Final Cam Unit 8
Final Cam Unit 8
MANUFACTURING SYSTEMS
Introduction:
CIM is the term used to describe the complete automation of the factory with all
process’s functions under computer control. It is the total integration of all components
involved in converting raw materials into finished products and getting the products to the
market. CIM includes all the engineering functions of CAD/CAM and it also includes the
business functions of the firm as well.
CIM is the short form of Computer Integrated Manufacturing. It includes all of the
engineering functions of design, manufacturing and the business functions related to
manufacturing. In this system computer is used to communicate and control the operational
functions and information processing functions in manufacturing. The concept of CIM is
shown in the figure 1.
In the concept of CIM all the operations related to production are computerized and
interlinked. In this integrated system, the output of one activity serves as the input to the
next activity starting from the customer order to product shipment.
The customer order contains the specification of the product. It is the input to the design
department. In design department the product is identified and prepares the bill of material and
assembly drawing. This output of the design department is the input to the production
engineering department. With the above input the production engineering department
does the process planning, tool design and similar activities which are necessary for production.
This output of the production Engineering department serves as the input for production
planning and control department, where material planning and scheduling are done using the
computer system.
Implements the CIM, resulting full automation of the industry. The activities of CIM are
shown figure 2.
• Computer hardware
• Display devices with graphics cards
• Input and Output devices
• Powerful software packages for modeling, analyzing and optimization.
The product development and manufacturing activities with all the functions being carried
out with the help of dedicated software packages in the CIM. The data required for various
functions are passed from one applications of software to another. The product data is created
during design. The data has to be transferred from the modeling software to manufacturing
software without any loss of data. CIM uses a common database. CIM reduces the human
component of manufacturing. The integrated approach is applied to all activities from the design
of the product to customer support. CIM based manufacturing industries are integrating the
design, manufacturing and business functions using the common database in the computer.
This is defined based on the product of manufacturing. The various activities of the CIM are
given in the figure 3. This is called as CIM wheel.
The design, analysis, simulation and drafting activities of CAD use the common database
in the system. Similarly, the CAM activities like shop floor control, material selection, CAPP and
quality planning and process are also using the common database. The material handling,
assembly, inspection and testing and shipping activities of the factory are also integrated by the
common data base in the computer. The manufacturing activities and sales and service
activities of an industry are also integrated with by the common database.
In earlier days, the design and manufacturing are considered as separate department. In
design department, the product was identified and the drawing is supplied to the manufacturing
department. The manufacturing department prepares data to plan, manage and control the
manufacturing from the drawing. Here there is more time involvement and duplication of effort by
way of collecting data to their purposes.
Now a days the application of computers on design and manufacturing not only automated
the design and manufacturing functions of the firm, but also interlinked the design and
manufacturing functions. Application of computer on design is known as CAD and on
manufacturing is known as CAM.
The interlinking of CAD and CAM provides an automated transmission of data form design
phase to manufacturing phase and the same is known as integrated CAD/CAM.
Evaluation
Definition
FMS is a computer-controlled manufacturing system integrates the automated production
machines and material handling equipment. The FMS is designed to be flexible so that it can
fabricate a variety of different products of relatively low volumes.
d) Human labour: Human beings are required for the following operations of FMS
It is the first major component of the FMS. It includes the following type of machines:
a) Machining centers
b) Turning centers
c) Head changers
d) Head indexers
e) Assembly workstations
f) Inspection stations
g) Special purpose workstations
The following are the important operations of the material handling system in the FMS:
For these systems to work effectively they must be synchronized with the machine
operations. The location and movement of workpieces must be tracked automatically. This is
done by using sensors on the materials handling system and workstations. These may be either
by switches or sensors.
The computer control system of an FMS integrates several sub systems including:
• CNC Systems
• Support system controllers
• Materials handling system controller
• Monitoring and sensing devices
• Data communication system
• Data collection system
• Programmable logic controllers
• Supervisory computer
This control system must also integrate other computer systems if existing in the factory.
The FMS system must also communicate with the following systems.
The CAD/CAM system which generates the CNC programs for the machine tools.
The shop floor control systems which schedules loading and routing of the work.
The MIS system which provides management with reports on the performance of the
system.
The operations are controlled with the help of supervisory computers connected by LAN.
The material handling system forms the FMS layout. The different layouts are:
• In-line
• Loop
• Ladder
• Open-Field
• Robot-centered cell
In-line layout
The workflows in one direction from one station to another. The workstations are in a line.
This is suitable where the machining operations progress from one station to another in
sequence.
