Automated Factories: A Discussion on Challenges in Automation
Other Videos in This Series
- Part 1: Lights-out: Are Fully Automated Facilities the Future?
- Part 3: Software is Key to Realizing the Idea of a Dark Facility
- Part 4: Labor, Power & Security in a Lights-Out Factory
Guy Courtin, vice president of Industry and Advanced Technology at supply chain software and services business Tecsys Inc., spoke with Sharon Spielman, technical editor at Machine Design, about the concept of a dark, or “lights-out” facility.
In this second part of a four-part video series, Courtin talks about the tremendous advances in robotics and mechanical engineering—as well as camera technology, visual technology, using data for identification, etc.—but quickly points out that industry is still behind when it comes to picking, for instance. Why? “Because our human hands are still pretty darn good, and they are still mechanical...It’s amazing.”
READ MORE: Robots Open World of Opportunities for A3 President
Courtin notes that what we are seeing from a robotic and mechanical perspective is getting very close to being able to handle some, if not a lot, of the functions we might have in a factory or the warehouse that could then transform into a dark factory or warehouse. However, Courtin says, “This is where I think the real question is: at what cost?”
Why, he asks, is the technology not in more warehouses? “We still haven’t brought the costs down enough where any warehouse or factory is going to jump all over this,” he explains.
Change management is another concern. “It’s a very misunderstood and not-focused-upon issue when it comes to robotics and automation,” Courtin says.
When a disruptive technology is introduced to a facility that has “ritualistic” processes and procedures, inevitably change management will be needed. Courtin offers the example of a trickle-down flow that he encountered at a facility last year.
More Lights-out Manufacturing Coverage
Barely There: Replacing Manual Operations with Lights-out Processes
About the Author
Sharon Spielman
Technical Editor, Machine Design
As Machine Design’s technical editor, Sharon Spielman produces content for the brand’s focus audience—design and multidisciplinary engineers. Her beat includes 3D printing/CAD; mechanical and motion systems, with an emphasis on pneumatics and linear motion; automation; robotics; and CNC machining.
Spielman has more than three decades of experience as a writer and editor for a range of B2B brands, including those that cover machine design; electrical design and manufacturing; interconnection technology; food and beverage manufacturing; process heating and cooling; finishing; and package converting.
Email: [email protected]
LinkedIn: @sharonspielman
Facebook: Machine Design
YouTube: @MachineDesign-EBM