After decades of tinkering with the machined part process, some might consider
it nearly impossible to improve on the methodology. Not so, states Michael
Angulo, an applications engineer in the Manufacturing Research Division,
aeronautics sector at Lockheed Martin Aeronautics (Palmdale, California). The
quintessential troubleshooter, Mr. Angulo and a team of quality engineers
focused on evaluating the company’s manufacturing and dimensional inspection
operations, and also on creating a time reduction plan for the machined parts
process.
To successfully introduce technology within the company, a tactical
implementation strategy was turned into reality via a hands-on pilot program. A
goal of process monitoring and tightening process controls to reduce
out-of-tolerance conditions was established. If all time-reduction goals were
accomplished, then the company would reap improvements in machine repeatability,
accuracy, product quality and serviceability.
The Focus Turns to Machined Parts
At Lockheed Martin, gearing up for a production run of quality aircraft parts
entails a part inspection plan. Traditionally, if a machined part makes the
grade, it moves on to the next process. If the part is rejected, it can be
reworked; however, its inherent value is thus reduced by half.
Nothing puts a downward curve on productivity like a long line at the parts
inspection door in a manufacturing facility. In a typical inspection scenario,
the machine setup is broken down and the part is removed. It is then transported
to quality control for a checkup. The process sounds smooth enough. However, on
a busy day, people and parts can quickly pile up at the CMM, in turn creating a
bottleneck. During this time, those CNC machines are moving on to a different
part order with a different setup. If the part does not meet the engineering
dimensional requirements, then a rework queue results.
Accomplishing inspection directly on the milling machine could essentially
reduce the process times needed to break down part setup and move on to
inspection, the company hypothesized. Mr. Angulo says he projected that the
company could achieve a 25 percent reduction in lost time as a result of this
on-machine probing and inspection.
Deploying the on-machine inspection solution began with the installation of
Metrolosys software from
Shadow Automation, Inc. (Chino Hills, California) to be used with a
five-axis CNC machine tool. The software was developed to essentially transform
any ordinary machine tool into a CMM, says the manufacturer.
Capable of being integrated with MasterCAM from
CNC Software (Tolland, Connecticut), Metrolosys software works in tandem
with any CNC milling machine that has a tool touch probe. The program enables
manufacturers to implement a quality process directly on the shop floor that is
bi-directionally delivered and controlled by the QA/QC department to perform
on-machine inspections on-the-fly. According to Shadow Automation, this new
approach to inspection enables manufacturers to capture critical errors such as
errors in design, CNC programming or setup upstream in the process.
With Metrolosys, users can generate full Geometric, Dimensioning and
Tolerancing (GD&T) inspection procedures using Dimensional Measurement Interface
Standards or DMIS 5.0 programming language in the background, all while creating
probing motion G code. Probing data can be manually or automatically collected,
and the collected 3D data can be compared to an imported CAD master model or a
user-defined CAD model to generate GD&T inspection reports directly from the CNC
machine tool touch probe. Another residual effect is that the machine tool (with
its larger area) can actually measure much larger parts than a conventional CMM.
The technology foundation for the Lockheed pilot program included two
networked workstation computers, Pentium-class desktops, Windows 2000 OS,
CNC-6000 machine tool controls from AGFM (Chesapeake, Virginia) and a volumetric
laser calibration system from Optodyne (Compton, California), which was supplied
by the contractor.
A critical phase of the time reduction benchmark involved the on-site
installation and testing of a designated five-axis CNC machine tool, with
travels of 395 inches by 80 inches by 43 inches (in the Lockheed Martin plant).
The volumetric compensation of the laser was performed after the setup of the
machine tool. This process uses off-the-shelf software, computer hardware, laser
gages and mirrors that run independently from the machine control. Optodyne’s
laser system is driven by a CNC G-code program produced by Metrolosys.
Laser gages interface with a stand-alone computer to track the motion, and
the software records the position and repeatability of the motion. Once this is
completed, a multi-dimensional array of compensation factors or errors in the
motion are captured and recorded. If needed, this information can be used by the
software to probe parts that are later produced using the machining center, thus
reducing measurement uncertainty. Once the laser measurement process was
completed and the results were analyzed, the machine tool was certified by the
company’s calibration laboratory.
The networked workstation computers were initially dedicated to creating and
maintaining the program’s inspection motion, as well as to creating the final GD&T
reports. The participating Lockheed quality inspector and the machine tool
operators worked as a team, and they were trained to use the on-machine
inspection software and probing equipment. The operators performed a range of
hands-on tasks, from creating and defining the probing sequence to post
processing the file needed to run the sequence. The team has now performed
machine probe inspection on more than 90 production part programs using the
process—a landmark in the project.
Setting A New Standard
The benchmark has since become standard practice at Lockheed Martin. The
on-machine inspection process has addressed two out of seven critical factors in
achieving lean manufacturing. First, the time reduction plan avoids
transportation to the CMM and eliminates the old QC queue. Secondly, the process
reduces setup times on both ends. Moving inspection to the machine tool earlier
in the machined part process results in better parts, says the company.
 |
| The on-machine approach to inspection
is conducive to capturing critical errors in design, CNC programming or
setup upstream in the process. |
“Given the magnitude of the benchmark, this type of pilot program requires a
high level of cooperation between tooling, design, CNC programmers and quality
control inspectors to initiate a quality inspection program that introduces new
concepts,” explains Mr. Angulo. “The focus must be on the end result. Based on
the success of the program, we will make on-machine inspection a part of any
factory acceptance for machine tools, so we will not have to integrate the
process at our factory.”
Today, three CNC machines are running 24/7 with on-machine inspection
capabilities. The machinist now downloads the NC program and probes data points
of a part within a tolerable timeframe, with future plans to produce his/her own
inspection report. If there are no exceptions to the report, then the part
proceeds to the next step. The inspection backlog is expected to be reduced. As
long as the cutter does not break, parts are moving on down the production line.
With the initial phase of the time reduction plan completed, the company is
building on this foundation and looking for continuous improvement and
efficiency in its processes. The quality team is now working with machine tool
manufacturers to ensure that the controllers are better attuned to the
on-machine inspection process.
Mr. Angulo and his team of quality engineers, with integration assistance
from CAD/CAM Consulting and Shadow Automation, have pioneered a new chapter in
lean manufacturing, and the dividends are tangible. The time-reduction program
at Lockheed Martin-Palmdale has reduced the variability of the machine process.
In the end, the program has also fostered a better understanding of the
processed product quality.
Article courtesy of MMS Online.