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Networking all of production

By Leslie Langnau | October 30, 2017

As part of the Industry 4.0 area at EMO 2017 trade show, HEIDENHAIN will present its Connected Machining system of production in which all work steps are networked – from the design to the deliverable component – through the company’s TNC control. It can access all order-related information in a company network, enabling efficient exchange of data. Partner companies in the areas of CAD/CAM, machine tools, tool measurement and tool management will collaborate in the demonstration.

HEIDENHAIN’s premise is that a workpiece is produced on a machine tool, so all information should be consolidated there and data on the status and quality of a workpiece must flow back into the production IT system. The machinist, who is responsible for the quality of components and for staying on schedule, needs to have access to all this data.

In the scenario to be presented, calibrated tools are already in the machine magazine, the operator having scanned a code on each tool holder when loading it, so the TNC 640 knows which cutters are available. Using the control’s Remote Desktop Manager software, the CAM system can be accessed directly, while the CAM software interrogates the tool database during program creation.

In the Batch Process Manager, the operator schedules execution of the production job on the machine. NC programs and the position of the clamped workpiece on the pallet are linked with respect to the order and sorted into a list according to priority. The TNC operator can schedule several production orders simultaneously.

The control supports this by comparing the tools required to run the program with the cutters actually available in the machine, reporting any tools that are missing. The operator can then, for example, output a list of new tools that need to be prepared to execute the job. Information on the estimated machining time can be used for further order planning and, together with information from the tool management system, for ordering new tools.

New StateMonitor software supports the operator, capturing data from connected machines, presenting a real-time view of machine status and sending messages to computers throughout the company as well as to mobile devices. The software can send a message to the tool presetting station if the life of a tool is approaching a critical value. Based on stored data, new tools can be preset, a unique code added to the holder for unambiguous identification and the data sent back into the network so the CAM system and virtual machining software are able to access it.

Automatic workpiece measurement on the machine delivers important data for quality assurance, which can be archived or evaluated. The data is centrally available to all other systems, meaning that from the NC program to the tool presetting station, all links in the process chain can be optimized.

Core components of Connected Machining are the DNC interface, the Remote Desktop Manager and the StateMonitor software. The interface establishes a connection to enterprise resource planning systems and production control systems and links StateMonitor to the company network. Remote Desktop Manager provides access to all Windows applications.

Furthermore, functions for data presentation such as viewers for PDFs and graphics files as well as for CAD files in STEP or IGES format are a standard feature. A browser is installed on the control, enabling simple Ethernet connection to a company network.

HEIDENHAIN CORP.
www.heidenhain.us


Filed Under: CONNECTIVITY • fieldbuses • networks • gateways

 

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