Accelerating Tech: Standards-driven, Digital Design Flow for Industry 4.0


Reading time ( words)

The term “fragmented manufacturing” is a good way to describe current assembly manufacturing challenges in an Industry 4.0 environment. Even in Germany, productivity reportedly continues to decline. To reach the upside of Industry 4.0, data flows relating to design play a major role—one that brings significant opportunity to the overall assembly business.

The assembly sector always complains about the increasing mix of products that are being scheduled together with lower volumes. It’s ironic when we consider the massive growth in the application of electronics into virtually every device that we use. Surely, that means that volumes overall should be going up.

Unfortunately, the industry has become like an old, mechanical hard disk. We are trying to squeeze through more and more data into a device that appears to be working more slowly, but the files on the disk have become fragmented. Instead of the data being stored in one long group record, files are split up into many pieces and stored in different places on the disk. It is as if instead of going to the supermarket, you have to pick up groceries from many shops on the high street, one by one. Windows 10 now turns on periodic hard-disk defragmentation automatically, so most people don’t even notice this issue anymore. Can we do the same in our assembly manufacturing plants?

Assemblers have been driven to reduce or eliminate finished goods stock from the warehouse all the way through to the customer with direct shipping preferred over the investment of stock in an expansive distribution chain and risk of depreciation as market demands change. This is in part a great opportunity for the resurgence of local manufacturing and a key driver of Industry 4.0. The assembly schedule, therefore, has to meet the almost daily requirements of the customer, over the complete range of products made. Hence, the high-mix and low-volume scenario.

As this is a long-term significant business driver, assembly cannot continue to cling to the paradigm of optimized long-term planning as core parameters change every day. What is really needed is a way to manage the allocation of products to assembly line configurations immediately in a way that optimizes the utilization of resources. Accepting that we have to visit individual stores on the high street does not preclude us from planning to visit them in an efficient fashion, creating a sequenced journey that minimizes the walking distance from one to another.

Having seen the evolution of the core business requirement, Aegis Software has been driving industry change through the use of new technology based on standards for some time. Assembly engineering and manufacturing are now going through a fundamental change to address the production fragmentation problem. Adaptive planning is a critical new solution within a modern digital engineering solution. The best practice flow is to receive the complete product design data inclusive of all required documentation related to the intent of how a product should be built.

To read this entire column, which appeared in the April 2019 issue of Design007 Magazine, click here.

 

Share




Suggested Items

Design for Cost in Real-time

04/24/2023 | Paul Carpine, Siemens Digital Industries Software
When do you first start thinking about the selling price of your new product? It’s impossible to avoid the question of what the price will be. The worst answer is: “I don’t know, let’s see after the first samples.” Let’s say the product’s selling price is $49; then the manufacturing cost will be $20. During each design change, the manufacturing cost should be recalculated to make sure the product is still competitive. This means you should involve people from both the development and cost calculation teams. This circle will be repeated until the final design is released, and the final calculation is done.

Sunstone’s Matt Stevenson Shares Insights From New PCB Design Book

10/27/2022 | Nolan Johnson, I-Connect007
There’s designing the “perfect” circuit board and then there’s designing a board that is “perfect for manufacturing.” While seasoned designers and design engineers understand many of the nuances, PCB fabricator Sunstone Circuits has just published a new book specifically for new designers who have the knowledge of design but are still learning what it means to get the board manufactured. Sunstone’s Matt Stevenson takes the reader through a series of situations that should help clarify what’s happening in the fabrication process and how to adjust a board design to be better suited for manufacturing.

What Happens When You Assume?

07/05/2022 | I-Connect007 Editorial Team
What is design with manufacturing and what does true DWM look like in operation? In this interview, I-Connect007 columnist Dana Korf explains what it will take to achieve total communication among all the stakeholders in the PCB development cycle. He also stresses the need for everyone involved in PCB design and manufacturing to stop making assumptions, even at the risk of being labeled as “that guy” who asks too many questions.



Copyright © 2023 I-Connect007 | IPC Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.