Showing posts with label bmw. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bmw. Show all posts

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Ubisense Smart Factory: Delivering Never Before Possible Visibility for Manufacturers Worldwide

By Adrian Jennings, CTO Americas

This week, Ubisense announced enhancements to its Smart Factory system that will be available early next year.  Admittedly, we’ve been a tad quiet about Smart Factory so I thought I’d formally introduce you to one of the most advanced location intelligence offerings available to manufacturers today.

Ubisense Smart Factory is a production-certified system that helps manufacturers sustain continuous flow, optimize efficiency and reduce errors in manual assembly processes. By accurately identifying and locating process-critical assets, Smart Factory provides real-time operational awareness, adaptive control and data-driven insights.

Using a sophisticated system that combines advanced hardware (tags and sensors) with software, Ubisense Smart Factory can reveal an entirely new level of visibility to help manufacturers gain efficiencies at a level never before possible. Think massive improvements in quality, productivity, and operational control and costs – all which help manufacturers more effectively manage mass product customization, which is where our world is headed.

For instance, in 2012, car buyers in Europe had 190 different car model choices. In 2019, the number will increase to an estimated 230 different models[1]. Producing that level of variation requires a substantial number of different parts and processes.  How can manufacturers possibly maintain quality by delivering on the demand for customization and choice? Ubisense Smart Factory.


Want to learn more about Smart Factory? Click here to access a video showcasing one example of how Ubisense helped BMW: http://ubisense.net/en/resources/videos.html.




[1] PwC Autofacts 2014 Q2 Data Release

Monday, July 22, 2013

Automotive Supply Chain Magazine Article

Find & Seek

If you're looking to turn your manufacturing facility into a Smart Factory then real-time location system (RTLS) technology can help. Laura King reports. 


The world of time and location-based data is growing at a staggering pace and its place in the automotive production line is pushing that evolution. The practise of increasing efficiency, cutting seconds, and increasing productivity has always been at the core of the automotive industry and Cambridge - based Ubisense has plenty of experience in assisting OEMs. The inspiration for their latest system came from the BMW assembly line in Regensburg and has now been rolled out in various production facilities across the globe, including BMW in China and the USA, MINI in the UK, Daimler in Germany, and Smart in France. Working closely with Atlas Copco – the Swedish industrial tooling and equipment business – Ubisense has produced smart tools which do the leg-work for you.

The first installation came at the BMW Regensburg plant, which produces the 1 Series, 3 Series and Z4 sports cars on the same line. The production planning system processes the customer orders and sends the customer-specific vehicle request onto the line. To utilise tools and set torques many plants use a passive RFID system or a barcode and scanner, which can be unreliable and labour-intensive. Ubisense CEO Richard Green highlights the problems the OEM was finding saying, “the operator has to pick up a scanner, scan the barcode that’s attached to a car, put the barcode scanner down, then work on the car that he’s just scanned – but occasionally the operator might get distracted, take a mobile phone call, and then go to work on the next car on the line. Of course he’s scanned the wrong car for the settings for the tool.”

“They were getting a lot of misreads of barcode scanning and so they wanted to eliminate that activity. So, as we tag the car and the tool, we eliminate that activity for the operator. That saves time but, more importantly, it really error-proofs the whole system. The operator simply has to walk up to the car with the tool and the tool is then programmed for the car on which he’s operating.”

“It’s very common – particularly with the new generation of wireless tools that most manufacturers are introducing – that the operators want to work forward; they can fool the system by working up the line and creating themselves a time buffer. That’s a pretty dangerous activity if you’re not changing the settings on the tool for the car that you’re going to go and work on but, if you have Ubisense installed, then it’s impossible for the operators to have the wrong tool with the wrong setting on the wrong car.”

