How will 5G transform manufacturing?

Welcome to โ€œAsk Deb from QA,โ€ a new column from MxD.

Every week, Deb from QA โ€” with decades of experience on the factory floor โ€” will answer your questions to demystify and explain the digital manufacturing industry.


Please submit your questions to debfromqa@mxdusa.org



Everyone seems to be talking about 5G, but how exactly will it โ€œtransformโ€ manufacturing?


5G is a bit like a Jimmy Johnโ€™s sandwich โ€” freaky fast. In fact, itโ€™s as much as 25 times faster than 4G. Now, you might think 5G is just for smartphones to scroll through Facebook faster, but it has a lot of implications for the manufacturing industry. Let me explain. 

Computers and machines talk to each other. However, current wireless network speeds limit just how much is being communicated. Itโ€™s fast, sure, but when weโ€™re talking about millions of complicated real-time decisions being made every minute, latency rears its ugly head. 

Translation: there may be a time lag between when an instruction is given and when the device accepts and implements that instruction. 

Even a few moments of delay โ€” because of a sluggish 4G network โ€” can cost a manufacturer a lot of money in mistakes or loss of productivity.  

Take self-driving cars. The latency issues of networks slower than 5G make it difficult for vehicles to be truly autonomous and safe (right now theyโ€™re semi-autonomous, requiring human input). When the 5G network becomes nationwide โ€” a future world with flawless communication and nearly zero latency โ€” driverless cars could become a reality. 

Whether itโ€™s a private network in your factory or nationwide coverage, when 5G is up and running itโ€™ll be like upgrading from a four-door sedan to a rocketship. Lag time will become virtually non-existent.

But back to how 5G can change manufacturing. It gives manufacturers the ability to have a modular factory, to quickly reconfigure a factory to meet current production needs without rewiring. And you can have real-time data on your products from the start of production all the way to final delivery.

Or, maybe thereโ€™s a problem on the floor, and you need a specialist to be on-site to fix the problem as soon as possible. With a super fast 5G network, you might use augmented reality to โ€œbeamโ€ the specialist to the problem site in near real-time. Big servers that once had to be built into the factory could now be in the clouds. Things that once took minutes will now take milliseconds. It adds up in a hurry. 

So yes, 5G is something that, for manufacturers, canโ€™t arrive soon enough. 

Assuring quality,
Deb

Deb from QA wants to hear your questions. Send โ€˜em to debfromqa@mxdusa.org and sheโ€™ll answer as soon sheโ€™s done with her shift. 

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