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Flexible Manufacturing Systems. Introduction to FMS/FAS. Conventional Manufacturing. Consisted of 2 varieties Job Shop type systems were capable of large variety of product, but at a high cost.
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Flexible Manufacturing Systems Introduction to FMS/FAS
Conventional Manufacturing Consisted of 2 varieties • Job Shop type systems were capable of large variety of product, but at a high cost. • Transfer lines could produce large volumes of a product at a reasonable cost, but were limited to the production of one, two, or very few different parts.
What is FMS/FAS? • A FMS/FAS is one manufacturing machine, or multiple machines that are integrated by an automated material handling system, whose operation is managed by a computerized control system. An FMS can be reconfigured by computer control to manufacture various products.
What is CIM? • CIM is the integration of the total manufacturing enterprise through the use of integrated systems and data communications coupled with new managerial philosophies that improve organizational and personal efficiency.
What is a manufacturing Cell? • A manufacturing cell usually consists of two or three processing workstations (typically CNC Machining or turning centers) plus a part handling system. The following two slides contain a CAD layout and picture of the RIT Mfg Eng Tech Class of 2000’s manufacturing work cell.
Manufacturing Cells VS FMS • A FMS/FAS is a manufacturing cell, but a cell is not necessarily a FMS/FAS • A FMS/FAS is a complete system that runs automatically • A manufacturing cell has some or most of the components of a FMS/FAS, but not all of them.
History of FMS • 1950’s NC machines first appear • 1960’s Computers appear in industry • Later 1960’s Flexible Manufacturing Systems first appeared in the U.S.A. at companies like Ingersoll-Rand, Caterpillar, John Deere, and General Electric Co.
Flexibility in a FMS/FAS • Machine flexibility • Production flexibility • Mix flexibility • Product flexibility • Routing flexibility • Volume flexibility • Expansion flexibility
Components of an FMS/FAS • Workstations • Material handling and storage system • Computer control system • People to manage and operate the system
Types of Workstations • Load/unload Stations • Machining Stations • Other Processing Stations • Assembly • Other Stations and Equipment (like Inspection)
Layout Configurations for Material Handling System • In-line layout • In-line Transfer • Conveyor • Rail guided vehicle • Loop layout • Conveyor system • In-Floor towline carts
Layouts Continued • Ladder layout • Conveyor System • Automated Guided Vehicle (AGV) • Rail guided Vehicle • Open field layout • AGV • In-line towline carts • Robot-centered layout
Computer Control Systems • Workstation • Distribution of control instructions to workstations • Production control • Traffic control • Shuttle control • Workpiece monitoring
Computer Controls (cont) • Tool control • Tool locations • Tool life monitoring • Performance monitoring and reporting • Diagnostics
Why Implement a FMS/FAS? • Increased machine utilization • Fewer machines required • Reduction in factory floor space required • Greater responsiveness to change • Reduced inventory requirements • Lower manufacturing lead times
Why Implement a FMS/FAS? (continued) • Reduced direct labor requirements and higher labor productivity • Opportunity for unattended production
FMS Implementation Issues • Part family considerations • Processing requirements • Physical characteristics or workparts • Production volume • Scheduling and dispatching • Machine loading • Part routing
FMS Issues (cont) • Part grouping • Tool management • Pallet and fixture allocation • Requires management commitment and planning • Major invest of time and money