Ubisense uses advanced ultra wideband (UWB) radio to locate and track small tags. As Ubisense removes the act of scanning a barcode, and the risk of faulty scanning, it can save as much as six seconds for each tool. On a line with over 140 tools this can mean gaining 14 minutes for every vehicle. This level of accuracy in geospatial awareness – the sensors can track a tool to within twelve inches in three dimensions many times a second – and reliability of data is almost totally unique to Ubisense and goes some way to explaining their global popularity, even having small installations in Honda and Toyota plants. Their work with Atlas Copco introduces them to the plant, and they then work hard to build relationships with OEMs, to provide upgrades to software and operating systems when needed.

Adding the tracking system and database to a factory is outwardly easy according to Green. He points out that on a final assembly line “work and cable trays would probably be running along the lines anyway for the forms of equipment”. This means Ubisense can simply “run our cabling into existing infrastructure and put up our network of readers along the line”. On something like the MINI production line, which is roughly two kilometres long, there will need to be between 350 and 400 sensor readers depending on the level of precision and performance reliability needed for a particular area. The actual installation time can be achieved in a manner of days; weeks if the area is bigger or the process more complicated.

“We have some fairly sophisticated tools for simulating a plant, quite early on in the process. Given the plant’s dimensional data we can model against that and simulate what the systems will look like and how they will interact. We can use that intimate early design workshop with the customers to make sure that they understand the kind of thing we can do, the inputs we need and the outputs we can give. I think we’ve got some fairly comprehensive tools but it’s still a fairly involved process, with the manufacturing engineers and often the systems people.

“Fairly early in the engagement, we would be working with the IT groups and they’re always satisfied with safety measures. There’s always an internal checklist for IT on network, security, wireless standards, interference and all those topics. They’re incredibly careful about those things and very early on in the process we’ll go through that discussion and I don’t think we’ve ever had a problem.”

Currently Ubisense offers an Assembly Control System, ‘Asset Manager’, among others, and ‘Ubisense VIP’ – a bonus package offering web-based user configuration, support for multiple-site operation and management of multiple components and multiple tags per component – as part of their sentient computing Smart Factory System. The company has developed this suite of applications by working closely with their strategic customers, who continue to stretch Ubisense into other areas of their business, as they see having one common location and identification system as being absolutely critical. Green mentions that this will be expanded in the future saying, “we have a whole road-map of things coming along, really driven by our strategic customers. That’s everything from tool locations, tracking at the beginning and into assembly control – quite a lot of activity in off-tracks and then into the yard – so we can genuinely put together an end-to-end system for the customer with a minimal number of systems to track and identify products and assets and make them visible and control them throughout the whole manufacturing process.”

The current systems require a lot of investment, but the return is a direct productivity benefit in reducing the amount of time it would otherwise take to identify the car and the tool. The tangible ROI can be labelled at about 12 months and with multiple applications this can be shortened. There is very well-defined, detailed ROI that Ubisense can plug into the parameters – the tools and the station’s stack time, output of the cars and so on – to illustrate the benefits of a compound ROI.

“We’ve got something that is genuinely helping companies to be more productive and I think that’s a key driver in today’s market. Anything that can help improve the productivity of a manufacturing plant gets an airing and to have secured some of Europe’s leading manufacturers – and a global agreement with BMW to roll it out across all their plants – is a testimony to the return on investment that they see.

“Any benefits of this sort of system are additive or cumulative. At a high level, the general benefit is giving operational management – visibility and control. That can be simply knowing where assets are, knowing where products are, knowing where major component assemblies are, as they’re going along a line. Then, using the knowledge of that location to drive process automation, establishing the setting of a torque on a torque tool, or the setting on a rolling road for a particular VIN number. They’re both making the activity visible and then being able to control it. And then, of course, being able to collect that data means that afterwards you can analyse it and look at ways of improving the process. That’s a huge additional benefit you get as a consequence of providing that visibility and control.”

