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Foundry Corporate News Con - Commercial Topic Centrifugal casting

Production Planning Software and Automation Solutions for Foundries

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A new buzzword is being talked about: “Real Time Compa-nies”. The effects under discussion include: responding to customer demands or operational anomalies in real time, meeting delivery deadlines, optimizing production processes and the deployment of materials, monitoring energy consump-tion, or optimizing warehouse inventories. Correspondingly, the primary goal of “real time” is that data for making deci-sions becomes available in a timely manner, meaning immedi-ately after it becomes known. At the same time, most compa-nies have recognized that strategies oriented towards condi-tions are an important lever for adjusting to increasing produc-tivity and accessibility.

Planning with outlook calculation for the start of production

For many companies, the discussions of real time may appear to be merely the return of a fashionably cute marketing strategy in search of sales arguments for the products of the IT industry. In reality, however, this is a systematic necessity for the economic effectiveness of a company in this continuously accelerating age. Consequently, the current strategic tasks of corporate manage-ment lie in the development and introduction of new, software-based technologies and organizational procedures for the optimi-zation of all operational processes. To an increasing extent, a modern company is an information-processing system. For which reason, the internal IT processes in particular should be involved in the streamlining process. Thereby, modern management is the shared usage of the central data, once it is available.

The objectives of the FerroTrade Company start here, and to-gether with their partners, they have developed technological solutions for foundries since 2004.
The important commercial and technological data are displayed, evaluated, and integrated into the landscape of the IT system. In doing so, a continuous flow of information ensures the vertical integration of data all along the value chain. Modern IT solutions using cost-transparent technologies (includ-ing Open Source components) generate: sustainable increases in production, improvements in the quality of the finished product, and efficient information transferal across all production depart-ments, while reducing costs at the same time.

In doing so, four issues should be considered by the companies when streamlining:

  • Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) and Production Planning Software (PPS) Systems for controlling the Production and Organizational Processes

  • Acquisition of Operational Data and Management of the Energy and Technological Processes
  • Documentation and Conception of Processes
  • Investment in the replacement of control elements with more affordable IT solutions

 

ERP and PPS Systems for Production Management

The increasing pressure to reduce costs in the industry has risen continuously over the last few years, and to an increasing extent, the product value is now determined by the amount of service. More often, the selection criterion for the customer is the attrac-tiveness of the products where quality, delivery reliability, delivery times, service, supply or technological prominence are concerned.

ERP or PPS systems consist of complex software components that support the resource planning of a company and have the following well-established definition for the production man-agement goals:

The article screen with all technological data

There are three goals, namely: optimization of expenses, obser-vance of deadlines and assurance of quality; whereby the pre-determined deadline still has priority, however, is no longer valued as the only measure of production control quality. The intention to manufacture products more in line with the market through the reduction of the cycle time, meaning shorter delivery times or starting production later, and to provide the necessary flexibility in order to react cost-effectively to constantly chang-ing demands stands in contrast to the goal of meeting deadlines. The primary goal of a PPS system correspondingly is in the planning and management of in-house production and external services, and includes a outlook calculation of the production process, in order to guard against ill conceived, improvident and irrational events, thereby using the values established through past experience for determining the technological production sequence. One of the primary goals of PPS systems is the improved pro-duction capacity load factor. Thereby, the user receives an overview of the shop operations that are currently being exe-cuted by the workstation under consideration, and can make adjustments if capacity is still available, either by delaying deadlines or producing stockpiles for other orders at this work-station. ERP or PPS systems serve as “real time” information centers for the marketing, production and shipping departments, and often also for the customers. FoundPlan is a production planning system, which has been inspired by this concept. Through its modular construction, and correspondingly the specific demands of a foundry. Components can be added for additional processes from the molding shop through the forming equipment, the pouring into a pressure die cast, or for centrifugal casting with management of sequence numbers.

At the same time, the PPS system can be extended all the way to the mechanical processing of cast parts and can represent all technological and operational planning processes for a complex foundry operation. However, due to its clearly laid out modular structure, the SMALL version may also be very effectively deployed in smaller foundries. A special language module enables the FoundPlan PPS to as-similate other languages very quickly.

Only by means of computer-supported assessment of all produc-tion data can appropriate decisions be reached in the event of production fluctuations and anomalies, and thereby have an immediate effect on the internal and external expenses.

FoundPlan was introduced at the Harzer Werke Mo-torentechnik in Blankenburg for the manufacture of cylinder sleeves for diesel motors using centrifugal casting and has produced concretely calculable improvements since then. Ac-cording to statements by the managing director, Mr. Wittkowski, the delivery deadline reliability, which started at 73%, has increased to 91%, which is a significant improvement in cus-tomer satisfaction and has had a positive impact on the assess-ment of suppliers. The company sales could be increased by roughly 17% during this period, where one must admit that an increase in sales is not possible without demand. Prior to the introduction of the PPS system, however, the capacity limits had already been reached, particularly in the mechanical processing area. Through FoundPlan, organizational and planning weak-nesses were discovered and the fact that the available capacity is now being used more effectively can be recognized from the sales developments. The order status and management reports provide just-in-time information about the processing status of the respective order and the fulfillment of the plan specifications, so that adjustments can be made for fluctuations in the produc-tion process. The third generation of FoundPlan is currently being implemented at Harzer Werke Motorentechnik.

