The Secrets to Implementing Lights-Out Machining
Making a whole day productive requires strategy not staffing
The iView is a measuring system that evaluates tooling while still in the workholding such as the ANCA GCX Linear skiving machine.
Simon Richardson, Product Manager, ANCA
It’s little wonder there’s more and more interest in the potential of lights-out or unattended production. The benefits seem immediately obvious. Staffing costs fall significantly if you can run equipment unsupervised, or with far fewer operators. Production capacity of the business greatly increases, offering the opportunity to add more customers without the expense of adding new equipment or staff.
It offers enhanced flexibility by allowing you to move longer-running jobs—that don’t require supervision—to overnight, ensuring your skilled operators can be fully engaged with jobs where they’re needed during working hours.
Another reality that’s having a significant impact on the appeal of unattended production is the skills shortage. Finding and retaining skilled operators seems to be becoming more and more difficult, with a high likelihood that it’ll be even harder in the future. Any opportunity to maintain the number of operators required and increase productivity can only benefit your business in the long run.
However, moving into lights-out machining can be a challenging transition and isn’t as simple as automating a few processes and hoping for the best. There are a multitude of factors to consider and changes that need to be made to ensure your machine shop’s ready to run unattended. But the improvements to efficiency and profitability make it an investigation well worth having.