Loop Layout
The work moves in one direction around the loop. The work can be stopped at any work
station. There is separate material handling system to flow in the loop. The loading and
unloading were done manually at the same end.
Ladder Layout
It is the modified form of loop layout to reduce distance to be traveled. The arrangements
of the workstations are in ladder form and each station forms an inner loop. The work can be
stopped at any workstation. No separate handling system necessary required as in loop layout.
It is the combination of loop and ladder layouts to achieve the required processing
requirement. It is best suitable to process large family of workparts. The works are routed to the
machine which is free.
The simplest and most flexible type of FMS is a flexible manufacturing cell. It consists of
one or more CNC machine tools with automated material handling and tool changers. FMC’s are
capable of automatically machining a wide range of different work pieces.
One or two horizontal machining centers with multiple pallets, advanced tool management
system, automatic tool changer, automatic head changer, robots or other material handling
systems to facilitate access of the jobs to the machine also constitute a flexible machining cell.
A turning Centre fitted with a gantry loading and unloading system and pallets for storing
workpieces and finished parts is a typical flexible turning cell. If the turning centre is incorporated
with post process metrology equipment like probes or inductive measuring equipment for
automatic offset correction, the efficiency of the system improves. Automatic tool changers, tool
magazines, block tooling, automatic tool offset measurement, and automatic chuck change and
chuck jaw change etc, help to make the cell to be more productive.
Flexible transfer lines are intended for high volume production. Apart in a high-volume
production may have to undergo large number of operations. Each operation is assigned to and
performed on only one machine. This results in affixed route for each part through the system.
The material handling system is usually appellatory carousel or conveyor. In addition to general
purpose machines, it can consist of special purpose machines, robots and some dedicated
equipment. Scheduling to balance the machine loads is easier. Unlike conventional transfer lines,
a number of different work pieces can be manufactured on the FTL. The resetting procedure is
largely automatic.
Flexible machining systems consist of several flexible automated machine tools of the
universal or special type which are flexibly interlinked by an automatic workpiece flow system so
that different workpieces can be machined at the same time. The characteristic feature is the
external interlinkage of the machines, unrestricted by cycle considerations. Different machining
times at the individual stations are compensated for by central or decentralized workpiece buffer
stores. Flexibility is applied to machines because of CNC control and flow of products from one
machine to another which is possible through flexible transport system. Flexibility is characterized
by the system's ability to adapt to changes in the volumes in the product mix and of the machining
processes and sequences. This means that a FMS will be able to respond quickly to changing
market and customer demands.
Intelligent manufacturing system is one in which computer based Artificial Intelligence (AI)
techniques are used to substitute humans in the decision-making process of manufacturing. In
AI, the facts are organized in systematic manner. As per the logic laid down computer makes
decision or help the human with advice to make decisions. The various fields of AI related to
manufacturing are expert system, computer vision, Robotics, voice recognition, neural networks
and fuzzy logic.
The function of Expert system is different from ordinary computer activity. Expert system
receives information and analyzes it and gives out solution to the query. The Expert systems in
manufacturing includes act:
An expert system does the above with the design data available from CAD.
• Automatic inspection
• Control aspects.
All these activities involve a system of relational matching and decisions making. The
vision system collects the seen and expert system matches the seen and makes decisions
accordingly, AI based scheduling in CIM environment: Scheduling is the process of allocating
time for various activities of the job considering the availability man, machine and delivery time.
Expert System does this within no time and the same is the required aspect for CIM with number
of job in process and number of jobs in queue waiting for process.
Decision support system in the CIM environment: In the CIM environment, there are series
of decision makings which ranges from job acceptance, planning and scheduling to process, man
and machine allotment. Also, there must be co-ordination among these decision makings. For
such environment expert system is most suitable.
1.13 SUMMARY
In this unit covers introduction to CIM, Concept of CIM and Evolution of CIM. Also, in this unit
describe the CIM wheel, Benefits of CIM wheel, FMS and its components. In this unit also covers
the topic of FMS layout, its types and benefits.
Further Readings:
CAD/CAM/CIM: Radhakrishnan P, New Age International Publishers 1994.
CAD/CAM: Groover, Mikell P and Zimmer’s Emory W, Prentice Hall India (P) Ltd, 2001.
CAD/CAM: Principles and Applications: Rao P N, Tata McGraw Hill Higher Education P Ltd 2002.
Mastering CAD/CAM: Ibrahim Zeid, Tata McGraw Hill Higher Education P Ltd 2004
1.14 SAQ’s
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