At Friendship, bars are heated cherry red with a gas torch, then bent
to the specified shape and dimensions by hand. Aside from the portable
CMM, there are only two machines in the plant -- a pair of hydraulic
forging presses that form and trim eyelets in the ends of each
stabilizer bar.
“With the portable CMM and PowerINSPECT, we just print out the inspection report ...”
Most production is prototype jobs of 5, 10 or 50. But Friendship also
has some jobs that run in the thousands of pieces annually. These go
into (or more accurately, underneath) pickup trucks, SUVs, school
buses, and the civilian and military versions of the Hummer all-terrain
vehicle.
Friendship sells directly or indirectly to all but one of the North
American car manufacturers. Its biggest customer is American Axle &
Manufacturing (AAM), a $4 billion-a-year Detroit-based supplier of
suspension systems. Much of Friendship’s direct sales are aftermarket
replacement parts for high-performance cars.
Tooling is simple: curved bending blocks welded onto steel tables. The
geometry of the bars’ bends is inscribed into the steel table top. The
real work is done by the benders -- Friendship employs about 10 -- who
combine sharp eyes and well-honed skills with strong arms and broad
shoulders.
To make sure it all comes out correctly, Friendship relies on a portable CMM.
The model 1000i arm was chosen because of its nine-foot reach and repeatable accuracy of +/- 0.003 inch.
PowerINSPECT software was chosen for use with the arm “because of the
flexibility in the way we can use it,” explained Francis Blake, who
also oversees production. “We rely on the software a lot for its
reverse engineering capabilities.” This is how Friendship ensures that
customers’ geometry is correctly transferred from the drawings (almost
always 2D AutoCAD files in the DXF or 2D DWG formats) to the bending
tables and the inspection room.
“In addition, only the combination of the portable CMM and PowerINSPECT
would accurately measure the amount of deformation in the curves of
sway bars,” he continued. “This is especially important with the heavy
wall tubing from which many of our products are formed. The
circumferential deformation must never be less than 85 percent of round
or more than 115 percent across the rod or tube’s outside diameter. If
the deformation exceeds those limits, the sway bar’s stiffness and
load-transferring capability are compromised,” he pointed out. “That
bar’s production lot would be rejected.”
Friendship inspects its stabilizer bars to determine accuracy directly
rather than measuring the tooling itself. While the latter, indirect
methods are the prescribed way of doing things in ISO 9002-certified
plants (as Friendship is), it is beside the point here. Friendship’s
process is virtually all manual and final part dimensions ultimately
depend on the skill and judgment of the worker. This is what
Friendship’s inspections verify.
“The other measurement systems we investigated assumed that the steel
bar or tubing was still round after bending,” Francis pointed out.
“This is not the case with stabilizer bars, however, since the amount
of deformation at each bend is a critical dimension. That deformation
is what determines the balance of stiffness and flexibility that makes
the stabilizer work,” he explained. “The only way to determine
deformation is by taking several coordinate points around the
circumference of the bar or tube at the apex of each curve.”
In PowerINSPECT, each job is set up in terms of cylinders (straight bar
segments), axial rotations and bends. The software even prompts the
user through the process step by step.
“With the arm and PowerINSPECT, we just print out the inspection
report,” Francis summarized. “The customer can then compare the
tolerances, norms, actuals, deviations, and errors with the original
CAD drawings or with the engineering specifications. We and they are
very happy with arm and PowerINSPECT.”
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