Âé¶¹´«Ã½

Published

Job Shop Automates Using Cobot Arm

Loading and unloading a repetitive job was straining employees at B.I.C. Precision Machine, so the shop integrated a cobot arm from Absolute Machine Tools into its production process.

Share

Leaders-In background
OB7 cobot arm installed between two Doosan turning machines

The OB7 cobot arm serves two Doosan turning machines at B.I.C. Precision Machine Co. Inc. Photos: Absolute Machine Tools

Machine-tending automation is becoming more and more common in job shops across the United States, taking on a variety of forms from simple to complex. For many of these shops, the system of automation increasingly can be something that does not occupy much space on the production floor, does not require large-scale integration, and has the flexibility to be easily repurposed for future jobs. . is an example: Automation here took the form of a cobot arm.

Last February, the Blanchester, Ohio-based job shop decided to automate a repeat contract job that was very labor intensive. In the past, one employee would load and unload parts from two Doosan lathes that were situated perpendicular to each other, producing silicon iron cores used in railroad safety devices. The quick cycle time left employees essentially going in circles all day as they tended the machines.

To ease the physical burden of this job, the shop first retrofitted the machine doors to automatically open, then installed a foot pedal and a palm button to open and close the chuck, but the repetitious nature of the work was still hard on employees. To make matters worse, the shop was running into quality issues as it shifted employees in and out of that position in week-long assignments.

“We were running two shifts on these parts around the clock, and we were getting complaints,” says Foreman Shawn Allen. “Employees hated the loading and unloading of the two machines.”

Armed with Automation

To solve this problem, B.I.C. invested in Productive Robotics’ OB7 collaborative robot arm, which was supplied by Absolute Machine Tools. The OB7 is an independent seven-axis cobot that has a 1,000-mm reach and can accommodate an 11-pound payload with ±0.1 mm repeatability.

The ability for the cobot arm to work safely beside B.I.C.’s employees without the need for safety fencing was very important for the company because it did not want automation to replace a human job. Instead of employees spending their week performing repetitious loading and unloading tasks, they are now free to stage parts for the cobot arm and do more interesting work as well, such as quality checks on the tight-tolerance parts.

“It’s definitely an arm for the process, but it hasn’t replaced the brain for the process,” says Business Operations Manager Sarah Burns.

OB7 cobot arm with pneumatic gripper

The OB7 places the part in the loading station.

To integrate the robot into the lathe cell, Absolute worked with B.I.C. to place the machines parallel to each other so the cobot arm could be situated between the machines. Using a custom pneumatic gripper designed by Absolute, the cobot unloads the core from the first lathe and places it in the lower specialty staging station located near the door of the second lathe. The cobot arm then goes back to the first lathe and grips and loads an unmachined core waiting in the lathe’s single staging station. The cobot arm moves back to lathe two, where the gripper removes the completed part and places it in the upper staging station before loading the machine with the core waiting on the bottom station. Finally, the cobot arm takes the finished part from the upper staging station and places it on a tray of completed cores. This process enables the cobot arm to access as many as 20 cores in one process, running for about half an hour before an employee is needed to stage new cores for turning and move the completed cores to a final milling operation.

pneumatic gripper on the OB7

To consistently grip the silicon iron core part shown here, Absolute Machine Tools devised a pneumatic gripper for the OB7.

While B.I.C. is pleased with the final outcome of the cobot integration, the initial install took some effort. The first challenge was consistently gripping the part. Since the silicon iron core starts as a forging, the parts are inconsistent in shape. To remedy this, Absolute devised a custom pneumatic gripper to replace the cobot arm’s original electronic gripper. The second challenge was the sheer number of locations — 10 total — the shop needed to teach the cobot arm in order to perform the actions described above. Luckily, the OB7 is not programmed like traditional robots. Instead, programming uses a Samsung tablet running an application in teach mode that tracks and mimics the cobot arm’s path.

Burns says getting to the right programming and gripper took time — even “easy” automation like a cobot was not a success at once. However, avoiding repetition fatigue and hitting the tight tolerance requirements have made the automation worthwhile, she says. 

Related Content

Five-Axis

The Power of Practical Demonstrations and Projects

Practical work has served Bridgerland Technical College both in preparing its current students for manufacturing jobs and in appealing to new generations of potential machinists.

Read More

Solve Worker Shortages With ACE Workforce Development

The America’s Cutting Edge (ACE) program is addressing the current shortage in trained and available workers by offering no-cost online and in-person training opportunities in CNC machining and metrology.

Read More
Automotive

DN Solutions Responds to Labor Shortages, Reshoring, the Automotive Industry and More

At its first in-person DIMF since 2019, DN Solutions showcased a range of new technologies, from automation to machine tools to software. President WJ Kim explains how these products are responses to changes within the company and the manufacturing industry as a whole.    

Read More
Sponsored

Workholding Fixtures Save Over 4,500 Hours of Labor Annually

All World Machinery Supply designs each fixture to minimize the number of operations, resulting in reduced handling and idle spindle time.  

Read More

Read Next

CAD/CAM

Shifting From On-Machine to Offline Programming

In the midst of learning to program its CNC milling machines offline and the promise of using that experience to transfer more work to its Swiss-type lathe, an Ohio job shop is changing its company culture and taking on more complex work.

Read More
Automation

AMRs Are Moving Into Manufacturing: 4 Considerations for Implementation

AMRs can provide a flexible, easy-to-use automation platform so long as manufacturers choose a suitable task and prepare their facilities.

Read More
Top Shops

Machine Shop MBA

  Making Chips and Modern Machine Shop are teaming up for a new podcast series called Machine Shop MBA—designed to help manufacturers measure their success against the industry’s best. Through the lens of the Top Shops benchmarking program, the series explores the KPIs that set high-performing shops apart, from machine utilization and first-pass yield to employee engagement and revenue per employee.  

Read More