Tipos de Manufactura
Tipos de Manufactura
Tipos de Manufactura
Chapter 1
etc. One of the objectives of CIM is to achieve the consolidation and integration of these
islands of automation. This requires sharing of information among different applications
or sections of a factory, accessing incompatible and heterogeneous data and devices. The
ultimate objective is to meet the competition by improved customer satisfaction through
reduction in cost, improvement in quality and reduction in product development time.
CIM makes full use of the capabilities of the digital computer to improve
manufacturing. Two of them are:
i. Variable and Programmable automation
ii. Real time optimization
The computer has the capability to accomplish the above for hardware components of
manufacturing (the manufacturing machinery and equipment) and software component
of manufacturing (the application software, the information flow, database and so on).
The capabilities of the computer are thus exploited not only for the various bits and
pieces of manufacturing activity but also for the entire system of manufacturing. Computers
have the tremendous potential needed to integrate the entire manufacturing system and
thereby evolve the computer integrated manufacturing system.
development in both CAD and CAM. The need to meet the design and manufacturing
requirements of aerospace industries after the Second World War necessitated the
Chapter 1
development these technologies. The manufacturing technology available during late 40’s
and early 50’s could not meet the design and manufacturing challenges arising out of the
need to develop sophisticated aircraft and satellite launch vehicles. This prompted the US
Air Force to approach MIT to develop suitable control systems, drives and programming
techniques for machine tools using electronic control.
The first major innovation in machine control is the Numerical Control (NC),
demonstrated at MIT in 1952. Early Numerical Control Systems were all basically hardwired
systems, since these were built with discrete systems or with later first generation integrated
chips. Early NC machines used paper tape as an input medium. Every NC machine was
fitted with a tape reader to read paper tape and transfer the program to the memory of the
machine tool block by block. Mainframe computers were used to control a group of NC
machines by mid 60’s. This arrangement was then called Direct Numerical Control (DNC)
as the computer bypassed the tape reader to transfer the program data to the machine
controller. By late 60’s mini computers were being commonly used to control NC machines.
At this stage NC became truly soft wired with the facilities of mass program storage, off-
line editing and software logic control and processing. This development is called Computer
Numerical Control (CNC).
Since 70’s, numerical controllers are being designed around microprocessors, resulting
in compact CNC systems. A further development to this technology is the distributed
numerical control (also called DNC) in which processing of NC program is carried out in
different computers operating at different hierarchical levels - typically from mainframe
host computers to plant computers to the machine controller. Today the CNC systems are
built around powerful 32 bit and 64 bit microprocessors. PC based systems are also
becoming increasingly popular.
Manufacturing engineers also started using computers for such tasks like inventory
control, demand forecasting, production planning and control etc. CNC technology was
adapted in the development of co-ordinate measuring machine’s (CMMs) which automated
inspection. Robots were introduced to automate several tasks like machine loading,
materials handling, welding, painting and assembly. All these developments led to the
evolution of flexible manufacturing cells and flexible manufacturing systems in late 70’s.
Evolution of Computer Aided Design (CAD), on the other hand was to cater to the
geometric modeling needs of automobile and aeronautical industries. The developments
in computers, design workstations, graphic cards, display devices and graphic input
and output devices during the last ten years have been phenomenal. This coupled with
the development of operating system with graphic user interfaces and powerful interactive
(user friendly) software packages for modeling, drafting, analysis and optimization
provides the necessary tools to automate the design process.
CAD in fact owes its development to the APT language project at MIT in early 50’s.
Several clones of APT were introduced in 80’s to automatically develop NC codes from