Metal Stamping Evolution Brings Challenges
November 1, 2019Comments
From the growth of automated and intelligent technology to new consumer demands, manufacturing faces many challenges that will require change in the way it does business, according to Laurie Harbor, president, of Harbour Results, Inc. A recent Harbour IQ Pulse Study, looking at performance across different manufacturing sectors, indicates that most shops are not prepared for the changing landscape of manufacturing. This evolution requires of industry best practices for delivering future success in emerging manufacturing technologies.
Industry 4.0
One example of a manufacturing technology in need of best practices is Industry 4.0, the umbrella moniker for all things related to improving processes and products by collecting and using real-time process-related information from factory equipment with network-connected sensors, software and cloud computing. When it comes to sheet metal forming processes, Industry 4.0 best practices are lacking. Jason Rsyka, chief engineer for North American stamping operations at Ford Motor Company, and his team, are striving to change that by recognizing and implementing new technologies to monitor sheet metal forming in real time. That feedback will then provide real-time directives to the press equipment, while also providing intuitive information to multiple levels of users on the influence of inputs variables on the process.
To arrive at Industry 4.0 best practices requires of teams such as Rsyka’s, concerted implementation of sensors, closed-loop process control and machine learning. Moreover, the application of real-time nondestructive evaluation tools that measure incoming material properties (e.g., yield strength and tensile strength), blank thickness, lubrication-film thickness, blank edge movement in the draw station, wireless monitoring of nitrogen pressure, and thermal imaging (tooling and stamping temperature), provide metal stampers with new opportunities to improve business performance, boost product quality and optimize production.
Metal AM Processes for Tool & Die
The manufacturing demonstration team at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) continues working on metal additive manufacturing (AM) processes for tool and die applications, an effort that began three years ago. ORNL’s efforts are supported by the DOE’s Advanced Manufacturing Office (AMO), which focuses on helping “early-stage research to advance innovation in U.S. manufacturing and promote American economic growth and energy security.” Producing metal stamping die components using AM processes such as 3D metal printing reduces raw material required to produce die components by adding metal to near net shape, rather than removing material. Using AM reduces the required machining process by up to 50 percent, allowing for shorter lead times and faster reaction time to changes, helping to make U.S. tool and die makers more competitive in the marketplace.
When machining die components, whether wrought tool steel or 3D-printed sections, the importance of the structural dynamics of the tool holder—the interface to the machine spindle—in relation to selecting milling parameters deserves consideration. Professor Tony Schmitz, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, has studied relationships between the structural dynamics, cutting force, chatter and machining accuracy through the application of artificial intelligence. The goal of his work: Demonstrate how chatter-free milling parameters can be chosen at the process planning stage (programming) to provide first-time-correct performance.