Green (pictured) has been with Ubisense since its inception in 2002 in an industrial lab in Cambridge headed by Chairman and President of the Institute of Engineers and Technology, Professor Andy Hopper CBE. During his twenty years of experience in the software industry, as a founder of Smallworld which was listed on Nasdaq in 1996 and was acquired by GE in 2000, he’s seen a lot of commercial opportunities. Ubisense continues to multiply, serving the aerospace business and expanding into industrial vehicles, from Cotton Harvester assembly at John Deere to hydraulic technology in industrial vehicles with Caterpillar and tier suppliers – notably providing a 98% reduction in manual search efforts in the repair area at the Jamestown, New York Cummins plant. The end product may vary greatly but the connections and software are easily adapted.

“The basic infrastructure is the same and also the basic software. Of course, the quantities, volumes and throughputs are quite significantly different. Although we find extremes in automotive – at one end we’ve got MINI producing a thousand cars a day and at the other end we’ve got Aston Martin producing 20 – that’s quite a significant variation. Then you go into aerospace and Airbus is producing one plane a month. It is a different scale; essentially they’re doing the same thing but it’s a more complex assembly. One of the huge benefits of getting a system like this installed is that it really helps with flexibility within the manufacturing activity. Whether it’s aerospace – and that ranges from an Airbus to a fighter jet to a helicopter – or tractors, this technology can be applied to any relatively high-value product and its manufacturing process.”

The system has the ability to show when a person or object with an assigned tag enters an area, automatically locate it, show it in the Ubisense 3D environment and pass the data through to the Ubisense API and to other systems such as After Action Review (AAR) camera tracking. The only challenge Ubisense finds in inplementing systems, says Green, is integrating with the existing systems because “the OEMs have an awful lot of home-grown systems and middleware. When we began working with BMW we had to integrate with its particular middleware. Daimler has another set and Volkswagen another. Once connected the suite quickly becomes indispensable.
“In terms of giving people visibility over the supply chain, it can be an enormous help in helping to adjust according to new circumstances.”

In short, the ability to locate and track containers, tools and vehicles on a production line in three dimensions can provide a flawless line, cuts in assembly time and practical usable data to build on in the future. A system that creates a multi-dimensional data image of a factory and can spot errors is only the latest in sentient computing. Advances in mapping technology, physical tagging and geospatial software are still possible. No point waiting for them though, the current systems are already performing miracles.
Return

 http://www.automotivesupplychain.org/features/204/62/Find-and-seek/

Friday, July 27, 2012

New Ubisense Videos! BMW and Transit Yard Manager



Learn more about our automated parking module for transit yards with this video:
http://vimeo.com/45469112

Learn more about our involvement at BMW by watching this video:
http://vimeo.com/16060985

Enjoy!

Thursday, October 06, 2011

Ubisense in the News

Collection of recent articles:

CambridgeFirst
Oct 6, 2011
BMW rolls out Ubisense tracking system

MarketWatch
Oct 5, 2011
IBS and Ubisense Revolutionise Car Manufacturing with Real-Time Location Identification System

GrowthCompany
Oct 5, 2011
Ubisense gains Realworld

Cambridge Business News
Oct 5, 2011
Ubisense buys its neighbour for 2.4m

Mandadeals
Oct 5, 2011
Ubisense gets busy on AIM

Cambridge First
Oct 5, 2011
Ubisense acquires geospatial firm for 2.4m

Cambridge Business Media (Cabume)
Oct 5, 2011
Ubisense acquires Cambridge neighbour, Realworld

Tech Market View
Oct 5, 2011
Ubisenses the Realworld

Ubisense in the News: Business Weekly

BMW rolls out Ubisense tracking system globally

05 Oct 2011
By Tony Quested

A new deal has been forged between BMW, IBS and Ubisense, extending the deployment of a real-time Location Identification System (LIS) across the global vehicle manufacturer’s production facilities.

The LIS system comprises a communication platform from IBS and identification tags and sensors from Ubisense.

IBS and its software partner Ubisense will expand the roll-out of LIS, which is already delivering significant productivity improvements at two of BMW’s eight vehicle assembly plants. The solution will now be implemented at three additional BMW assembly lines in Asia, Europe and the US.

