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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Wednesday, November 25, 2020
Primarily, AI4II technology, when adequately trained, can review feedback from heaps of assets and process thousands of data sets and images in a notably shorter period of time than a manual inspector can, with a lower margin for a mistake than a human workforce.
FREMONT, CA: Manufacturers in the aerospace sector will be aware of some of the issues manual inspectors face when they conduct an industrial inspection of an aircraft. They look in detail at whether a structure, component, product, or process meets the specification requirements.
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These challenges comprise of human error, recurring labor expenses, and health and safety concerns, chiefly associated with the necessity to speed up the inspection process in line with increasing demand for high-quality machinery that lasts.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is starting to fulfill its potential as the next revolutionary technology in driving efficiency for high-value manufacturers. Its growth has already delivered smarter and more effective ways of working, automating the processes, and overcome the challenges such as pushing down production budgets.
At the vanguard of the latest and most stirring advancements in this technology is AI for industrial inspection (AI4II), which is anchored to change the way manufacturers inspect the visual examination process.
Primarily, AI4II technology, when adequately trained, can review feedback from heaps of assets and process thousands of data sets and images in a notably shorter period of time than a manual inspector can, with a lower margin for a mistake than a human workforce. This instance works predominantly well for manufacturers that need to inspect fast and routine examinations of assets.
It also saves manufacturers money and diminishes some of the health and safety risks linked with manual examination. By decreasing the call for an engineer, AI4II qualifies manufacturers to redirect the emphasis of their highly-skilled personnel to value creation tasks rather than troubleshooting faults. It also denotes that inspectors will no longer need to examine possibly hazardous, hard-to-reach, or confined spaces.
AI4II also helps in spreading awareness of possible applications of emergent AI technologies in the conventional manufacturing industry. Manufacturers can produce data through AI to notify future technologies and materials, thus apprising future business decisions. It is expected this kind of automation will endorse a culture of data curation in the industry, in turn leading to further embracing of AI technologies to mechanize business processes.
Forthcoming, it is with no doubt that AI will be a crucial tool for high-value manufacturers. It will provide businesses with an opportunity to introduce innovation and technology to the visual industrial inspection process and incapacitate some of the challenges the industry presently faces.
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