With improvement
on technologies, how manufacturing is done has totally changed during recent
years. With the highly competitive market, entry to manufacturing is lowered.
People need to be highly efficient in their operations.
As shown on researches,
the largest proportion of cost of goods sold is wages and other employee related
compensation costs. However, smart manufacturing may help reduce a lot of the
people cost.
For example,
Tata Motors made Nano with a sticker price of $2,500 in Indian market. This cheap
price is resulted from the “smart” factory in Gujarat.[1] The automation
technologies – sensors, microprocessors, and motor control devices improve the
manufacturing process efficiency a lot.
As technologies
become more polished, information available to make management decisions will
become large and instant. As a result, responsiveness of the production will be
improved. Tools to visualize such huge information are also available to help
fast decision making in the competitive market.
The essential
part of the smart manufacturing process is to create knowledge-embedded manufacturing
operations. Process are automated and controlled more intensively in terms of
automatic startups, shutdowns, deviation responses, and formulation changes. Furthermore,
use of modeling and simulation will allow the information management, process
knowledge flow more efficiently. Using open-source technology will make successful
model available for other projects or parties. Success model may optimize a set
of predetermined performance metrics.[1]
Although,
automation, control, modeling and simulation are not so new for manufacturers,
the smart ecosystem is one of the challenges raised. Extending the technologies
and concepts from plant level to the entire supply chain and multiple industries
will require a lot of effort in standardizing infrastructure. With this shared
infrastructure, small business will benefit a lot from using interoperable
tools for efficient production. In addition, cloud technology allows different
parties share data across the supply chain. With this kind of integration
across industries, entrepreneur may find their opportunities more easily with a
great resources pool.
For example, Re-Char
designed a fully functioning, off-the-grid factory inside a shipping container.[2]
A Shop-In-a-Box consists
of:
- A
CNC table, working envelope 4'x4'x6", capable of running a plasma
torch or wood-cutting router.
- Solar
panels plus batteries and inverters, adequate to power the shop's
computers and hand tools.
- A
generator adequate to power the shop while the welders and plasma CNC do
production work.
- Transformers,
capable of scrubbing irregular grid power so it's safe for use in the
shop.
- 2
plasma torches—one for CNC use, one for hand operation. Each can sever
metal up to 3/4″ and sustain cutting in any thickness metal from 1/2″ to
22-gauge.
- Full
MIG, TIG, and oxyacetylene welders, to join a wide variety of metals.
- Electronics
prototyping, focused on through-hole components and arduino
microcontrollers.
- Desktop
3D printer.
- A
desktop, aluminum-capable CNC router.
- A
wide variety of small hand and power tools—everything you'd expect in a
well-outfitted garage.
- DVR
with 4 cameras, mounted to easily capture and share all details of project
builds.
- Computers
and software necessary to support the shop.
With this kind
of great tool, people may implement their design much more easily. And “atoms”
will become the most important thing in the new manufacturing industry.
“The Internet has
transformed marketing from a significant expense to a negligible cost, allowing
startups and small enterprises to compete with many of the giant business
enterprises of the 21st century.” said by Rob Kalin, a New York University
graduate who made furniture in his apartment.
As said by Fred
Wentzel, vice president of industry relations and workforce development at the
National Council for Advanced Manufacturing, advanced manufacturing harnesses
the efficiency of mass production and marries it to the flexibility of custom
manufacturing. The goal is to respond quickly to customer demand by using
high-precision information technology. With the shift from labor cost to highly
automated manufacturing, companies are able to cut their number of employees
thus lower the cost. While outsourcing labor cost keeps increasing, more and
more jobs are returned to U.S. from outsourcing vendors.
However, this
highly automated manufacturing system requires skilled workforce since dummy
jobs are done by machine in a more efficient way. Certain concerns are raised
in U.S. for the insufficient focus on education of science, technology,
engineering or math which is the driven force for the new industry revolution.
In addition, due
to climate changes and other environment effects, we need to make our industry
mode more sustainable with use of green (renewable) energy.
Evolutions of
power allow us to use energy more efficiently. Researchers at the Georgia Institute
of Technology have found a way to generate and store energy in one single unit,
thus save energy in the process.
With the
empowered technologies, the next industry revolution will shift to distributed
small and medium size enterprise networks.[3]
The question for
most of us would be how should we take this precious opportunity to succeed in
the future? By designing our own product? By polishing the necessary
technology? What are the future needs for the developing industry?
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