The LIS integrated real-time location system (RTLS) solution, developed specifically for BMW, combines best-in-class ultra-wideband (UWB) radio tags and sensors with advanced quality management and traceability software, bringing the production process a step closer to Six Sigma and the vision of complete traceability.

The technology tracks individual vehicles through on-line and off-line final assembly. It determines the identity and location of each car in the assembly facility and, based on the proximity of the vehicles to both fixed and mobile equipment such as tools and scanners, programs and controls the devices.

Delivering unprecedented levels of accuracy and reliability for an RTLS-based solution, the system improves quality and enables line operatives to work more efficiently, achieving time-savings, process safeguarding, zero defects and cost reductions.

In 2008, Ubisense and IBS deployed LIS on a 1.8km long assembly line at BMW’s Regensburg plant in Germany. In 2010, LIS went live on the new X3 assembly line at BMW Spartanburg in South Carolina – home to the company’s SUV range.
The solution will now be deployed at plants in Shenyang, China; on the X5 and X6 production line in Spartanburg; and at the dedicated Mini plant in Oxford, UK.

How the technology works

Vehicle assembly is a complex process – particularly at plants where different models are manufactured on the same line. At BMW Regensburg, Series 1 and Series 3 vehicles are assembled alongside Z4 Roadsters. With each model built to exact customer specifications and travelling along the production line, more or less in the order of purchase, assembly line operatives have to identify the next vehicle at their station quickly and accurately in order to select the right component or tool setting and complete the work necessary in the seconds they have available.

Previously,operatives identified vehicles using hand-held scanners and paper barcode labels, which were attached to the bonnet of each car. They then had to take their Direct Current (DC) tool to the correct location on the vehicle and wait for the correct settings to load before starting work – a time-consuming process in a manufacturing environment where every second counts.

Working with BMW, IBS and Ubisense have automated this process within the BMW IT environment, shaving valuable seconds off assembly line operations. The RTLS tags now replace the barcodes on car bonnets and have been fixed to DC programmable tools.

As the cars move through the plant, the tags communicate their location via UWB radio to sensors located along the production line. The sensors instantly relay this data via a local area network (LAN) to LIS, which is integrated with the BMW IT environment. Running under SAP, the BMW IT environment comprises a so-called “communication machine” (KM), the Integrated Production System (IPS) and the Automotive Production System (APS).

LIS determines when the tools enter the pre-defined work zones around each moving vehicle, identifying the vehicle and generating a “positive event.” This prompts the APS to automatically load the correct vehicle-specific program to the operative’s tool so the next job can be performed.

Ubisense CEO, Richard Green, said: “Extending our agreement with BMW via IBS is a major endorsement of the Ubisense solution, demonstrating the quality improvements as well as time and cost savings it can deliver.

“Working with IBS, we are delighted to have forged a long-term partnership with BMW and look forward to working with the company to drive forward new efficiencies at its global manufacturing sites.”

http://www.businessweekly.co.uk/automotive-general-news/12830-bmw-rolls-out-ubisense-tracking-system-globally?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

Monday, September 19, 2011

Photo: Ubisense In Action



"Ubisense have met our expectations and have a team that delivered a reliable precise real-time location solution that fits BMW's requirements perfectly."


-Andreas Lehner, Project Director, BMW Regensberg

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Ubisense Tag combines UWB and GPS for 'best-of-both worlds' tracking named as CSR Location Summit Fast-Pitch finalist

Cambridge, 6th October, 2010.  Ubisense, the world leader in precise real-time location systems announces the Trimode Tag, the latest addition to its line of location tracking equipment for industrial users. The unique Trimode tag combines ultra-accurate ultra-wideband (UWB) location, low-cost presence sensing, and outdoor GPS tracking in a single device.

