Klingelnberg Receives Innovation Award
Unlike a number of companies in other industries, machine manufacturer Klingelnberg is banking on compatibility, not a self-contained solution, in its quest to adopt Industry 4.0. It's an approach that seems to be resonating. Case in point: this year's Industrie-4.0-Award.
With the Internet of Things - connectivity between smart devices in the upstream and downstream areas of a shop floor - industry is currently on the verge of taking a powerful, revolutionary leap forward. Cyber-physical production systems seamlessly connect the physical world to the digital world, making it possible to implement changes without a latency period. According to the engineering and economics experts behind the Industrie-4.0-Award, the biggest obstacles preventing a breakthrough of Industry 4.0 right now are a lack of standardized interfaces and a way to collect and evaluate the relevant data in the world of big data. Many manufacturers are focused on developing systems of their own. As a result, there are a number of excellent local solutions, but they don't communicate with each other.
Klingelnberg has taken a different approach from the outset: "Our corporate philosophy directs us to adapt perfectly to existing environments and ensure we are compatible with the existing software and machine structure," explains Dr. Hartmuth Müller, head of technology and innovation at Klingelnberg Group. The company has applied Industry 4.0 thinking to toothed gear manufacturing and has created a cyber-physical system that provides a smart digital twin for the toothed gear at every step along the entire value chain. This opened the door for the introduction of quality gates, where the geometry specified for the current production step is tested in real time. Any manufacturing deviations are immediately corrected on the spot by software-based assistance systems. Thus every manufacturing deviation is caught and corrected, and at the same time, the customer receives detailed documentation - a "family tree" of the customer's component, so to speak.
Klingelnberg's system includes not only all of a component's geometrical information, but also information about the tool as well as a description of a virtual cutting machine's manufacturing movement - for both soft machining and hard machining. This data is automatically supplied by Klingelnberg's KIMoS program system and form the digital backbone of every production step. Every machine and program system involved in the process has thus been integrated horizontally, with a central database containing the digital twins and the geometry-determining technological parameters for every step in the manufacturing process. To get to this point, the company consolidated over 20 years of development work in one system.
20 to 30 years ago in the aviation industry, the certified master gear model still stood in for every additional "clone" - with every little scratch and surface defect, making it a challenge to reproduce parts from measured data. In its initial step toward a cyberworld, Klingelnberg calculated how the tool penetrates the component in a cross-sectional simulation. And for the first time, Klingelnberg was able to digitize the formation of the tooth flanks with its software. The developers continued to hone the Klingelnberg Integrated Manufacturing of Spiral Bevel Gears (KIMoS) program until the design software produced a tooth flank geometry that was an electronic copy of the master gear. But this electronic template did not just contain the nominal data for the digital twin; it also contained the "machining specification," the exact geometry of the gear cutting tool, as well as the movement required to manufacture the tooth flanks. "That was the real appeal of KIMoS. We wanted an intelligent digital twin, not an electronic shadow that only described the surface of the tooth flanks," said Müller in describing what Klingelnberg had set out to accomplish.
When cutting bevel gears, the slightest changes in the shape of the cutting edge or in the installation on the tool carrier can lead to production or installation deviations, and the component will not fully comply with the calculated setting data as a result. Where machine operators make readjustments in practice, Industry 4.0 thinking calls for digital solutions. To answer the call, Klingelnberg created its Closed Loop assistance system, an automated link between the production machines and the measuring technology. Machine setting values are automatically adjusted to the nominal data with such precision that deviations measure a mere two to three micrometers. The process chain has Closed Loop modules for blade grinding, gear tooth cutting and gear grinding, as well as for setting of gear cutting tools.