Reshoring with robots

Manufacturers hope that, by reshoring, they can bring supply closer to demand in order to achieve shorter lead times and better service against the current global supply chain issues and increasing-import costs. 

Here, Nigel Smith, CEOof industrial robot specialist TM Robotics, the official distributor of Shibaura Machine, explains the vital role of advanced robotics in these trends.

“Mama, I’m coming home,” Ozzy Osbourne once sang, “here I come, but I ain't thesame.” This could apply to manufacturers that are trying to quickly reshore productionback to their own countries, under slogans such as “buy British” in the UK. In doing so, companies hope to mitigate supply chain issues caused by the after-effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, Brexit, the Ukraine conflict and material shortages.

But, to paraphrase Ozzy, manufacturing is no longer the same. Gone are the pre-Covid days when managers and suppliers could take supply chains for granted, andmanufacturing was outsourced to countries like China at a significant profit. Instead,businesses are under pressure to reshore their production while keeping iteconomically viable, reducing lead times and improving quality of service, despite the supply chain disruptions.

However, according to the London School of Economics, robotisation might play a vitalrole in helping manufacturers bring their operations back home to the UK.

High production

Take injection moulding for instance, a manufacturing process that Digital Journal predicts will see booming growth between 2023 and 2030. Injection moulding is used to manufacture a huge variety of plastic parts — everything from medical devices to takeaway food containers — with good repeatability, consistently high production with low waste, and a low-cost-per-part. However, the injection moulding process can be expensive, overall. 

Estimates range from £3,000 to £100,000, relative to the size of the product, the volume of manufacture and the speed of production. How can automation and robotics lower these costs? First, let’s consider that 90 per cent of the costs of injection moulding are attributable to the electricity used to power the injection moulding machine itself. Machines powered by a hydraulic motor are often favoured because they produce higher energy levels and higher injection pressures, and the initial cost of the machine is lower.

But there are disadvantages. The machine’s hydraulic power is connected to anelectric power unit, so works at maximum capacity during the entire moulding processand even consumes energy when idle. These factors significantly impede the energy efficiency and are why manufacturers should instead consider all-electric machines.

Energy efficiency savings

Let’s examine the case of one TM Robotics customer, a large UK manufacturer ofplastic containers. The company relies on Shibaura Machine’s all-electric injectionmoulding machines (IMM) supplied by TM Robotics. Performance benefits of the IMM include a range of clamping force from 50 to 2,500 tons, which can be calibrated by a digital direct screw transfer (DST) control for added production flexibility. While all-electric machines are initially more expensive with lower injection pressures, they greatly outperform hydraulic versions in a variety of other ways.

Advantages of all-electric IMMS include higher rates and speeds of injection, becausethey rely on toggle clamping rather than direct pressure clamping, which is better forhigh-speed injection moulding. Other benefits are improved dry cycle times and the overall stability of the mould itself.

But what about the energy savings? Performance tests by Shibaura Machinemeasured its EC650SX-61B IMM, with a clamping force of 650 tons, against ahydraulic servo machine. It delivered a 51 per cent energy reduction. Another EC-SXmodel, the 1,800 ton EC1800SX-155B, was tested against a competing all-electric IMM.

Although both machines had the same energy consumption, the Shibaura Machine IMM delivered a faster cycle time, for overall energy efficiency savings of 30 per cent.

Bringing it all back home

Meanwhile, the TM Robotics’ customer has experienced 20 to 40 per cent lowerrunning costs and 35 per cent faster cycle times with the all-electric IMMs, plus a lowercost-per-mould.

Thanks to these benefits, the manufacturer of plastic containers has ordered severalmore Shibaura Machine IMMs from TM Robotics, specifically its newest SXIII rangeof injection moulding machines. An additional benefit is that the SXIII can be easily integrated with Shibaura Machine robots like the TVL industrial robot range that are compact, lightweight and space saving. 

Each robot has varying reach and payload specifications, and a longer arm length compared with previous robot ranges. The advantages of all-electric injection moulding machines, like the EC-SX and SXIII, demonstrate how automation and robots can help manufacturers bring their operations back home to the UK. Reshoring can be achieved with cost- and energy-efficiency as well as productivity benefits — even if, as Ozzy sang, things “ain't the same.”

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