Inside buildings, the tag operates in the standard Ubisense UWB tracking mode, transmitting UWB signals to a network of base stations for unrivalled centimetre-level 3D location sensing. Within indoor areas, where low infrastructure cost is more important than tracking accuracy, the tag can operate in a 'presence' mode, using its on-board radio to simply indicate that the tag is at hand. When the tag is outdoors, it automatically switches to GPS mode, calculating its position from the satellite signals, and reporting them to the Ubisense system using its on-board radio.

"We're very excited by the possibilities afforded by the Trimode tag," said Andy Ward, Ubisense's Chief Technology Officer. "Our customers can now deploy a single tag to locate assets in real-time across their sites, both indoors and outdoors. We're providing the best of both worlds – precision tracking where it's needed indoors, and cost-effective, low-infrastructure tracking across large outdoor areas."

Powered by a high-capacity lithium battery, and housed in a rugged IP67 enclosure, the device is suitable for a wide range of mixed indoor/outdoor applications in the manufacturing, transit and military sectors.

Learning that the Trimode tag had been named as a finalist at the CSR Location Summit Fast-Pitch awards, in the “Most Innovative Connected Location Device” category, Ubisense CEO Richard Green, said: "Our major manufacturing customers like BMW, Aston Martin and Airbus rely on our precise UWB tracking to keep their production processes running smoothly, and we can now integrate large-area outdoor tracking into the same solution. I'm delighted that this innovative product is already receiving plaudits from industry experts."

Monday, August 30, 2010

Ubisense "cruises" to automotive success

Cambridge, 23 August, 2010 - Ubisense, the world Leader in Precise Real-Time Location Systems (RTLS) supports a weekend of spectacular motoring events, including the Ramshackle Rally, Valencia and the Woodward Dream Cruise, Detroit.

Driving a highly decorative, Ubisense-sponsored car, purchased for only £ 150, Pascal Green joined the Ramshackle Rally Valencia to raise funds for Cancer Research.  The rally involves driving 1450 miles and taking part in daily challenges to score points.  At the end of the rally the team with the most points win, and all of the participants join the finale at the La Tomatina festival in Bunol, just outside Valencia.

Ubisense Americas’ team and CEO, Richard Green were also representing the company, in support  of their Strategic Partner, the world-leading industrial tool manufacturer, Atlas Copco at the world’s largest automotive cruise, the Woodward Dream Cruise, held annually in Detroit.

The Woodward Dream Cruise attracts almost two million visitors every year and is a haven for car fanatics cruisin’ along the 16 miles of Woodward Avenue, enjoying the attractions, and viewing a number of corporate sponsors demonstrating their products along the sidewalk areas. This year’s event clearly demonstrated an uplifted mood of anticipation throughout the industry.

Ubisense counts many automotive manufacturers, including BMW, Aston Martin, Fiat, Daimler and most recently General Motors amongst its customers and partners, and were very pleased to be able to support Atlas Copco at the event

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Ubisense Video - in production at BMW


Ubisense BMW from Caroline Brown on Vimeo.

Ubisense Tool Location System in action

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Ubisense and Atlas Copco Industrial Technique enter development partnership.

Ubisense, the world Leader in precise Real-time Location Systems, and Atlas Copco Industrial Technique, the world-leading provider of industrial productivity solutions, are collaborating in the research and development of real-time locations systems for industrial tooling.

“Collaborating with the world’s leading precise real-time location system provider will allow us to continue to develop innovative solutions for our customers who wish to significantly increase their productivity and quality in these tough economic times,” explains Anders Lindquist, President MVI Division at Atlas Copco Industrial Technique. “We became aware of the potential of the Ubisense approach to real-time location at our mutual customer, BMW in Regensburg, Germany. Subsequent discussions with potential customers for this type of technology not only in the Motor Vehicles market but also in aerospace, mining and construction equipment as well as discrete manufacturing led us to the idea of pooling our knowledge and resources to create a new family of solutions for our customers.”

