This post is brought to you by Universal Robots.
For small to mid-sized manufacturers, any gain in productivity can have a huge impact. Automation offers significant advantages, but many small and mid-sized enterprises (SMEs) believe that robotics is out of their reach. These organizations can’t afford large, complex robots that don’t fit within their limited floor space, that require specialized personnel to program and maintain them, and that are simply too expensive, with a payback period that is too long to justify the investment.
But a new generation of collaborative robots (or “cobots”) is changing the game for smaller manufacturers, helping them compete more effectively, offering new opportunities for employees, and even improving worker safety. Look for these 5 essential requirements that will put robotics within your reach.
1. Quick set-up
Shane Strange, automation and integration specialist with faucet maker RSS Manufacturing and Phylrich in Costa Mesa, CA, had this experience: “Once [the UR robot] actually hit the floor, we got it unboxed and found a stand for it, and within 45 minutes we had it up, powered, and were actually programming the robot, doing simple back-and-forths and pick-and-place.”
2. Easy to program without special skills
Paul Quitzau, senior manufacturing engineer with medical device manufacturer Tegra Medical in Boston said, “Programming the Universal Robot is very straightforward. Anyone with any sort of ability to think logically, and who can envision how a process ought to run could program the robot. The screens are laid out friendly, the commands are almost self-intuitive. It comes with a manual that you could consult if you need to, but you don’t need much of that.”
3. Collaborative and safe, even in small shops
Robots can take over repetitive, injury-prone jobs and improve worker safety, even in limited manufacturing spaces. Richard Clive, machine operator with shelving manufacturer Etalex in Montreal said, “With the Universal Robot arm now I would say it’s at least a 100% safer. Before you had to put your hands close to the break press… and an accident could happen at any time. With the Universal Robot, there’s no chance of anyone getting injured.”
4. Flexible deployment for multiple uses
Matt Bush, director of operations for electronics manufacturer Scott Fetzer Electrical Group in Nashville was challenged by how to create a mobile robotic workforce when faced with the need for traditional safety enclosures. Mounting collaborative Universal Robots on wheels solved the problem. “When our workers come in in the morning, their task is no longer to do some monotonous task. It’s to go take the robot and deploy it to whatever job it needs to do that day.” With a similar strategy, Joe McGillivray, co-owner of injection molder Dynamic Group in Minneapolis said, “We’re able to quickly redeploy these robots to completely new tasks in very short order. We have most of them—all of them actually—on bases that we can transport around on wheels and slide them from press to press and application to application. That’s been hugely beneficial to us.”
5. Fast payback of your investment
Hal Blenkhorn, director of manufacturing for medical device manufacture Tegra Medical said, “We’ve had great financial success with the implementation of these robots, to the tune of what we’re seeing on average for the return on investment of between 3 and 6 months. And we were looking at cost, ease of implementation, and ease of use and the Universal Robots seemed to have nailed it in all those areas.” Dynamic Group’s Joe McGillivray said, “When we first started looking into automation, I was surprised to find that we could afford a six-axis robot, and a collaborative one at that. I assumed those robots cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. The return on investment on our initial system was less than two months.”