In producing fire truck cabs, everything at Pierce revolves around
seven large welding fixtures. They are for wheel wells, doors, step box
assembles, engine tunnel assemblies, roofs, sides and rear walls.
Pierce makes six different cabs, built on five distinctly different
weld assembly fixtures. The stops accommodate the multiple sizes of
otherwise standard fabricated aluminum components. Sheet metal
components for each cab are fitted into the final assembly fixture
manually and rest on the stops as they are arc-welded together—also
manually.
Pierce builds high-end fire apparatus, with most units costing $200,000
or more. Both the production rate and the backlog are strong, “so we
are always trying to find ways to build more trucks faster and maintain
the high quality that Pierce is known for,” Nennig said.
The 150,000 sq. ft. Appleton plant fabricates nearly all the components
for its cabs and chassis and all their assembly fixtures, so it is
highly vertically integrated. Pierce builds over 1,300 custom fire
trucks a year. Total company employment is about 1,600.
But Pierce has more than 60 competitors, half a dozen of which present
serious competition. To maintain its market leadership, Pierce stresses
productivity improvements. Three of its many CMM-related efforts are:
• Engineering the aluminum fittings that hold the halves of the oversized windshields in place.
• Engineering the cabs’ forward-most side roof-support pillars for
better structural integrity. Known as A pillars, measurements
originating from them determine dimensions and tolerances for the many
other cab components.
• Checking and troubleshooting assembly fixtures. Because Pierce
designs and builds nearly all its fixtures in-house, this is where
dimensional measurement is critical to productivity.
In addition, redesigns and material substitutions are replacing
labor-intensive sheet metal work. Fabricated steel mounting brackets
are being redesigned as iron castings; each fire truck has dozens of
different brackets, many in left-and right-hand versions. Fan
shrouds—one per truck but awkward to inspect—have been switched from
steel fabrications to reaction-injected molded (RIM) plastic. “The iron
castings and plastic fan shrouds are both fairly new for us,” Nennig
said.
“So we still need to do first-article inspections as new parts come in
from suppliers. Getting those done fast and accurately is the key to
production efficiency and this is accomplished very effectively with
the CMM. Data from the first-article inspections allow us to apply
continuous product improvement methods to our castings and composite
part innovations,” he added. “Every part can be accurately scrutinized
and the results compared over time.”
In the past two years, Pierce has bought two 3000i portable coordinate measuring machines
(CMMs). Both were equipped with PowerINSPECT, the world’s leading
hardware-independent inspection software, developed by DELCAM PLC,
Windsor, Ont., Canada. CimCore provides pre-sales and post-sales
support, application assistance, training and on-going telephone
support for the complete CMM system.
“The arm with PowerINSPECT is a wonderful system for any organization
like ours that is tasked with constantly improving its work...”
Prior to getting the first arm in 2000, all in-house inspection was
handled with “hand” measuring devices such as tapes, height gauges,
calipers and micrometers. The first machine was sent to Pierce’s parent
company, Oshkosh Truck Corp. in nearby Oshkosh, Wisconsin, after the
second 3000i purchase to accommodate the CMM workload at Pierce.
“The most obvious impact of the arms and PowerINSPECT is the ability
for us to set up welding fixtures in-house with verifiable proof of the
accuracy of the stops in a timely fashion,” Nennig explained. “Now we
are able to work with our design engineers to develop and build
fixtures before production starts and this is a big boost in getting
production started quickly.
Challenge: Getting Good Dimensions Quickly
The most sophisticated work undertaken with the portable CMM has been
obtaining a surface model of the windshield to insert into the solid
model for design of the cab windshield openings. Each of these glass
pieces measures roughly 44 by 32 inches and is curved in all three
axes. Glass is held in place by hand-stamped aluminum “trim” parts and
getting these parts dimensionally precise has long been a production
bottleneck.
Nennig digitized the windshields’ glass panels with the point cloud*
guided planes** functions within the PowerINSPECT software. “Every time
I crossed the predetermined ‘guided plane’ with the probe of the CMM,
it gave me a series of points in an exact row, all lying on that
plane.” That took a mere two hours, he said.
