IMTS 2008: The Focus--Global Technology
Lindsey Snyder, Assistant Editor
It’s that even-numbered-year time-of-the-year again. The International Manufacturing Technology Show, IMTS 2008, is right around the corner. This 27th installment of the biennial trade show is focusing on connecting global technology, and visitors can expect to see exhibits from 1,500 companies spanning 1.2 million net square feet of space at Chicago’s McCormick Center. Over 90,000 buyers and sellers typically come from 119 countries to look at more than 15,000 machine tools, controls, computers, software, components, systems and processes.
IMTS planners have been busy at work filling the schedule and extending the show’s features. This year’s conference, the Manufacturing Business and Technology Forum, has expanded. The forum sessions provide current technical information surveying the latest technologies that impact how companies manufacture and enhance the effectiveness of workforce efficiency and productivity. Forum sessions are designed to supplement what is seen on the trade show floor and are conducted by several industry partners: Society of Manufacturing Engineers (SME), Center for Automotive Research (CAR), American Society for Precision Engineering (ASPE), National Tooling and Machining Association (NTMA), ToolingU and the Association for Manufacturing Technology (AMT).
“By expanding the number of partners participating in our educational efforts, we can offer broad and relevant content to our IMTS attendees,” says Peter Eelman, IMTS vice president–exhibitions. “More than ever before, we are designing this education experience for the end user.”
One special session will be showcasing MTConnect, a new com-munication technology that provides an open standard for passing information between devices, equipment, systems and higher level applications. MTConnect combines manufacturing technology and computer science to access data on a regular basis. The goal is to create “a seamless ‘manufacturing pipeline’ from design to production,” according to mtconnect.org. MTConnect will be open and free of royalties. The session will provide an overview of MTConnect with detailed presentations demonstrating how to develop an adapter for retrieving data from a device or piece of equipment. IMTS 2008 will be the first public demonstration of the standard’s use. The forum session is free and sponsored by the AMT on Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 11:30, Thursday from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. and Friday from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.