Any manufacturer who has launched a new product is well acquainted with the risks associated with the production lifecycle. They not only need to ensure they have an adequate, readily available supply of components required for the initial deployment but, as customer demand increases, for a successful ramp-up as well. Navigating fluctuating supply and demand – and getting the product from unit 1 to unit 1M – can be an especially challenging journey when leveraging legacy, inflexible technologies that cannot adapt or pivot as requirements change.
Fortunately, today’s next-generation, flexible solutions allow manufacturers to avoid many of the common pitfalls associated with production ramp-up. Let’s dive in.
Risks that Threaten Ramp Up
Manufacturers are highly aware of the risks that threaten production ramp-up, but even knowing what the risks are doesn’t mean they’re easy to overcome.
If the assembly line takes too long to deploy, it not only delays the introduction of unit 1 but limits the ability of the facility to meet the number of units required over time. Slow upgrades on the assembly line occur when there’s inflexibility to build new product revisions, and insufficient capacity can happen when there’s an inability to scale the assembly line.
As production ramps up and units per hour increase, quality issues may emerge. Unpredictable output happens when there’s performance inconsistency; line downtime occurs when there’s a slow response to unexpected issues. And overall site disruption happens when there’s an inability to transfer technology or have dual sites.
Without the right tools and technologies in place, delayed deployment and reduced quality are difficult to avoid—but that’s all changing.
How to Avoid Common Pitfalls with Next-Generation Automation
Products like smart meters, automotive modules, batteries, and power tools all have components that require assembly, which includes various steps such as gluing, soldering, and screwdriving. Until now, manufacturers have approached these intricate assembly stages in two ways—with human operators, who are fast and flexible but are not scalable and have limited capacity for improvement, or with basic or custom automation, which is resilient to disruption but isn’t always scalable and certainly isn’t flexible.
Next-generation automation solutions, including Bright Machines Microfactories, introduce fast, flexible, scalable production that’s resilient to disruption and poised for continuous improvements. Using a software-driven approach, microfactories make the setup, configuration, and deployment of assembly lines easy to navigate; software runs work orders and leverages data from the line to analyze production in real-time, so any concerns can be addressed before they happen.
Next-generation automation is also faster to deploy. Basic automation can take up to a year to analyze, design, fabricate, assemble, program, integrate and deploy; modern automation can be deployed in half that time (or less!) with a flexible architecture that makes it easy to configure lines, add devices, and create new recipes.
Other production benefits from next-generation automation include:
Manufacturing requirements and risks are rapidly evolving alongside today’s dynamic market, meaning that production (and production ramp-up) need to adapt as well. The benefits of a software-driven approach – one that leverages next-generation, flexible automation – are unparalleled.
Ready to start your automation journey? Reach out to us at sales@w5engineering.com