The Ubisense system is installed in the production facilities of companies such as BMW, Aston Martin, Caterpillar and Honda. The application at BMW called LIS/TAS involves tracking the industrial tools used on the final assembly line and loading the correct program into the tool automatically based on the specific vehicle being worked upon.

“The introduction of LIS/TAS has resulted in the elimination of the need to scan vehicles in order to identify them”, comments Andreas Lehner, project manager at BMW in Regensburg. “All the project objectives have been met on time and within the planned budget. From the standpoint of value creation, the project is a complete success”.

“This unique relationship allows Atlas Copco Industrial Technique and Ubisense to investigate the key innovations that will drive the next set of standards for use in manufacturing production and enable significant process improvements”, comments Terry Phebey, VP Sales Ubisense.

About Atlas Copco Industrial Technique

Atlas Copco’s Industrial Technique business area develops, manufactures and markets industrial power tools, assembly systems, software and service. It innovates for superior productivity for applications in the automotive and aerospace industry, general industrial manufacturing and maintenance, and vehicle service worldwide. Principal product development and main manufacturing units are in Sweden and France.
More information on the company is available at www.atlascopco.com.

Monday, August 03, 2009

BMW revolutionises vehicle assembly using new Ubisense solution

Final acceptance of Tool Assistance System to automatically relate vehicles and torque tools successfully achieved at BMW plant in Regensburg. Solution extends the automation of vehicle assembly, reducing both defect rate and production costs.

Cambridge, August 3rd 2009 – Ubisense has successfully completed the implementation of a new Tool Assistance System (TAS) at BMW’s production facility in Regensburg. TAS is based on the Location Identification System, which, as the name implies, is designed to locate and identify production assets. LIS/TAS has been developed jointly by Ubisense and IBS AG and is the result of bringing together the Ubisense real-time location system (RTLS) and the IBS software systems, which provide the link between the location system and the existing BMW IT environment.
The Tool Assistance System rolled out in Regensburg provides automatic recognition of the vehicles being assembled as well as automatically detecting their proximity to production automation equipment such as intelligent tools and test equipment. TAS eliminates both the need to scan barcodes on vehicle work-orders, in itself not a value adding activity, as well as manually generated defects arising from scanning the wrong asset. The system works by evaluating the spatial relationship between production automation systems and the vehicles continuously in real-time. A positive “relationship event” is generated when a mobile tool enters a pre-defined zone around the vehicle or when a vehicle enters a zone around an item of automation equipment.
LIS/TAS is fully integrated into BMW’s production IT environment via the IBS Communications Platform which provides all the necessary interfaces to the relevant systems. In particular this includes the administration of the tools and vehicles as well as passing on the tool control events via IP telegrammes. A relationship event causes a new vehicle-specific program to be loaded into the tool or starts an automation system with the correct program for the particular vehicle detected. Typical tools and equipment in this context are torque tools, riveting hammers, diagnostic equipment, and programmable logic controllers.
The system is in production across the entire Regensburg assembly plant where around 120 tool systems are used to produce approximately 1,000 cars per day. The vehicle location in 3D is performed in real-time via Ubisense tags located on the cars. These tags are small transponders which are located using ultra-wideband radio technology by sensors mounted at fixed locations along the production line. The location and identification information is analysed for relationship events and the information passed on directly to the BMW IT environment. Ultra-wideband technology enables high precision location by transmitting extremely short pulses with very low energy (less than 0.1 milliwatts per m²) which means there are no negative effects on other systems or the health of the staff.
“The introduction of LIS/TAS has resulted in the elimination of the need to scan vehicles in order to identify them”, comments Andreas Lehner, project manager at BMW in Regensburg. “All the project objectives have been met on time and within the planned budget. From the standpoint of value creation, the project is a complete success”.
Richard Green, CEO of Ubisense, is very pleased with the results achieved. “Ubisense, together with our partner IBS, is the only RTLS vendor able to fulfil all BMW’s requirements and LIS/TAS is a unique tool for the automotive industry. We have here a clear differentiator and are delighted with the praise from BMW.”