Many of the weaknesses in production companies result from observable shortcomings in the flow of information.  The causes for this lie in insufficient perception or conception of interde-partmental order management. A PPS system supports the planning, administration and conception of the flow of work from sales to shipping following a horizontal integration path, and increases the transparency of order processing. At the same time, objective support for decisions is made available for the resolution of conflicts of interest between the various specialist departments.

The essential foundation of a PPS system is the management of data, covering information that is both order independent (inde-pendent of deadline) and contract dependent (dependent upon deadline). The data created, stored and maintained within infor-mation management includes the item and model information, raw material management, parts lists, task schedules, production facility management, planning information management, order management, customer and supplier data, delivery notes and invoices. In addition to the primary goals, the usage of PPS systems provides a number of additional advantages, which are clarified by the secondary goals, which do not lie within the responsibility of production management and, unfortunately, are often not recognized as advantages of PPS systems. The most interesting secondary goals are:

  • Improvement in quality through the continuous inte-gration of article and model information, parts lists and work schedules
  • Documentation of the expert knowledge, which can be made available to everyone. Specialist knowledge, which is independent of the personnel
  • Confident and complete preparation of materials in all production areas through the usage of parts lists, and the reduction of downtime due to the absence of materials along with that
  • Confident calculation and control of costs
  • Simplified creation of the shipping documents
  • Better capacity usage through compliance between demand planning and actual outlays
  • Reduction of the production costs through consistent information about the production methods and im-proved control of production from the viewpoint of expenses

 

Documentation and Conception of Processes

The documentation of all available data is one important task for IT systems, organizing it into relationships and presenting it in an understandable manner. In addition, external data sources may also be integrated into the system, such as: video monitor-ing images, documents and peripheral systems.

The data is displayed “live” and may be reviewed anywhere thanks to web technology, and, if necessary, may be transferred to any possible terminal device including mobile phones. Like-wise, this data is available to other systems and software (data-base gateways or ODBC and web services).
On the basis of the data volume obtained, limitations and rules can be defined for quality management control, analysis and supervision, and both the production procedure and the terminal are monitored continuously, both quantitatively and qualita-tively.
In this manner, production flaws and bottlenecks are quickly recognized and may be eliminated before the customer or later production steps report the discovery of the defect, which sig-nificantly reduces the costs of quality assurance and reworking measures. The user responsible for production receives an over-view by means of the continuous assessment of what is being produced and how. The corresponding values are displayed in order to get a more graphic representation than just the pure numbers.

Here, FerroTrade offers a number of proven solutions in coop-eration with their partners; and they are specially predestined for the solution of typical foundry problems.
Management of the Energy and Technological Processes.

The solutions in the field of automation have been implemented locally, centrally controlled and cross-linked among themselves. Thus, data from across the entire production cycle can be opti-mally incorporated into the daily production schedule in order to use energy effectively, to ensure the quality of the material or to stabilize the reliability of machines and facilities. Modern algo-rithms from information processing and computer science, such as neural networks and genetic algorithms, thereby support the production process and quality assurance through optimal con-trol action, and so create the basis for savings in raw materials and energy resources. The finished products remain competitive not only due to the increased quality and significantly fewer returns for flaws, but also in every case by reason of the expense situation.

Visualization and trend calculation of the analysis values of the spectometer

 

Practical examples provide testimony about the economical effect of such control elements, such as a computer-supported control system that was deployed at the Gussfertigungs Ges.mbH in Vienna for monitoring the energy consumption and quality of the melting process. A coke-less cupola furnace with an induction collector is metallurgically monitored by a control element in combination with a spectrometer and its energy consumption optimized. The potentials in this case lay in quality assurance, reduction of material rejections and energy savings, as well as amortization, of not even a single year.

Investment in the Replacement of Control Equipment

For most machines and equipment, the primary source of re-placement costs arise from the control components, such as stand-alone power supply controls. In this field in particular, license-free open source software has proven itself with modules for production automation and management, and an increasing number of globally active companies are retrofitting their sys-tems to be based on such systems, in order to reduce their in-vestment and operating costs. The system components from FerroTrade have been developed on the basis of such license-free components and guarantee independence from technology and manufacturer. They provide better performance and stability using the same hardware. Thereby, even older machines and equipment can be slowly migrated to a new generation of devices, whereby expensive re-cabling is avoided, the systems are on-line significantly more quickly and are once again available less expensively.  In conclusion: a real time company is not a marketing strat-egy; the way there is increasingly becoming an economic necessity to an increasing extent in a market, which operates globally.

 


 

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