Title: Chapter 5 ComputerAided Process Planning CAPP
1Chapter 5Computer-Aided Process Planning (CAPP)
2Agenda
- Definition of process planning
- Basic steps in developing a process plan
- The principal process planning approaches
3Definition of Process Planning
- Process planning serves as an integration
between and - Process planning refers to a set of that are
used to a component or a part so that
the design specifications are met - Process planning determines component will be
manufactured
4Basic Steps in Developing a Process Plan
- Analysis of part
- Selection of raw
- Determining manufacturing and their
- Selection of tools
- Selection of , devices, and equipment
- Determining machining (cutting speed, feed,
depth of cut) and manufacturing ( setup
times, processing time, lead time)
5Step 1 Analysis of Part Requirements
- The part part features, dimensions, and
tolerance specifications - Step 1.1 feature analysis
- Step 1.2 dimensional and tolerance analyses
6Step 2 Selection of Raw Workpiece
- Attributes
- Shape
- Size (dimensions and weight)
- Material
7Step 3 Manufacturing Operations and Sequences
- Factors influence the
- Accessibility and setup
- Types of machines and tools available
- Batch size
- Surface roughness and tolerance requirements
- Operations are dependent on one another
- Cutting forces and rigidity of the workpiece-tool
machine tool - to evaluate the alternatives
- Quality of product produced
- The efficiency of machining
8Step 4 Selection of Machine Tools
- Factors
- -related attributes kind of feature desired,
the dimensions of the workpiece, etc. - tool-related attributes process capability,
size, tooling capability, etc. - -related information production
quantity and order frequency - Evaluation
- Input information part tolerances, process
capability of machine tools, processing cost, raw
material cost, unit salvage value. - Note unit processing cost depends on the type
and size of the machine, production volume of
parts, workpiece-related information - Output unit cost of production, manufacturing
lead time and quality ? select the best machine - Yijk KijkYojk
- Ysjk KsjkYojk
- Xojk KijkXijk KsjkXsjkKijkf(Yijk
) - Technological coefficient of scrap Ks
SC/(1-SC) Sc the fraction of scrap - Technological coefficient of input Ki 1 Ks
9Example
- Suppose 500 units of a shaft are to be
manufactured within 10.003 in. Suppose there are
three alternative machine tools with the
information given in the following table. Select
a machine tool to perform turning operation. The
other data are Unit raw material cost 10,
unit salvage value 2, process average
1.0015in. - Basic data on types of machine tools
- Type SD unit proc. unit proc.
setup - cost ()
time (m) time (m) - Turret lathe 0.007 7.00 1.00
15 - Engine lathe 0.001 10.00 0.90
30 - Auto. Screw 0.0005 15.00 0.70
60
10Solution
- Turret lathe
- Zu11 0.21 and Zl11 0.64 . Thus SC
0.416830.26109 0.67792 - Technological coefficient of scrap Ks
SC/(1-SC)2.1048 - Technological coefficient of input Ki 1 Ks
3.1048 - Number of raw units required Yi KiYo 1552.4
(units) - Number of units scrapped Ys KsYo 1052.4
(units) - Unit output cost Xo KiXi KsXsKif(Yi)
48.572 - Manufacturing lead time S tYi 151.1552.4
1567.4 (min) - Engine lathe
- Number of units scrapped Ys KsYo 33 (units)
- Unit output cost Xo KiXi KsXsKif(Yi) 21.28
- Manufacturing lead time S tYi 510.06 (min)
- Automatic screw machine
- Number of units scrapped Ys KsYo 1 (units)
- Unit output cost Xo KiXi KsXsKif(Yi) 25.03
- Manufacturing lead time S tYi 410.7 (min)
11Step 5 Selection of Tools, Workholding Devices,
Inspection Equipment
- The selection of machine tools, cutting tools,
fixtures and inspection equipment is based
primarily on - The , , , , and of parts essentially
determine the types of workholding devices
required
12Step 6 Determining Machining Conditions and
Manufacturing Times
- Input information workpiece material, machine
tool, cutting tool, etc. - Output optimal machining conditions cutting
speed (v, m/min), feed (f, mm/rev), depth of cut
(d, mm) - Objective reduce cost and increase production
rate - Notations
- c0 cost rate including labor and
overhead(/min) - ct tool cost per cutting edge
- t1 non productive time (loading, unloading
part, idle)(min) - tc machining time per piece (min/piece)
- td time to change a cutting edge (min)
- tac actual cutting time per piece (min/piece)
- T tool life (min)
13Minimum Cost per Piece
- Cost per component, Cu nonproductive cost per
piece machining time cost per piece tool
changing cost per piece tooling cost per piece - The feed rate and depth of cut are normally fixed
to their allowable values, optimum cutting speed - Optimal tool life
14Maximum Production Rate
- Time per piece, Tu nonproductive time per piece
cost of machining time per piece tool
changing time per piece - Optimal solution
- Manufacturing lead time major setup time TuQ.
- Example 5.2 (reading)
15The Principal Process Planning Approaches
- The manual -based planning method
- The method
- The CAPP method
- The CAPP method
- process planning
16The Manual Experience-Based Method
- Basic steps
- Analysis of part requirements
- Selection of raw workpiece
- Determining manufacturing operations and their
sequences - Selection of machine tools
- Selection of tools, workholding devices, and
inspection equipment - Determining machining conditions and
manufacturing times processing - Problems
- Time consuming
- Inconsistent plans
- Take long time and high cost to develop skill of
a successful planner
17The CAPP Method
- A multiple of interactions among various
functions of an organization and dynamic changes
require to use in process planning (e.g.
machine break down, design change, etc.) - Advantages
- Produce accurate and consistent plans
- Reduce cost and lead time
- Reduce skill requirements
- Increase productivity of process planers
- user friendly interface sub-programs cost and
lead time estimation, work standards.
18A CAPP Framework
19The Variant CAPP Method
- A process plan for a new part is created by
recalling, identifying, and retrieving an for
a similar part and making for the new
part - Process plans are developed for parts
representing a family of parts ( ) - Steps
- Define the coding scheme classification
- Group the parts into part families
- Develop a standard process plan
- Retrieve and modify the standard plan
20The Variant CAPP Method
- Advantages
- Reduce time and labor requirements
- Standardized procedures
- Lower development and hardware costs and shorter
development times - Disadvantages
- Maintaining consistency in editing is difficult
- Adequately accommodating various combinations of
factors is difficult - Dependent on the experience of process planners
- Existing systems CAM-I, MIPLAN
21The Generative CAPP Method
- Process plans are generated by means of , ,
, and to perform uniquely the processing
decisions - Components
- Geometry-based coding scheme define all
geometric features. - Process knowledge in the form of decision logic
and data perform all activities of process
planning automatically - Tools for developing a good manufacturing
knowledge structure flowcharts, decision trees,
decision tables, iterative algorithms, expert
system shells, etc.
22Knowledge-Based Process Planning
- A computer program that can store the
manufacturing and use that knowledge to
the decision process of a human expert - Problems
- The knowledge representation a real-world
problem representation scheme by which computer
can manipulate the information - The inference mechanism the way in which the
computer finds the solution. e.g. IF-THEN - A knowledge-Based System EXPLAN