Welcome to โAsk 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
Dear Deb: Isnโt digital manufacturing only for big companies with big budgets?
I donโt want to age myself, but olโ Deb here remembers the days when she had a TV with only five channels. I was perfectly content with my antenna TV โ as long as I had Dallas and Wheel of Fortune, I was a happy camper.
The idea of getting cable felt unnecessary. I was satisfied with the status quo. Of course, I eventually gave in. Suddenly having 30 more channels on television opened new worlds for me. I mean, MTV and HBO! And it didnโt cost all that much.
Diving into the world of digital manufacturing is also something you can do at a reasonable cost. And itโs a plunge worth taking, because it will save your company time and money in the long run.
Letโs say you have a manual assembly line. Your output is counted by human eyeballs and inputted into a computer. For a relatively low cost (like that of a 22-inch TV), your company can buy a sensor retrofit kit. What exactly can that do? You place a proximity sensor at the end of the factory line, and it automatically tracks each product coming off the line.
If for some reason that line goes down, you donโt have to wait two hours for someone to tell you; youโll know it in real time. Or, itโll tell you how long your machines are on. Or which shift is the most productive.
Now, a sensor without a computer is like eyes without a brain. And even those computers are becoming incredibly cheap โ Iโm talking under $50! Open-source, low-cost microcomputers like Raspberry Pi, Arduino or BeagleBone are used to teach high schoolers about computers, and theyโre sophisticated enough to work in your operations.
For under $400 (and getting cheaper by the month), youโll be able to gather and interpret data, then identify opportunities where your company can become more efficient. This can pay for itself many, many times over.
So no, digital manufacturing isnโt just for big companies with big budgets. You can get started for basically the price of six months of cable TV.
Assuring quality,
Deb
Check out last week’s Ask Deb here:
Where are manufacturing jobs?
Deb from QA wants to hear your questions. Send โem to debfromqa@mxdusa.org and sheโll answer as soon sheโs done with her shift.