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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Thursday, June 02, 2022
The ability to establish cyber-physical systems inside the shop floor that drive industrial automation, interoperability and other optimization applications is critical to the future of manufacturing.
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FREMONT, CA: The gathering, processing, and transfer of data will drive every Industry business model. Industry 4.0 and digital transformation technologies are used by aerospace and defense equipment makers to boost productivity and develop new revenue models. Still, it all starts with data collected from the factory floor. Many of the current obstacles facing aerospace and military OEMs, such as inventory supply issues, the need to be inventive, and building energy-efficient equipment, are expected to be solved by Industry 4.0.
To realize these benefits, OEMs must implement data collection frameworks and tactics that communicate the story of shop floor operations and interconnected processes. However, this is still a relatively new shift to standard procedures. Capturing data from every shop floor area and production process was nearly impossible until the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) arrived on the scene roughly a decade ago.
Extracting Data
Data from the deepest area of the shop floor and transactional processes are harnessed thanks to advancements in IIoT and Edge computing. IIoT systems have also made it possible to collect and analyze all of the data collected during aerospace and defense equipment manufacturing. Capturing many data types is possible with IoT hardware, including sensors, radio frequency identification devices (RFID), and smart gadgets. As a result, Industry 4.0 business models like predictive maintenance and data-driven production optimization can be implemented. The aforementioned IIoT gear can now be connected to legacy equipment, resolving the problem of retrieving data from assets that do not have wireless capabilities.
Implementation of edge computing
Defeating the Obstacles to Large-Scale Industry 4.0 Implementation Edge computing, a hallmark of Industry 4.0, provides the decentralization required to deliver near real-time automation, which should be excellent news for the aerospace and military sector. Although the capacity to process data at the edge is an essential component of any Industry 4.0 implementation, facility-wide operations necessitate more computational power than the ordinary Edge device can deliver.
IIoT platform
IIoT systems provide the scalable computer resources needed to implement Industry 4.0 across an entire factory. Consider the requirement for a data-driven production optimization approach to ensure that every process in a master production plan is optimized. Edge computing lacks the resources required to assess and optimize the interconnected processes within a production plan, necessitating an IoT platform. It's worth noting that not every IoT platform can handle the issues that the aerospace and defense OEM sector faces.
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