Precision
Metal Fabricator Depends On Multi-Media Software to
Maintain Quality
Electrolabs, Inc., a precision metal fabricator in
Fraser, Michigan, used to have problems making sure
that machine and tooling setups were done right the
first time and that parts were assembled correctly.
Electrolabs specializes in prototypes and small production
runs. It offers a complete range of sheet metal processing
services from design and layout to painting and silk-screening.
Although about 50 percent of its work is at least partially
repetitive, many of the shop employees cannot read prints,
and the company had no easy way to describe the required
operations and setups.
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| The
Realtrac job router picture shows the die setup
on Electrolab's Amada FBD III-8025 press brake for
fabrication of an automotive part. Realtrac pictures
can be attached to job routers or displayed on any
PC that can access Realtrac. |
Then the company began using the Realtrac real-time
shop management system from Realtrac (Irvine, California),
and with recent advances in digital camera technology,
Electrolabs is now able to utilize the improved multi-media
capability of Realtrac to link actual pictures of parts
to jobs and router operations. A picture is worth
a thousand words, says Dennis Suddon, president
of Electrolabs. How many things can a person remember?
If I dont have a print to show someone, I can
give him a picture.
Using a Sony MVC-FD8 digital camera, a picture is captured
of many parts in various stages of completion as well
as a picture of practically every finished part. For
example, without hunting for paper, paint shop employees
will know they are working on the right assembly by
bringing up a picture on their PC screens. This helps
assure that the finishing is always done the same way
for a specific part. When setting up operations, employees
know exactly what tools and setup to use by viewing
a digital picture. Also, pictures are often sent electronically
to customers for reference when discussing future orders
for the same or similar parts.
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| A
Realtrac job router picture of first bending operation
on the Amada press brake gives visual verification
concerning how the operation is to be performed. |
Before linking an image to a specific operation on
the Realtrac job router, Electrolabs can edit the image
using Paint Shop Pro and add dimensions and a typed
description. Electrolabs also stores images on floppy
disks for backup and future reference. In addition to
digital pictures, Realtrac can be used to link scanned
images, CAD drawings and sound files (for example, voice
description of setup procedures) to jobs and operations.
Electrolabs uses an Amada FBD III-8025 press brake
system with fully automated controls. A PC with a touch
screen monitor is used on the shop floor with both the
Amada and Realtrac software, and Mr. Suddon has been
able to integrate both systems so drawings and other
information provided by the Amada system are transferred
right into Realtrac. A PC at the Amada with a touch
screen monitor allows operators to view images linked
to Realtrac. Electrolabs currently is using the microterminal
emulation feature of Realtrac, which allows workers
to also use the Amada touch screen monitor to log on
and off operations.
Mr. Suddon also has pioneered the linking of a Realtrac
data collection terminal to a machine robot that can
log on and off of specific operations.
Mr. Suddon feels that Realtrac has contributed greatly
to the ability of Electrolabs to maintain a high level
of customer satisfaction. Shop employees enter data
as activities occur using Realtrac microterminals, so
that machine loads, schedules and costs are maintained
in real-time. When Electrolabs first implemented the
system in 1986, Mr. Suddon felt if the company kept
Realtrac for five years, it would more than recoup its
investment. Now the company still depends on the system
to track jobs and provide up-to-the minute information.
Every morning, key staff people review Realtrac screens
that tell them what has to be done that day.
Mr. Suddon especially likes Realtracs flexibility
to do a job the way he wants to do it. Operations can
be changed and added on the shop floor or moved to a
different machine than planned. Although Realtrac offers
an estimating and quoting module, Mr. Suddon needed
a system that allowed it to take advantage of its existing
estimating procedures and formulas and the vast amount
of historical data it had accumulated. So, with the
help of an outside consultant, a custom estimating program
was developed that integrates directly with Realtrac.
MMS
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