“The first one, when we were still new to computerized measuring
techniques, and without guided planes, took two days,” he added.
“Without the CMM it would have been virtually impossible to create a
sophisticated set of fittings for each of the windshield panels.”
The cabs’ A pillars were a similar CMM challenge. Structurally
speaking, the A pillar is critical. “It is the origination point for
all the cab dimensions,” Nennig said, “so if the A pillar is off,
everything will be.”
“It was taking us three to four hours to form each of these
pillars—tap, adjust and check, saw, hammer, weld and grind,” said Ryan
Lang, a Pierce manufacturing engineer assigned to Cab Fabrication.
Pierce engineers felt they needed to take an hour out of that for each
pillar. And because the A pillar itself is curved in two axes—in part
to hold the outside edge of the windshield glass—its tooling is among
the most complex. The cabs’ other pillars—B, C and D —are vertical and
the glass they hold is flat.
“We take extra care to positively support the A pillars’ tooling, to
ensure that all three planes of motion are locked down,” Nennig added.
“The stops for the A pillar welding fixtures are meticulously set and
reset, checked and double checked before the fixture leaves the tool
room for production.”
“With a correct geometric model from PowerINSPECT we can produce a new
A pillar and the die to form it in one step, all at the same time,”
Nennig said. “Also getting extra measurement attention are the cab
pivot and lockdown stops, wheel wells and step heights, and engine
tunnel widths and heights. As with the A pillars, many other dimensions
depend on these.”
“For me, as the incoming inspector, a first-article casting inspection
consumes a good portion of my day,” said Andy Smazinski, a Pierce
receiving inspector. “It takes me an hour or two to program in the
geometry, set up the planes and tolerances, and so forth,” he added.
“That is really good time because I am still learning,” he added. “Even
after working with the CMM for a very short time, I was able to program
fairly complicated part inspection files.” With the arm’s easy mobility
and magnetic clamps, physical setup takes him 15 to 20 minutes. “Most
inspections have 30 to 40 dimensions to verify with a minimum of 10 to
15,” he pointed out.
Solution: No More Road Trips For Inspections
“The beauty of using the portable CMM is that if just one stop in a
fixture was moved,” said Lang, “we can identify it quickly and see
exactly how much and in what direction it moved. Since each fixture has
dozens of stops, previously finding one that was out-of-position might
have taken us a week. That’s the same time as it takes to build a new
fixture. There are huge time savings in troubleshooting on the shop
floor.”
Nennig confirmed Lang’s point by explaining the complexity of Pierce’s
big fixtures. “The main, final assembly fixture is 12 feet long and
probably weighs a ton. Depending on the cab model, size and type being
built, it has 120 to 150 individual stops. At best, we can ‘set’ 30
stops a day and 25 is the norm. To accommodate the cab variants, some
stops have two and even three settings to accommodate differing sizes
of components from the six cab models.”
Even simple fixtures are big. The “base” or cab floor frame measures
60x102x132 inches or 5x8.5x11 feet, roughly half the size of a typical
bedroom. On to this frame, Pierce bolts approximately 40 stops that
together have about a hundred “stopping surfaces.” Each must be
dimensionally located and spatially oriented in three dimensions.
“These stops range in size from 3x3x2 inches to 4x6x15 inches “and some
are even larger in a particular direction,” Nennig said. “Not only do
we have to build and check these fixtures,” he added, “but we also have
to recalibrate them on a rotating basis. We also have to reverify the
cab weldment setups every year. So, clearly, the portable CMM helps us
keep production moving.”
“Typically, we create our own part-specific files directly in
PowerINSPECT rather than using downloaded CAD and IGES files,” he
continued. “The CAD tools in software make this so easy to do. Most of
the time I have the CMM laptop computer on my desk beside my CAD system
monitor. I type data from the CAD screen directly into the program I am
writing. This works extremely well.”
