Title: Components of Computer Integrated Manufacturing: CAD/CAM
1Unit 2
- Components of Computer Integrated Manufacturing
CAD/CAM
2Computer-Integrated Manufacturing (CIM)
- CIM is the manufacturing approach of using
computers to control the entire production
process. - This integration allows individual processes to
exchange information with each other and initiate
actions. - Through the integration of computers,
manufacturing can be faster and less error-prone.
3CIM Components or Subsystems Include
- CAD
- CAM
- CAPP
- CAE
- ERP
- PPC
- CAE
- Computers
- Automated conveyors
- CNC
- DNC
- Robotics
- Controllers
- FMS
- ASRS
- AGV
- Monitoring equipment
- Others
4Chapter 3
- Product Design and Production Engineering
5Product Design and Production Engineering
- These areas or departments are appropriate
starting points for a detailed study of CIM - The two have embraced and encouraged the use of
technology to reduce many tedious manual tasks - The initial creation of data starts in these
areas - It is appropriate to have a common data base for
all the data
6Sample CIM Sub-Systems
7Design Information Flow
- The product area is responsible for product
design and analysis, material selection, and
design and production documentation - The production engineering area adds production
standards for labor, process, and quality to the
product data from design area. - Engineering release is responsible for product
change control.
8The Design Process A model
- Although there is a five-step design process,
marketing plays a role before design engineering
picks up
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10Step 1 Conceptualization
- Conceptualization (recognition of need
definition of the problem) - Form (shape, style, and character)
- Fit (marketing fit or order winning criteria)
- Function is determined with data from marketing
- Divided into two Typical and atypical
- Typical design relates to repetitive design
- Atypical design is for new product
11Step 2 Synthesis
- Specification of material
- Addition of geometric features
- Inclusion of greater dimensional details to
conceptualized design - Removes (filters) cost-adding features and
materials - Employs DFM and DFA to ensure good design
- About 70 of manufacturing cost is fixed in steps
1 and 2 activities
12Step 3 Analysis
- Analysis means determining/describing the nature
of the design by separating it into its parts to
determine the fit between the proposed design and
the original design goals - Two categories of analysis are mass properties
and finite - Can be performed manually, but the computer
increases analysis capability and reduces its
time
13Step 4 Evaluation
- Checks the design against the original
specifications - Often requires construction of a prototype to
test for conformance - Often employs rapid prototyping technique
14Step 5 Documentation
- Creating all necessary product and part views in
the form of working drawings, detailed and
assembly drawings - Addition of dimensions, tolerances, special
manufacturing notes, and standard components - Creation of part numbers, bill of materials, and
detailed part specifications - Creation of product electronic data files used by
manufacturing planning and control, production
engineering, marketing and quality control
15Chapter 4 Design Automation CAD
- CAD is the application of computers and graphics
software to aid or enhance the product design
from conceptualization to documentation. - Computer-aided drafting (CAD) automates the
drawing or product documentation process. - Computer-aided design (CAD) is used to increase
the productivity of the product designers.
16CAD System Capabilities Include
- Stand-alone PC and RISC-based CAD workstations at
each engineering and design drafting location - The ability to share part data and product
information with every station in the system
17CAD System Capabilities Include
- Access to part data files from the mainframe
computers on the network - Shared peripheral resources such as printers and
plotters - Concurrent work on the same project from multiple
workstations, one of the reasons our team project
needs a web site or data base.
18Basic CAD System Includes
- Keyboard
- Input devices
- Output devices
19Application of CAD to Manufacturing Systems
- Concept and repetitive design (product, fixtures,
gauges, pallets, mold, etc.) - Drafting
- New product development management (PDM) and the
Internet
20Computer-aided Manufacturing (CAM)
- Â Â CAM is the effective use of computer
technology in the planning, management, and
control of production for the enterprise. - Â Â One of the major applications of CAM is in
CAD/CAM where the part geometry created with CAD
in the design engineering is used with CAM
software to create machine code (NC/CNC) capable
of machining the part.
21Computer-aided Manufacturing
- Includes the use of CAD files to
- Define the machine tool that will process the
part - Define the stock or material
- Define the features to machine
- Generate operations
- Select the origin
- Generate tool paths
- Simulate tool paths
- Generate NC code
- Download NC programs
- Operate the CNC machine that will cut the part
22Data Communication Processes in CAD/CAM
- In CAD/CAM
- Data is created
- Data is generated
- Data is simulated
- Data is transformed
- Data is translated
- Data is cleaned
- Data is stored
- Data is communicated
- Data is manipulated
- Data is managed
- Data is analyzed
- Data is retrieved
- Data is interpreted
23Numerical Control (NC), Computer Numerical
Control (CNC), and Distributive Numerical Control
(DNC)
- NC
- CNC behind the reader system
- DNC minicomputer system
24Computer Integrated Manufacturing Network Demands
- Â A common database for enterprise information
flow - Â Â Easy, accurate and instantaneous movement of
part geometry files and product data between
departments - Â Â An enterprise network is a communications
system that supports communications and the
exchange of information and data among various
devices connected to the network over distances
from several feet to thousands of miles
25Data is Defined as
- Â Â Â Â Information
- Â Â Â Â Statistics
- Â Â Â Â Facts
- Â Â Â Â Figures
- Â Â Â Â Number
- Â Â Â Â Records
- Â Â Â Â Report
- Â Â Â Â Account
- Â Â Â Â Minutes
- Â Â Â Â Proceedings
26How Data is Acquired and Used in a CIM Environment
- Â Â Â Â By Simple Data Acquisition, such as
- Ø Given Data
- Ø Measurement Data
- Â Â Â Â By Data Generation (from CAD)
- Â Â Â Â By Data Importation (from CAD)
- Â Â Â Â By Data Analysis (from CAD)
- Â Â Â Â By Data Computing (from CAD)
- Â Â Â Â By Data Conversion (from CAD)
- Â Â Â Â By Data Formatting (from CAD)
- Â Â Â Â By Data Processing (from CAD)
- Â Â Â Â By Data Translation
27Product As Origin Of Data
28Design
- Conceptual design (parts and assembly)
- Synthesis (materials, geometry, DFM etc.)
- Analysis (meeting original design goals)
- Evaluation (using prototypes)
- Documentation (views, BOM, part numbers,
dimensions etc.) - Bill of materials (BOM) creation
- Product structure diagram
29Manufacturing
- MRP daily production scheduling tasks
- Capacity production activity control tasks
- Part manufacture (material processing)
- Product assembly
- Quality and inspection tasks
- Material handling tasks
- Storage retrieval tasks
30CIM Database
31Sub-Systems of CIM
32System-To-System
33Worker-To-System
34System-To-Worker
35Worker-To-Worker
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38Current Capabilities and Applications
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Networks
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Hardware communications
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Embedded computers
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Systems integration
39Problems to Overcome in Implementing CIM
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Interdepartmental support/politics
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â CIM justification
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Intangible benefits
40Sample CIM Sub-Systems
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42Sample CIM Network