Arburg:Process chain as highlight of the “Additive Manufacturing Plaza”

  • Arburg:Exclusive partner at the Hannover Messe 2015
  • Individualisation of mass-produced articles using additive manufacturing including Industry 4.0
  • “Digital Factory” leading international trade fair:Special “Additive Manufacturing” exhibit
    illustrates industrial additive manufacturing

Lossburg.Two worlds will converge at the Hannover Messe 2015:the worlds of additive manufacturing and injection moulding.As an exclusive partner of the “Additive Manufacturing Plaza”, the special new exhibit at the leading “Digital Factory” trade fair from 13 to 17 April, Arburg will demonstrate how this works.Arburg is the ideal partner to Deutsche Messe AG, the organiser of the Hannover Messe, because with its Freeformer and Allrounders, the innovative machine construction company covers the entire industrial manufacturing spectrum of efficient plastic parts production, from one-off parts to mass production.

The main focus of the fair, “Industrial Automation and IT”, combines two leading trade fairs, “Industrial Automation” and “Digital Factory”.In 2015, the “Additive Manufacturing Plaza” will be held for the first time as part of the “Digital Factory”, with exclusive partner Arburg, in a prominent position in Hall 7 of the exhibition centre.This special exhibit deals specifically with the use of additive processes in industrial production.Heinz Gaub, Arburg Managing Director Technology & Engineering, comments:“We are delighted to have the opportunity to present our Freeformer and the patented technology of Arburg Plastic Freeforming in this setting.Firstly, this confirms both the significance of our new industrial system for additive manufacturing and the individualisation of plastic parts as well as the importance of Arburg as a source of expertise in this future-oriented sector.”

Additive manufacturing generates more value from high-volume products

In collaboration with cooperation partners, Arburg demonstrates how, through additive manufacturing, mass-produced articles can be finished with plasticsin such a way that manufacturers can generate added value from them.The objective of producing individual plastic parts on an industrial scale is presented by means of a process chain with Industry 4.0 technology.The items under production are “rocker-type light switches” from Gira, the renowned manufacturer of facility management systems.

The technology and expertise in the field of additive manufacturing and the injection moulding of high-volume products, as well as the networking of processes via a host computer system, all originate from Arburg.In addition to Gira (product design and mould construction), other project partners are Trumpf (lettering applied to parts by laser), Fuchs Engineering (quality checks) and Fpt Robotik (Automation).

The entire process chain, “development – production – application”, is demonstrated by means of individual process modules.The process steps commence with product design, followed by the recording of an order and injection moulding production, including lettering applied by laser, plus a quality check.This is followed by the main step of additive part individualisation.The process is rounded off by packaging and the demonstration of comprehensive traceability via a linked host computer.

The process modules in detail

The “Product design” station, which includes a CAD workstation and a Freeformer, shows the production of prototype parts.

The process chain for the production of the rocker-type light switches starts at a PC station where the individual orders are recorded and the visitor selects his own symbol/name combination.

The light switch basic body is series produced on an Allrounder injection moulding machine.This is part of an automated production cell, which also includes part inspection and code applied by laser.The laser-applied DM code enables the process and quality parameters of each moulded part to be retrieved online – in accordance with the individual part traceability required by Industry 4.0.Here, the Arburg host computer system plays a key role.

The Freeformer turns every rocker-type light switch into a unique item by applying the individual symbol/name combination in an additive process with plastics.As the next step, the finished products are placed in “their” packaging in a robotic cell.The packaging is conveyed inline to the process chain and the relevant rocker-type light switch is printed with the symbol/name combination and a QR code, which also enables the product parameters to be retrieved online.

Specialists are at hand to answer questions at every station of the process chain.

A perfect match:“Digital Factory” and Arburg

As a leading international trade fair, the “Digital Factory” provides answers to important questions about tomorrow's production.The answer lies in the digital harmonisation of different steps in the value-added chain, from development to production, through to the use of innovative products.The “Digital Factory” plays host to many high-ranking decision-makers and innovators from research, development and design.This future-oriented process chain is of interest to both target groups.The example of a rocker-type light switch, which is representative of numerous potential value-added production processes or products, highlights the possibilities of combining injection moulding and additive manufacturing.Basically, many mass-produced parts can be simply individualised by applying these techniques.In this way, we can exploit new market potential for individual components, which were previously not economically viable.

Images

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With the Freeformer for additive manufacturing and Allrounder injection moulding machines, Arburg covers the entire industrial production spectrum.At the Hannover Messe 2015, Arburg combines two processes for the individualisation of mass-produced parts.

Photo:ARBURG

Further photos will be available on request.

About Arburg

German machine manufacturer Arburg is one of the world’s leading manufacturers of injection moulding machines with clamping forces between 125 and 5,000 kN.This is complemented by robotic systems, customer- and sector-specific turnkey solutions and further peripherals.An innovative additive manufacturing system was added to the plastic processing range in 2013.

The company places the topic of production efficiency at the centre of all its activities, taking into account the entire value-added chain.The objective is to enable the Arburg customers to manufacture their plastic products, whether one-off parts or high-volume production, in optimal quality and at minimum unit costs – e.g. for the automotive and packaging industries, communication and entertainment electronics, medical technology, or the white goods sector.

An international sales and service network guarantees first-class, local customer support.Arburg is represented by its own organisations at 32 locations in 24 countries and by trading partners in more than 50 countries.The machines are produced exclusively at the parent factory in Lossburg, Germany.From a total of around 2,350 employees, around 1,950 work in Germany. About 400 further employees work in Arburg’s organisations around the world.In 2012, Arburg became one of the first companies to gain triple certification:to ISO 9001 (Quality), ISO 14001 (Environment) and ISO 50001 (Energy).

Further information about Arburg can be found at