lunes, 23 de mayo de 2011

GKN AEROESPACIAL REDUCE EL TIEMPO DE FABRICACIÓN CON LA IMPLANTACIÓN DE CATIA, ENOVIA, DELMIA Y 3DVIA

GKN Aerospace Reduces Manufacturing Engineering Time

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To meet the demands of its complex composite design and build programs, GKN Aerospace recognized the need to introduce more sophisticated methods and design tools.

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AMD May 4, 2010

GKN Aerospace is a Tier 1 aircraft parts supplier specializing in complex composite and metal parts and aircraft assemblies. The company is known for its technological leadership on projects that include developing the first major composite wing spar, the first all-composite fan containment case, and the first all-electric ice protection system.

Like all pioneers in composite manufacturing, GKN used the traditional paper-doll approach to composites design, which involves cutting and re-cutting the initial design on the shop floor until the flat pattern conforms to the lay-up tool’s surfaces. Various applications have been developed over the years to simulate producibility, but data normally must be translated from system to system, adding time to the process, impeding communications and introducing the potential for errors.

To meet the demands of its complex composite design and build programs, GKN Aerospace recognized the need to introduce more sophisticated methods and design tools. GKN Aerospace has subsequently developed a leading-edge process that integrates CATIA, ENOVIA, DELMIA and 3DVIA Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) solutions from Dassault Systèmes (DS) with third-party software from DS CAA Partners Intercim, Simulayt and Magestic Systems. This integration process is now used throughout the design and fabrication of GKN-designed parts.

Plies Work The First Time
GKN engineers use CATIA Composites Design (CPD) to organize the ply buildup by creating sequence charts, material tables and lay-up books. Then they use producibility algorithms, either in CPD or using Simulayt’s Advanced Fiber Modeler (AFM) for complex shapes, to assess possible fiber deformations in plies. If the potential for deformation is identified, the design can be corrected with the addition of splices at the design stage. “Since we began simulating producibility up front, we have seen very few cases where the results were not as anticipated by the NC programmers,” said Tonya Cole, NC programmer on the project.

As a part is designed in CATIA, the in-process data is managed in ENOVIA, where it can be accessed by design and manufacturing team members regardless of their location, as well as by the customer for electronic signoff. Once producibility is verified and the part is approved, CNC programs are generated directly from CATIA data.

“Maintaining all of the data in ENOVIA makes it easy to collaborate with designers that are hundreds of miles away,” Cole said. “When we make a change during the manufacturing process, everything downstream updates in CPD to stay in synch.”

GKN Aerospace is implementing DELMIA Assembly work instructions to automatically define manufacturing processes, generate shop floor work instructions directly from the design data, and reconcile the engineering bill of material (EBOM) to the manufacturing bill of material (MBOM). DELMIA will be used to create visualizations of the work instructions for workers on the shop floor, making processes clearer and avoiding misunderstandings. GKN also plans to use DELMIA to simulate other operations, such as moving parts through the aisles of the shop to verify they will fit.

3DVIA Composer enhances CATIA data with exploded views, annotations, callouts, and other notes that add rich, interactive 3D information to the work instructions, replacing words and increasing understanding. Velocity, from Intercim, electronically delivers the planning and work instructions to the shop floor, monitors information, and generates activity and quality reports to tightly connect the physical world of Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES) with the virtual world of PLM.

The original CATIA geometry is used by TruNEST, a software from Magestic Systems, to nest the plies, which maximizes material efficiencies during the ply-cutting process. Magestic Systems’ TruLASER View software then uses CATIA data to program laser projectors that project ply boundaries onto the mold. These programs work as functions inside CPD and pull data directly from the CATIA tree. “With nothing to translate or input, there is no need to revalidate the CAD data,” Cole said.

Focus on Tata Technologies
When it came to designing and integrating the solution, DS value-added reseller Tata Technologies proved to be an invaluable partner, Cole said. “Tata Technologies helped us configure the integrated solution and provided major assistance during implementation in getting everything to work together correctly,” Cole said. “We came to them whenever we had any type of problem during implementation, and they always provided us with a solution.”

Improved visualization cuts time
With DS PLM, GKN Aerospace reduced manufacturing engineering time approximately 50%, to an average of four hours per part, and greatly improved collaboration throughout the extended enterprise.
“With CATIA, plus Simulayt and Magestic Systems working inside CATIA, the ability to evaluate producibility on the computer rather than on the shop floor positions us at the leading edge of composites design and fabrication,” Cole concluded. “Our integrated DS PLM solution helps our people stay connected throughout the entire process, regardless of location, while ensuring that downstream processes match the correct released engineering"

Fuente:AEROSPACE MANUFACTURING AND DESIGN

Url:http://www.onlineamd.com/aerospace-manufacturing-design-GKN-engineering-amd-050410.aspx

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