| October
2001 Issue of Injection
Molding Magazine
Driving
JIT with new technology implementation
Wouldn’t it be
great if you could buy all of the high-tech
equipment your heart desired? Imagine all the
problems that could be solved. Your molding
operation would practically run itself, right?
Of course, to be successful molders must plan
and implement that new technology in an
intelligent way, taking human factors and
specific applications into account.
That’s the
conclusion World Class Plastics Inc. (WCPI)
reached when it set out to add optical gauging,
automotive degating, and a sophisticated SPC
system to its 32,500-sq.-ft. plant in Russells
Point, OH. WCPI is a privately held custom
molding operation that has grown in seven years
from one press and one customer to a $10
million-plus molder producing 10 million
close-tolerance parts/month.
This plant
specializes in JIT production for customers in
the automotive, medical, appliance and
industrial markets (see “JIT on Steroids,”
July 2000 IMM, p. 14). Many products go directly
from floor to truck in this scenario, so the
need for automation, tracking, and accuracy is
obvious. Yet, before implementing any new
technology, WCPI first explored the benefits it
wanted to achieve and then looked for the best
solution and implementation method to support
those goals.
DEGATING
OPTIONS
“We strive to
minimize variation in the process,” says David
Disniewski, engineering and R&D manager.
This is why the company decided to install CNC
degating systems (Aeroboy SK-250 from
>SAS< Automation). WCPI has 25 Sumitomo
presses ranging from 18 to 350 tons, each of
which is serviced by Yushin servo robots and
sprue pickers. The degating systems were placed
on the end of the servo robot traverse beam.
“Using CNC
degating instead of doing it manually produces
more consistent results, and the quality goes
up,” explains Wisniewski. In addition, the
system helps molding technicians, each of whom
are generally responsible for running five to
six machines, to manage the process and
consistently get good parts.
To help ease the
installation of the systems, WCPI purchased a
modular system. “The quick-change end-of-arm
tooling (EOAT) system slide in and clamp rather
than screw down,” explains Wisniewski. “As a
custom molder, we are always changing jobs. We
have two dedicated presses, but the rest can run
jobs from two to three days down to 6 hours. So
we needed a flexible system.”
A recent visit to
the plant illustrated this concept. In a
workcell with a 160-ton press, instrument
cluster bezels for the PT Cruiser were
automatically degated and trimmed. The tool that
WCPI inherited wasn’t designed for ease of
manufacture, according to Wisniewski. It should
have been hot-edge gated; instead, there were
two small subrunners coming off the hot
manifold. “we have to nip the subrunners and
flush trim the gates. On runner is situated
behind a rib so we needed a reach-around cutter.
JDV Products built a custom nipper blade from
WCPI specifications.
PUMPED-up SPC
Another component
of the WCPI strategy involved having each
workcell take responsibility for its production
and quality goals. To that end, the company
purchased a 2-bit SPC software package called
Synergy 2000 (Zontec) so named because it
consists of three parts that work together.
One part is used
by production technicians for real-time data
collection and input. Data inputs automatically
into the system through calipers micrometers,
and height gauges. Another capability helps
quality managers and engineers establish control
and spec limits to analyze data. A third
component lets managers monitor the processes in
real time from a single screen and create
reports.
Brett Johnson,
director of quality, explains how this new
technology was introduced. “Rather than
forcing this system on our employees, I went to
a trainer’s workshop first, and then shard
what I learned with representatives from all
three shifts. Over a weekend, we completed
associated training and went into production on
a Monday. The process was seamless.”
In the near
future, the system will allow selected customers
the ability to review actual data through a
secured Internet connection. This eliminated an
additional QC check normally performed when the
parts are received.
The new system
was also flexible enough to incorporate a
suggestion from molding technician Greg Postle.
He noticed that manually entering part numbers
introduced unacceptable levels of human error.
He asked if parts could be assigned bar codes
for keyless entry. “We produce about 400,000
part and shipping labels per year,” says
Johnson, “so the idea was immediately
investigated.”
A bar code
containing the part number is now printed on
each job card. Technicians scan the code with a
pen, which then prompts the system to enter the
part number. In another version of the job card,
scanning the code produces a bar code label for
shipping. Both systems have reduced error
throughout the plant.
AUTOMATED
MEASURING
Right-tolerance,
visually critical parts are the order of the day
at this facility. WCPI produced, for example,
several tiny components found within every GE
refrigerator around the world. These parts have
tolerances of +30pm.
To ensure that
parts meet dimensional requirements, WCPI added
a video measuring system (Avant Zip 600 from OGP)
for quality checks. Target dimensions are first
input into the system along with a part number.
The automated probe then does the measuring.
“We needed
something that could inspect anything we mold,
and after extensive research, we knew that this
was the system,” says Johnson. Cost savings on
inspection alone are estimated at $100,000
annually. – Michelle Maniscalco.
Reprinted with permission from Injection
Molding Magazine; © 2001 by
Canon Communications Inc.
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