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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Wednesday, April 28, 2021
Industry 4.0 and digital transformation technologies are used by aerospace and defense equipment manufacturers to increase productivity and generate new business models.
FREMONT, CA : Building cyber-physical systems inside the shop floor that accelerate industrial automation, interoperability, and other optimization applications is essential for manufacturing growth. This overview will make data valuable because capturing, processing, and transferring data will influence any Industry 4.0 business model.
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Industry 4.0 and digital transformation technologies are used by aerospace and defense equipment manufacturers to increase productivity and generate new business models, but it all begins with data gathering from the factory floor.
Several of the existing problems of aerospace and defense OEMs, like inventory supply issues, the need to stay competitive and developing energy-efficient equipment are expected to be solved by Industry 4.0. To achieve these benefits, OEMs must implement data collection mechanisms and techniques that tell the story about the operations and interconnected processes on the shop floor.
It is also a relatively new improvement to standard procedures. Capturing data from each corner of the shop floor and manufacturing processes was nearly impossible before the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) arrived on the scene about a decade ago.
Solving the Diffculties of Extracting Data in Aerospace and Defense OEM Facilities Data from the deepest part of the shop floor and transactional processes can now be harnessed due to IIoT solutions and Edge computing developments. IIoT applications have also made it possible to compile and analyze all the data collected during aerospace and defense equipment production.
Collecting various data is possible with IoT hardware like sensors, radio frequency identification devices (RFID), and smart devices. It enables Industry 4.0 business models like predictive maintenance and data-driven production management to be implemented. Today, IIoT hardware can be connected to legacy equipment, solving the problem of retrieving data from assets that lack wireless or digital I/O abilities.
IIoT hardware gives OEMs the resources they need to improve modern equipment's data collection efforts. The frequency of an equipment's vibration during use can be determined with a vibration sensor. The data collected can then be used to calculate the impact of vibrations on tool heads and other moving parts of the machine.
Solving the Challenges of Large-scale Industry 4.0 Implementations with an IIoT Platform
Edge computing allows for the decentralization needed to provide near-real-time automation, a symbol of Industry 4.0, which must be good news for the aerospace and defense industries. While the capability to process data at the edge is an integral part of any Industry 4.0 implementation, facility-wide operations need more processing power than the typical Edge computer can provide.
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