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Eight Tips to Optimize Your Operation During the Covid Pause

So you’ve hit the Reset button. Now what? Gisbert Ledvon, Director of Business Development - Machine Tool at Heidenhain Corporation, advises companies to use this time to OPTIMIZE their organization:
Nov 04, 2020

So you’ve hit the Reset button. Now what?

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Gisbert Ledvon, Director of Business Development - Machine Tool at Heidenhain Corporation, advises companies to use this time to OPTIMIZE their organization:

  • Optimize operations throughout your company and supply chain.

  • Purchase locally – seek out new suppliers.

  • Train your staff – teach your programmers and CAM operators more about the CNC control.

  • Invest in new technology – the cost of borrowing is at an historic low and government incentives are available (including tax credits).

  • Monitor your efficiency – how much time is the CNC actually making chips?

  • Innovate – get out of your comfort zone and explore new markets.

  • Zoom – the new method of conference calls is here to stay, so use it to stay in front of customers.

  • Execute on new information and data gathered.

Heidenhain, with U.S. offices in Schaumberg, Ill., is a leading manufacturer of CNC controls, touch probes, encoders (linear, rotary and angle), electronics and other precision measurement and control equipment used in machining and automation systems. Ledvon started his career as an apprentice toolmaker in Germany nearly 40 years ago and has since held a variety of engineering, marketing and business development positions with leading global machine tool manufacturers.

Ledvon mentioned the OPTIMIZE acronym during a Zoom interview for IMTS Network. Knowing that Ledvon has worked with companies of all sizes and industries to improve their operations, we conducted a follow-up interview with him so he could share some specific examples of OPTIMIZE in action.

Optimize

“First, don’t focus on the negatives during these challenging times. There is a light at the end of the tunnel,” says Ledvon. He encourages companies to stay in touch with customers and suppliers and use this time to optimize their operations.

“We recently worked with a mid-sized, family-owned job shop that moved from a 3-axis machine to a 5-axis machine. The ability to cut more part geometries with a single set-up really opened their eyes,” he says. “They purchased a second 5-axis system just eight months later. Now they can bid on different types of parts and bid more competitively.”

Purchase Locally

ACU-RITE, which produces readout systems, precision glass scales and CNC controls, is part of the Heidenhain family. In 2018, ACU-RITE shifted some production from New York State to Schaumburg. With all of the job shops in the area, ACU-RITE chose to connect with one of them to source brackets and other mechanical components to support the retrofit of knee mills.

“Because of the depth of local resources in northern Illinois and Wisconsin, we can save a lot on shipping costs compared to buying brackets from overseas,” says Ledvon. “If there is a production issue, we are just 500 yards apart, so it’s easy to see what is happening at each other’s facility.”

Lower shipping costs, eliminating shipping delays and the ability to collaborate are just a few of the factors that positively influence supply chain performance. For a more detailed look, Ledvon advises companies to perform a Total Cost of Ownership (TKO) analysis, which includes using this online estimating tool.

Train

Even good programmers benefit from training. In one case, a programmer was really proud of the program he wrote for a drilling cycle because he couldn’t find that function on the controller, when all he had to do was use the CNC control’s right arrow key to move the menu over to open up the drilling cycles and many others.

“We often see people who do not understand how to use three-point alignment functionality so that when our touch probe is used to locate a part, the 5-axis machine automatically aligns the plane. As a result, you don’t have to shim the part,” adds Ledvon. “It’s like smart phones. They’re very powerful, but we are only aware of a fraction of their capabilities.”

Another example Ledvon cited was programmers and operators who were unaware of the software function that lets them use a touch probe to inspect a part and generate a report before removing the part from its fixture. This can reduce rework, especially for the first few parts in a lot or if the part will be difficult to re-fixture.

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Invest

With money readily available at little or no cost, now is a good time to explore new technology. Users can start with simple automation, such as a pallet changer, a load/unload robot for cells dedicated to longer part runs, or a cobot to support workers.

“The touch probe I just mentioned cost a few thousand dollars, but so many people don’t use one. Adding it to the tool carousel can really help you become more productive,” adds Ledvon.

Monitor

“Large companies are looking for more data from their machine tools,” says Ledvon. 

“Understanding efficiency within and between locations starts with better monitoring of your cutting machines.”

Heidenhain offers its StateMonitor software to help companies monitor machine status. It automatically conducts analytics and generates data points. It can send out messages to operators, programmers or maintenance personnel. New functions coming in 2020 include the ability to monitor specific sensors on the CNC, such as for a coolant tank, spindle or ball screws.

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“We had one customer connect 70 machines to their internal network. Through the StateMonitor, they quickly identified bottlenecks,” says Ledvon. For example, they learned that even though the machine was available to run the part, machine operators were still waiting for the programs to be delivered, so they focused on other tasks and the machine went unused for an even longer period of time.”

Using the StateMonitor, the company in this example also learned operators were overriding speeds and feeds on the machine tool — not to gain time, but to slow it down because they were uneasy with instructions from the programmer. The operators lacked confidence and were worried about causing damage.

“This company addressed their operators’ fear factor through more training,” he says. “Now that operators have verified the programming for themselves, they’re no longer worried about crashing a half-million dollar machine or scrapping parts.”

Innovate

In challenging times, companies need to move outside of their comfort zone and look at new industries and opportunities.

“Who could have known that we would need to shift our manufacturing capabilities to masks, ventilators, protective equipment or pill dies,” says Ledvon. “We can make anything if we just put our mind to it, so what can we make new or better? The crisis will cause new industries to be born and old manufacturers to realign themselves. What could some of those possibilities be?

Zoom

Since customers in some states could not travel because of quarantine requirements — yet they had made investments in millions of dollars of CNC machines — Heidenhain developed a hybrid solution of virtual training to visually communicate with customers using Cisco’s Webex (of course, Zoom or Microsoft Teams accomplish the same objective).

The hybrid part comes from creating a control simulator that has the actual keyboard and screen from a Heidenhain TNC 640 control, but with a video camera embedded in the screen.

“One company set up their control simulators on picnic tables in the shop so students could social distance, and others put them up near the CNCs in the shop, which are spaced more than six feet apart,” says Ledvon. “Training starts with two hours of our instructors working with them on the simulator, then the operators and programmers move to the real machine for another couple of hours, and then they reconnect with the instructors in the afternoon. Our instructors have a head-mounted camera so students can follow their movement as they are working inside the machine and see the strokes on the keyboard.”

Execute

With information gathered from monitoring and programmers/operators equipped with new skills, companies need their executives to live up to the “execute” part of their name.

“You can’t run a business efficiently relying on raw emotions from operators or your own gut instinct,” says Ledvon. “Data really opens people’s eyes, and the before and after situation when we install a StateMonitor follows a familiar pattern. People think they’re running at 70% efficiency. The spindle may be spinning, but the data shows they’re only cutting 40% of the time. More importantly, the data identifies the bottlenecks they need to remove, and that gives management the confidence to execute changes.”

The entire world is moving through uncharted territory — but it is moving forward. In our own lives, we’ve taken the time to remodel our kitchens and seen our favorite restaurants use the downtime to make improvements.

If you have the time, now is the right time for industry to OPTIMIZE. Uncover ways to become more profitable, explore new lines of revenue and become your own light at the end of the tunnel.

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Author
Gisbert Ledvon
Director Business Development Machine Tool
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