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Better Production:
Improving Inspection Throughput And Reducing Scrap
with CMMs
FN Manufacturing LLC (Columbia, South Carolina) manufactures small arms for
the military and civilian law enforcement markets. The company employs Mori
Seiki horizontal and vertical CNC machining centers as well as conventional
machining equipment to produce close-tolerance aluminum and steel components,
including receivers, bolts, slides and rails. Subcontract machining, heat
treating and surface finishing are also among the company’s specialties.
As part of its large equipment complement, the company operates coordinate
measuring machines, including an Xcel 7107, four PFx 454s, four Mistral 775s,
two Global 777s and three One 775s, all from Brown & Sharpe (North Kingston,
Rhode Island), for its inspection operations.
In the past, FN Manufacturing used primarily conventional machining techniques
to manufacture parts and traditional variable gaging such as micrometers, height
gages and comparators, as well as attribute gages such as plug gages and
function go/no-go gages to inspect dimensional features.
“Our CMM departmental approach has been quality-oriented, with a focus on
process control,” says Scott C. Kramer, FN Manufacturing Quality Engineering
Supervisor. “We went from using the CMMs for final inspection of parts to
in-process verification and acceptance in a short period of time. Our overall
number of machines jumped from five to 14 in 6 to 7 years.
“The CMMs have also been an important part of our program to re-industrialize
parts to CNC machines,” he continues. “They give us actual numbers in real time
to make adjustments to the machining centers.”
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| CMMs at FN Manufacturing are installed on the shop floor near production equipment. With this arrangement, operators spend less time waiting for an open CMM.
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All of the company’s CMMs are installed on the shop floor near production
equipment. The majority are integrated into the machining center cells, with, on
average, one CMM for every four machining centers. Parts are moved to the CMM
and manually loaded by the operators. The company says that having a CMM close
at hand means that operators spend less time traveling to and from the CMM. In
addition, they spend less time waiting for an open machine, in turn reducing
overall inspection time. All of the CMMs are tied into FN Manufacturing’s
intranet to allow uploading of any inspection program to any machine from a
central server.
“Considering that the machining centers are networked the same way, and that
jobs are frequently moved from one machining cell to another, CMMs can be
managed in this way as well,” says Mr. Kramer. “With this arrangement, we have a
good deal of flexibility and confidence that we can provide the required support
to our production operations.”
However, this flexibility introduces part programming challenges and the need to
examine a different way of grouping programs and handling machine access, says
Mr. Kramer.
“We could no longer associate one machine with one or two inspections, and one
inspection with one set of probing tips,” he says. “We had to come up with a
family or group approach to programs and solve our interchangeability issues.”
Mr. Kramer and his staff solved the problem by creating a generic alignment
procedure off of a square L-bracket, instead of using traditional part alignment
techniques. Each CMM has a square bolted to the work surface that is used to
align each workpiece. The CMMs are set up with a pallet change system that
allows any workpiece fixture to be put on any CMM and run with minimal effort by
the operator. The machine operator manually nests the workpiece fixture in the
square, and the part program is called up and run. No manual alignments are
needed when changing over from one workpiece to another or from CMM to CMM.
Company: FN Manufacturing LLC
Problem: Lack of interchangeability, slow in-process inspections
Solution: CMMs from Brown & Sharpe
Result: In-process and first-piece inspection was expedited, scrap reduced |
“Using this procedure, we can measure several different parts
throughout the day, and the operator has to perform only one
alignment,” says Mr. Kramer. “The individual part programs execute the
part alignment, thus saving the operator time while making the CMM
more user-friendly.”
The procedure also works with the tip qualifications, the company
says. Tip verification is performed once per shift; a full tool rack
qualification is performed only when the verification indicates an
inconsistency. The one qualification handles all of the in-house
probing needs.
“Before a program is released for production, we perform a full
correlation back to known methods, such as SMTE, gaging and other
methods,” explains Mr. Kramer. “This ensures accurate, reliable
programs, which are retained with revision levels. Any change is
documented in the program body, and all of the copies are updated in
the server and the necessary CMMs. If an update includes new probing,
then a correlation is performed for verification. This approach
reduces the likelihood of the CMM accepting non-compliant parts as
good products by accident.
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| The company moved the focus of its inspection operation from final inspection to in-process verification and acceptance. Dimensional data from the CMMs are used to make adjustments to machining centers.
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“Literally, we can go from one machine to another and measure any part
as needed,” says Mr. Kramer.
The CMMs located on the shop floor, with the exception of the model
One CMMs that have aluminum frame/Plexiglas enclosures (formulated
in-house) built around them to protect them from shop contaminates.
These enclosures include doors for easy load and unload, the
manufacturer says.
Designed specifically for shopfloor measurement and inspection
operations, the model One CNC CMM contains critical drive components,
all of which are completely enclosed to optimize reliability.
Recirculating bearing packs are sealed to resist airborne
contaminants, resulting in high life expectancy and low maintenance.
The inherent stiffness provides volumetric accuracy and repeatability
equal to those of air bearings at a higher level of acceleration, the
manufacturer says.
The materials and components used throughout the CMM are designed to
minimize thermal effects and enhance measurement throughput and
accuracy on the shop floor. Its high-density polymer composite base is
said to stiffen the machine to provide ten times more vibration
dampening than traditional materials. The base also absorbs
high-frequency noise typically found on the shop floor, further
reducing vibrations that affect measuring accuracy, the manufacturer
says.
Dimensional data are used to determine how well the process is running
and what adjustments, if any, need to be made to the machining
centers. Dimensional data are given to machining center operators in
the form of a printed report. The CMMs are also used in reverse
engineering applications to feed dimensional data to the company’s
engineering department or tool fabrication department in order to
improve products and processes.
The volume of dimensional data collected per feature depends upon the
critical nature of the feature. “Our goal is to collect as much data
as possible while still having a cycle time that does not make the
inspection counter-productive,” says Mr. Kramer.
In summary, the CMMs allow for fast inspection of complicated parts.
First-piece inspections that used to require days in an open setup are
now completed in a few hours, while in-process inspections that
sometimes took several hours now take minutes. The company reports
that after implementing the CMMs on one particular production line,
the capability of the machines was assessed; adjustments were made to
the machining centers and the process; and scrap was reduced by 50
percent in less than 4 months.
Article courtesy of MMS Online
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