Predictive Maintenance

The journey towards Industry 4.0

08 February 2018

The e F@ctory concept from Mitsubishi Electric
The e F@ctory concept from Mitsubishi Electric

Hartmut Pütz, President Factory Automation EMEA at Mitsubishi Electric Europe, talks about the digital transformation of industry. He focuses on the effects on manufacturing businesses, especially at a production level, and how customers can benefit from innovative solutions.

Manufacturing industry is currently undergoing a period of rapid change. In concrete terms this can be seen as the move from automated production to fully digitised manufacturing. New goals are continually being set, but the target is to use existing standards to achieve them.

The way things will develop depends largely on the requirements of end users, which have changed massively in recent years. End users increasingly expect more product variety and customisation, but at a similar price point. 

An obvious example is the speed at which online configurators have influenced the car market. Vehicle manufacturers have long relied on options lists to make a profit from selling a passenger car. However, competition has increased and more technology has now become standard. That has resulted in the requirement for a larger range of personalisation options to be offered in order to entice buyers into choosing a certain model. For less complex end products, the customisation-on-demand process can happen even faster. 

With the rise of online ordering, the link from a sale to a machine tool or a robot altering its work pattern is closer than ever. To satisfy this demand suppliers require the highest levels of flexibility from their manufacturers throughout the supply chain. They have to react very quickly, changing production numbers for individual items on the fly. This is where the ‘smart factory’ starts to come into being.

As an automation solutions provider, Mitsubishi Electric is a partner to industry. It supports customers in the development of their business ventures with consultation on industrial automation and information technology. 

The e F@ctory concept from Mitsubishi Electric is being used to provide a practical structure for delivering solutions, enabling the process of digital transformation to happen at a manufacturing level.
The e F@ctory concept from Mitsubishi Electric is being used to provide a practical structure for delivering solutions, enabling the process of digital transformation to happen at a manufacturing level.

All activities relating to the digital transformation of enterprises - creating the ‘smart factory’ – are part of its ‘e-F@ctory’ concept. This encompasses the e F@ctory Alliance, a worldwide active network of cooperating companies. The network brings together manufacturers of industrial components as well as specialist system integrators and software providers. These partner companies collaborate at an individual level to offer flexible, optimised solutions.

A great example of the e-F@ctory Alliance delivering proven solutions to Industry 4.0 challenges can be found at Mitsubishi HiTec Paper Europe GmbH in Bielefeld, Germany. There, a more holistic approach to predictive maintenance has been achieved by implementing a Smart Condition Monitoring solution developed in cooperation with FAG Schaeffler. 

The technology allows a whole range of parameters from the coating machine and its ancillary parts to be monitored around the clock. That data is then used to analyse the condition of individual components as well as the health of the individual machine and of the wider plant. The information gained from the system includes maintenance recommendations. This enables intelligent decisions to be made in advance, based on real need, not simply routine. The solution has created a new working methodology, drastically reducing unplanned downtime and the risk of subsequent damage. Overall, the result is vastly improved predictive maintenance, optimised asset lifecycle management and production, while reducing total operating costs.

When talking about Industry 4.0, the Internet of Things (IoT) is inevitably a key theme as well. They are related concepts with an essential relationship and form the basis for Industry 4.0. Recent estimates already put the number of devices that are connected through the IoT at about 5 billion, and this is likely to soar over the next few years. Combine that prediction with the amount of data that is being generated and processed by a more connected factory, and it is easy to see why companies’ IT infrastructure needs to change. 

Hartmut Pütz, President Factory Automation EMEA at Mitsubishi Electric Europe B.V.
Hartmut Pütz, President Factory Automation EMEA at Mitsubishi Electric Europe B.V.

We can appreciate, then, the attraction of cloud based data storage and processing services. They have the potential to deliver more secure, reliable, scalable and affordable data collection and distribution than on-site IT platforms. Businesses are increasingly using cloud services not simply to store large volumes of data, but also to perform analytics tasks. Processing the data means deriving trend information and presenting users with customised dashboards. The intelligence gained can be used to improve overall plant performance and asset management. Edge Computing is complementary to Cloud Computing, and businesses are increasingly finding that they need the capabilities of both. The cloud delivers the ‘bigger picture’ of the IoT, while Edge Computing brings the IoT to life by supporting applications that demand a real-time response. 

Mitsubishi Electric has developed solutions that support both of these complementary IoT approaches. It offers simple and secure access to a range of different cloud services, like SAP Hana, Microsoft Azure and Amazon. But it also facilitates it for niche cloud applications and dedicated cloud-based analytics services using Edge Computing. The results can be widely distributed intelligence, with remote devices generating lots of information. Those are linked over standard open protocols that can be seen as the key to forming a digital nervous system within businesses. The networked digital data is then combined into bidirectional systems to integrate data, people, processes and systems for better decision making.

Within the context of the Internet of Things; Mitsubishi Electric has also been able to realise a project together with Intel. The company is using an IoT gateway from Mitsubishi Electric to aggregate and securely input data into a big data analytics server. For Intel, this pilot is forecast to save millions of dollars annually and provide other significantly valuable business benefits.

Mitsubishi Electric is supporting customers worldwide in their goal of developing their individual business models in terms of digitalisation. Moreover it’s contributing to the developments of innovative international organisations such as the German Government committee “Plattform Industrie 4.0”, the Industrial Internet Consortium (IIC) in the USA and the Robot Revolution Initiative (RRI) in Japan. Its e-F@ctory strategy has also been recognised by leading initiatives and organisations, such as the Best Practise Award (category: Industrial Internet of Things in Factory Automation) from Frost & Sullivan and the ‘Strategic Point of Light partners’ award issued by the Taiwanese government. 

See how Mitsubishi Electric is able to respond to today’s automation demands:

gb3a.mitsubishielectric.com/fa/en/solutions


Contact Details and Archive...

Print this page | E-mail this page


Predictive Maintenance

This website uses cookies primarily for visitor analytics. Certain pages will ask you to fill in contact details to receive additional information. On these pages you have the option of having the site log your details for future visits. Indicating you want the site to remember your details will place a cookie on your device. To view our full cookie policy, please click here. You can also view it at any time by going to our Contact Us page.