Product category:
Coordinate measurement arms, systems and software
News Release from: Metris | Subject: Simultaneous CMM programming
Edited by the Manufacturingtalk Editorial
Team on 21 February 2007
Simultaneous CMM programming more
productive
A Metris LK co-ordinate measuring machine (CMM), together with Camio programming software, has helped Verdict Aerospace to increase productivity.
On the shop floor of high-precision contract machinists, Verdict Aerospace, Chalfont St Peter, production output from the machine tools has increased dramatically since a Metris LK co-ordinate measuring machine (CMM), together with the manufacturer's Camio programming software, were installed at the end of 2005 The higher productivity results from being able to program inspection cycles directly from CAD models of components, before they have been machined, allowing far higher spindle up-time than when machine tools stood idle waiting for first-off inspection results from manually operated or conventionally programmed CMMs
This article was originally published on Manufacturingtalk on 2 Oct 2008 at 8.00am (UK)
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Verdict, formed in 1951, is the only remaining privately owned Tier 1 supplier to Airbus, whose contracts account for a little less than half of the contract machinist's GBP5.5 million turnover.
Despite the aircraft manufacturer's policy of reducing its supplier base, in 1998 Verdict won a contract to manufacture access door panels for long-range and single-aisle aircraft.
More recently, it was awarded four tranches of work for the A380, namely manufacture of flap track diaphragms (18 per aircraft), joint straps (600 per wing), access door panels and a turning package.
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A380 contracts alone will increase Verdict's turnover by GBP2.5 million by the end of the decade.
The firm's latest investments in production equipment were prompted by this success.
In addition to the Metris LK Integra CMM with its 1.5 x 1.2 x 1 metre measuring envelope, three high-speed (20,000 rpm) Matsuura machining centres have been installed, including a 4-axis model with automatic pallet change.
The contract machinist has also purchased Catia V5 CAD software.
Said Verdict's Engineering Manager, Ray Gibbs, "Before our new CMM and the CAMIO off-line programming software were installed, we did not have the ability to prepare an inspection routine in advance of machining the first part.
"In practice, we would inspect the first-off on a manual CMM, as it was faster than programming our older CNC measuring machine in 'learn' mode, which could take up to two days for a complex part.
Consequently, for batch runs of components requiring frequent inspection on our old CMM, we saved time by programming it from the first, manually-checked part, concurrently with machining the remainder.
"Even so, depending on component complexity, the machine tool spindle would be stopped for anything from three hours to a day while manual first-off inspection was in progress; and if there were any errors, the part would have to be measured again, so there was further machine downtime." Mr Gibbs went on to describe the significant advantages of the new metrology process based on the LK Integra.
Now, as soon as the CAD model of a part arrives, as a Catia file in the case of Airbus and many others in the aerospace sector, the data is fed into two computer-aided manufacturing software packages.
One produces the cutter paths for the machine tool and the other, LK Camio, generates the measuring routine that the part, when manufactured, will undergo on the Integra CMM.
The machine tool is therefore idle only for as long as it takes to measure the first-off part, which is done immediately it arrives in the metrology room.
Inspection can be as quick as five minutes and is rarely longer than one hour, even for the most intricate parts.
Productivity is therefore much higher compared with when first-off inspection took three to eight hours.
For second and subsequent parts, the quicker axis movements of the modern Metris LK Integra enable inspection cycles to be completed faster than on the older CNC CMM.
So again, machine spindles are stopped for a shorter time when producing batches of parts needing periodic or 100 per cent inspection, boosting productivity further.
A particular benefit of Metris LK Camio software is its ability to import native Catia files directly, without the need for translation.
This standard option from Metris, involving some 500 lines of code, allows Verdict to comply with the stipulation by Airbus that parts must be checked against the original CAD model in the form that it was supplied, complete with geometric dimensioning and tolerancing (GDandT) definitions.
The LK CMM has had the additional effect of deskilling inspection to the point where machine tool operators, rather than metrology professionals, are beginning to take responsibility for measuring the components that they produce.
To take this a step further, a pictorial front-end called Launchpad is being installed.
It identifies the inspection program and necessary fixturing, and instigates the CNC cycle when the operator clicks an on-screen photograph of the part.
Overall, upgrading of metrology capability and engineering software at the Chalfont St Peter factory has had a big impact on Verdict Aerospace, not only in terms of increased productivity, but also in its move towards paperless manufacturing.
In so doing, the contract machinist is mirroring the direction in which its main customer, Airbus, has already gone in order to facilitate closer communication and co-operation with its pan-European suppliers. Request a free brochure from Metris ...
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