Identifying the right quality tools for production-wide, data-driven transformation

A CMM can easily remain in service 20 years, which given the pace of technological change could have its challenges. Even the oldest CMMs, however, have proven adept at adapting to new technologies such as optical sensors, user friendly metrology software and asset management systems.

Now, however, digital transformation is making fresh demands on CMMs to be interconnected and communicative. Without the ability to collaborate with other systems and people on the shop floor, CMMs risk becoming an information black hole that prevents the real-time data flow required for smarter manufacturing.

But for many CMMs, the collaboration with modern IT systems that enables data transformation takes them outside their traditional comfort zone. Whereas the adoption of digital optical measurement, for example, is taking place within the confines of the metrology department, the quality team now increasingly needs to share metrology data in real time across the entire manufacturing workflow, from design and engineering, through to production.

Older CMMs, however, were designed to function within quality department silos, with CMM operators gathering information that often only they know how to read, act on and share.

The challenge now facing manufacturers is how to enable metrology systems to collaborate and provide the rest of the business the quality information they need in real-time, without compromising security, accuracy, precision or performance.

That’s why we have taken a multi-pronged approach to putting CMMs at the heart of data-driven, smarter manufacturing. In addition to our traditional strengths in security, performance, accuracy and precision, our latest collaborative systems technology for CMMs focuses on bolstering ease of use and real-time data exchange.

Ease of use is an enormous factor in the success of digital transformation projects. If it’s not easy for people to adjust to new ways of working, then they will ignore or resist change. It is also important to remember that the latest generation of CMM operators have grown up with consumer technology and expect collaboration between people and machines to be intuitively simple and real-time, with information provided in formats that are easy to understand and share.

For this reason, we’ve designed our collaborative systems for CMMs to give operators more control over how they access, manage, share and analyse information.

One example is Digital Control Center (dCC). It’s a handheld device that gives users instant access to metrology software in a tablet-format from anywhere near the CMM, doing away with the need to switch between computer and jogbox. And it does so in a way that feels familiar because when we built the dCC we ensured the thumb stick controls functioned similarly to those on game pads.

Our EYE-D technology automatically recognises a workpiece, aligns it, and executes the right inspection routine, freeing up operators to perform other value-added tasks. And the data it captures integrates with wider software systems to enrich the analysis of the entire manufacturing and quality control process.

PULSE, meanwhile, enables users to receive remote notifications of any significant changes in vibrations, humidity, air pressure, and crash notifications, freeing them to move around the shop floor.

And our automated CMM part loading and unloading system, TEMPO, enables organisations to run entire inspection shifts unmanned, driven by data.

Find out more on our website or contact your local Hexagon representative.

Author

  • Milan Kocic

    As Director of Business Development for Service and Support, Milan Kocic leads innovation and user experience efforts to enhance service and support offerings in North America. Milan joined Hexagon in 1995 as a Tech Engineer for PC-DMIS before managing various hardware and software product lines. He holds an MBA in International Business and Strategic Management.

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