TCIOceania15 Advanced Manufacturing - Opportunities and Risks
Manufacturing And Warehousing News — April 14 2014
1. Manufacturing And Warehousing News — April 14 2014
By Trisha Leon, contributing writer
In the news, additive manufacturing will enable MRO shops to "print" the parts they need. Also
manufacturers are optimistic about the benefits of Big Data -- MESA International will release the
results of the "Metrics That Matter" survey on April 16.
Additive Manufacturing Could Be In MRO Shops' Future
Matthew Bromberg, Pratt & Whitney's president of aftermarket, predicts that in the future,
maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) shops will speed up repairs and reduce stored inventory
with additive manufacturing -- shops will "print" needed parts. In an Aviation Week article, he says,
"It will work. It will be efficient. It's the way the industry will go." The technology is in its early
stages -- only 10 years old -- but its applications are expected to grow exponentially. General Electric
is at the forefront of bring this capability to market and has reported a 25 percent weigh reduction
in Leap nozzles, which they plan to move into full production with by 2015-16. While certification
remains a hurdle, particularly for safety-critical parts, the issues are solvable.
Manufacturers Find Value In Big Data
Manufacturers have a new tool in harnessing the huge amounts of data flowing through their
organizations. A Manufacturing Business Technology article cites preliminary results of the LNS
Research and MESA International 2013-2014 "Metrics that Matter" survey. ?With Big Data
manufacturers hope to better forecast and overall increase production by finding correlations
between customer data, scheduling, and maintenance, which could lead to greater operational
efficiency, better anticipation of order lead times, shorter asset/machine downtimes, and more
effective materials purchasing and WIP decisions. The positive response from manufacturers
indicates that they view Big Data as a game-changing capability that will, along with ERP, PLM,
MOM, MES, mobility, and cloud technology, aid them in understanding data and, ultimately,
improving their bottom line.
Wednesday Webcast Features "Metrics That Really Matter" Survey Results
MESA International, a global not-for-profit industry association will be sharing the findings of a five-
month research study on manufacturing performance improvements in a webcast entitled: "2013-
2. 2014 Manufacturing Metrics that Really Matter," on Wednesday, April 16. The webcast is targeted
at manufacturing executives, manufacturing IT professionals, continuous improvement team
members, and plant managers/supervisors seeking to improve and optimize their business
performance. "MESA's point of view is that metrics do matter to manufacturers' success, and that
manufacturing matters to the global economy," says Julie Fraser of MESA International.
Can Real-Time Data Analysis Increase Efficiency, Cut Costs?
An Automation World article reports companies collect data to investigate aspects of quality,
efficiency, productivity, and personnel costs. This information, though, refers to the past: last shift,
last day, last week, or last month. Luigi De Bernardini, CEO of Autoware, asks, "is looking to the past
truly the best way to increase efficiency?" With real time information, manufacturers can recognize
the onset of any problem and be able to intervene and reduce the possibility of compromising the
production target. By implementing "bottom-up" projects, manufacturers will collect information in
real time and see efficiency gains translated into significant cost savings that allowed the client to
repay the cost system with unexpected rapidity.
DiCentral Acquires On-Demand WMS
DiCentral, a provider of supply chain management solutions and business-to-business (B2B)
integration, and JDA Software Group, announce that DiCentral Systems purchased JDA's cloud-based
On-Demand Warehouse Management Systems. According to Ann Grakin, CEO of ChainLink
Research, "Warehouse management continues to be a critical function in the global supply chain.
Many innovations continue to be introduced to enhance operational capabilities, as well as allow
those who manage the warehouse to introduce new services to their customers and partners."
Manufacturing And Warehousing IT Talking Points
In Supply Chain Digest, Gana Govind, president of Softeon says, though benefits of software in the
cloud are becoming widely understood, the market has seen relatively slow penetration of cloud
warehouse management systems (WMS). Some reasons may be: the largest WMS providers have
been slow to embrace cloud offerings, cloud-focused WMS solutions have had limited functionality,
WMS concerns about system response time, and lack of IT resources. But the market has changed,
making available cloud WMS solutions that can successfully manage and optimize the same complex
data centers as any traditionally deployed system. These along with improving internet speed are
knocking down barriers to cloud-based WMS adoption.
For more news and insights, visit BSMinfo's Manufacturing And Warehousing Tech Center.