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Integrating CMMs With Shopfloor Operations
By Christine L. Witkos
The case for a
shopfloor coordinate measuring machine combines the arguments in favor of
shopfloor gaging with the case for a CMM in general. Measuring work on the shop
floor can bring the application of the measurement closer to real time, so the
results have more value in controlling the process. And compared with other
measuring systems that can be used in manufacturing operations, the CMM offers
the most flexibility. A CMM can accurately measure objects of widely varying
sizes and geometric configurations, and it can describe the relationship between
separate features of a workpiece. This flexibility, along with a CMM’s speed
relative to surface plate techniques or fixed gages, allows measurement to be
used cost effectively to refine the process and analyze process trends.
Integrating the speed, flexibility and accuracy of CMMs into shopfloor
operations has been an ongoing trend. Shopfloor integration makes the measuring
function integral to the machining process. The CMM may be physically attached,
as in a transfer line, or it may be connected by some type of transfer
mechanism, such as a cart or a rail-guided vehicle, that moves the work to the
CMM from a machine tool.
Beyond the obvious benefit of real-time or close-to-real-time process control,
integrated shopfloor gaging with a CMM has various advantages. On the shop
floor, gaging is most often performed by machine tool operators themselves,
reducing the need for special inspectors. Another benefit of shopfloor gaging is
its ability to build a historical database that tracks the way machines, parts,
pallets and fixtures have behaved during the actual machining process.
Capturing Time
An advantage of shopfloor gaging using a CMM is speed. Machined parts are
becoming increasingly complex, with more measurement features and tighter
tolerances. Meanwhile, high speed production to high standards of precision
creates a demand for high inspection throughput.
The most dramatic advantage of the CMM is the increased inspection efficiency
when compared with traditional surface plate/precision hand tool techniques. For
example, measuring the location of a single hole using a surface plate and a
height gage can involve:
- Squaring the face of the part with the surface plate.
- Indicating the top edge and bottom edge of the hole’s opening using a height
gage.
- Comparing the measurements to a reference.
- Recording the readings.
- Calculating the difference between the measurements to find the location of the
hole center line.
By contrast, measuring the same hole with a basic CMM involves:
- Automatically aligning the part with the CMM by measuring a datum plane, datum
line and datum point. Approximate time: 30 seconds.
- Touching the hole in four locations. Approximate time: 8 seconds.
- Pressing the Print button to record the X location, Y location and diameter of
the hole.
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| Coordinate measuring machines for shopfloor use are designed to resist the influence of ambient temperature on measurement results.
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A part’s complexity further increases the inspection time for the operator using
hand measurement tools. Because height gages and similar inspection tools only
measure along a single axis, at least two setups are needed to locate details on
the face of a workpiece. Even more setups may be needed to locate certain
details. And when multiple sides of a part are checked, the setup has to be
changed each time the part is rotated. The CMM, on the other hand, can measure
multiple faces of a part without
disturbing the setup.
Through faster measurements with fewer setups, inspection time can be reduced to
as little as one-tenth of the time required using hand tool techniques. Ten
parts can be inspected on a CMM in the same amount of time it takes to inspect
one part using surface plate technology.
More sophisticated machines can reduce inspection time even more. The operator
can be relieved of such time-consuming tasks as manually recording readings,
checking the inspection sequence and performing computations. An additional
benefit of the more advanced CMMs is their ability to measure arc lengths and
profiles. These routines are literally impossible to perform using conventional
inspection methods or even a manual CMM.
Countering Heat And Vibration
Building CMMs for shopfloor operations is a challenge. The effect of changing
temperature on the measuring machine and the workpiece is the single most
difficult obstacle to overcome.
One approach is to compensate for thermal expansion and thermal distortion
errors by means of temperature sensors placed at critical points in the machine
structure. Expansion and distortion values that are extrapolated from the sensor
data are used to compensate each measured point, virtually canceling out the
influence of temperature variations over a wide range.
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| One advantage of a CMM over other gages is its efficiency at inspecting complex parts with multiple critical features. CMMs can be configured to handle a wide range of part sizes and shapes, eliminating the need for custom gaging.
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Another approach
relates to the choice of materials in the CMM’s construction. For example, the
design of Brown & Sharpe’s “One” shop-floor CMM is built around the use of steel
bearings. All of the other components of the CMM have thermal properties similar
to steel to minimize the effects of temperature variation on measurement
accuracy. The X-axis carriage and Z-axis ram are constructed from an
aluminum/silicon carbide matrix material that exhibits a similar coefficient of
expansion to that of steel. At the same time, this material is light weight,
allowing smaller motors to be used in the CMM, a change that further reduces the
weight of the machine and also reduces the heat the machine generates.
Another challenge in placing precision CMMs on the shop floor is shielding them
from vibration. The design of the One machine relies on a high-density polymer
composite base to provide ten times more vibration dampening than traditional
materials. This base’s protection against vibration even extends to absorbing
high-frequency noise.
Yet another design challenge that can’t be overlooked relates to software.
Because of the need for greater accessibility when a CMM is used on the shop
floor, software can play a role as important as that of the hardware. The
software should allow operators of all skill levels to achieve accurate,
repeatable inspection results. Brown & Sharpe’s software does this by including
automated routines accessible using a graphic operator interface, as well as
tutorial and on-board training modules covering topics before, during and after
programming and data gathering. A special capability recognizes the type of
feature being measured to create a graphical representation of this feature on
the computer screen. The capability lets the operator rotate and enlarge a model
of the inspected feature in order to see more clearly where the part is trending
out of tolerance.
Christine L. Witkos
Product Manager
Brown and Sharpe
Article courtesy of MMS online.
MMS Online is a trademark of Gardner
Publications, Inc, copyright 1997-2005. MMS Online and all contents are
properties of Gardner Publications, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
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