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Digital Twin Simulation for Greater Productivity in the Smart Factory

The ESPRIT CAM system from DP Technology provides digital twinning, digital threads, machine-aware manufacturing, knowledge-based machining and cloud-enabled databases that enable shops to streamline their workflows, prevent silos from forming during manufacturing, and increase tool life and machine utilization.

Posted: March 6, 2018

This photo illustration of a digital twin created in the ESPRIT CAM system from DP Technology shows a blend of real life and a virtual simulation of a main shaft being machined on an Okuma 5-axis machine. The virtual machine ensures that whatever happens on screen will also occur on the shop floor. Workpieces and cutting tools are set up virtually for exact simulations, greater productivity and better toolpaths for higher quality parts using a digital thread that ties together each step of the workflow from CAD design to finished part, ensuring that none of the manufacturing process is siloed.

To support Industry 4.0 and smart manufacturing initiatives that help factories prepare for the digital transformation now taking place in manufacturing, the ESPRIT® CAM system from DP Technology Corporation (Camarillo, CA) provides digital twinning, digital threads, machine-aware manufacturing, knowledge-based machining and cloud-enabled databases that enable shops to streamline their workflows, prevent silos from forming during the manufacturing process, increase tool life and machine utilization, and create greater access to practical knowledge for process improvement.

ESPRIT allows users to create a digital twin of their machine tools for programming, optimization and simulation. This virtual machine ensures that whatever happens on screen will also occur on the shop floor. Workpieces and cutting tools are set up virtually, resulting in exacting simulations, greater productivity and better toolpaths for higher quality parts. A digital thread ties together each step of the workflow from CAD design to finished part, ensuring that none of the manufacturing process is siloed. ESPRIT reads part data from CAD software and creates machine-optimized G-code and setup sheets, which it then passes on to shop floor management, tool data management and enterprise resource planning software. It provides machine-aware CAM programming to increase tool life and reduce cycle times.

The CAM system’s ProfitMilling® and ProfitTurning™ apps represent a fundamental change in the way toolpath in created: most CAM software works from the shape of the part first and considers the machine last, if at all. But ESPRIT machine-aware systems first consider the machine tool – its axes positions and their limits, acceleration, and attainable and requested cutting speeds, allowing users to run machines faster, get a better surface finish on their parts and significantly increase their tool life. As a result, with machine-aware CAM, programmers make better choices regarding toolpath, without asking the machine tool or cutting tool to exceed their own abilities.

Knowledge-based machining, the term for artificial intelligence built directly into a CAM system, makes it possible to significantly cut programming time by capturing best practices, including machining processes and cutting conditions, leaving more time to focus on strategic process improvements and reducing time spent on repetitive tasks. The KnowledgeBase™ system in ESPRIT streamlines part programming by automatically selecting the optimum processes – machining cycles, tools and conditions – for part features based on proven best practices. Recording practical knowledge via KnowledgeBase is more reliable than leaving it to memory and allows for higher levels of automation through repeatable steps. Because programming is more predictable and consistent, programmers encounter fewer problems and produce higher quality parts.As shops move to data-driven manufacturing, integration with cloud-based databases, such as MachiningCloud Inc., further facilitates access to knowledge, product data, resources and process controls for machines, cutting tools and work holding. These cloud-enabled databases suggest factory-recommended feeds and speeds for a given cut, let users quickly find the tools they need, and provide continuously updated manufacturer product data, including drawings and models of tools and cutting tool assemblies for simulation. Because information is stored in the cloud, it is always up to date, available on demand and can be accessed anywhere.

DP Technology Corporation, 1150 Avenida Acaso, Camarillo, CA 93012, 805-388-6000, www.espritcam.com.

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