On the other hand, “mainly for part inspections,” he said, “we will use
solid models from our CATIA software and import it directly into
PowerINSPECT. This is very useful for rapid part checking. This lets
us—at last—upload accurate tooling files to the CAD system. When we
verify a stop’s location or verify that it has not moved, we use
PowerINSPECT’s spheres of alignment tools.”***
“When we bought the first arm, we considered the competition, too,”
Nennig said, “but we liked the PowerINSPECT software better than the
other packages. “It is a much more powerful organizational tool for
handling geometry and groups of measurements. We need to gather
measurements in large groups, all at once, when we troubleshoot or do
first-article inspections,” he explained. “Then we break the groups
apart to retrieve the specific data and look for root causes and
process-improvement opportunities. We could not do that with any other
system.
“PowerINSPECT was the big selling point, the shining star of the 3000i
system,” Nennig said. “The arm was a better product, too, the 3000i was
more attractively priced, and we liked the level of service we got from
Dean Solberg,” the distributor from Exact Metrology, Algonquin,
Illinois. “When you get right down to it, we did not like the other
systems at all.”
The Pierce engineers run their PowerINSPECT software on Dell Computer
Corp. Latitude PP01L models. These have 1.6 gigahertz Intel Corp.
Pentium III CPUs with 128 megabytes of RAM and 20-gigabyte disk drives.
The operating system is Microsoft Corp.’s Windows XP Professional. At
the time of the interview, Pierce was upgrading PowerINSPECT to Version
3.00 from Vers. 2.200 (Service Pack 3).
Benefit: Better Dimensional Control, Better Production
The biggest gains in inspection at Pierce stem from a fundamental
change: The inspection systems—the arms with PowerINSPECT—now travel to
the parts and fixtures rather than the parts traveling to contract CMM
shops. No longer do those “road trips” determine when work will start
on new parts.
The arms give the quality control team a huge advantage by increasing
their effectiveness. “The 3000i allows us to control the quality and,
to some extent, the speed of the build process.” Nennig pointed out.
“We always have to be certain that the fixtures are correct and that
they were built that way.
“The 3000i's capability for infinite rotation is a definite time and
frustration saver,” Nennig said. “Our cab welding fixtures are big and
many of the points have to be taken from inside them. Without infinite
rotation we would be backtracking a large percentage of the time.” If a
user is forced to back out of a welding fixture to unwind the joints of
an arm, registration can be lost. In that case, the inspection has to
be started all over again.”
Also of great value to Pierce is the arm's accuracy. “Our CMMs need to
fill many roles,” Nennig continued. “They need to check machined parts
to five- or seven-thousandths of an inch as well as be durable enough
to use for setting up larger welding fixtures where tolerances are a
little more forgiving.”
“The machine is rarely if ever wrong,” said Lang, a long-time user.
“Once in a while a number will ‘appear’ to be way ‘off.’ Upon further
investigation we find that it was our fault. “The system makes the
whole dimensional measuring process foolproof.”
The CMM also minimizes the human factors that are responsible for so
many measuring errors. Even better from a day-to-day use standpoint, if
a dimension is off in some manner it will quickly be obvious. You know
that there has been an operator error and you can see it,” Lang
continued. “We correct our error and keep on measuring.”
“The 3000i also gives us better control over the content of the work
instructions that go to production,” Nennig pointed out. And since
Pierce is ISO 9001: 2000 certified, this is an important benefit.
“There is more data in the work instructions, it is presented better,
and it is more current. We are now providing foolproof dimensional data
to engineering and purchasing,” he added. That’s a great reassurance
for them as they make decisions.”
“The 3000i with PowerINSPECT is a wonderful system for any organization
like ours that is tasked with constantly improving its work,” said
Smazinski. “Everyone at Pierce is involved with quality, right to the
president. It is great to have a machine that measures down to a
thousandth of an inch.”
Since he joined quality control in December 2003, “I have seen an 80 to
90 percent improvement in what’s being measured,” he continued. “And in
how accurately that’s being done, and in the processes that have been
established to make sure it’s done correctly.”
As a result, Pierce’s inspection department —14 people—is now “getting
the respect we deserve for the quality and completeness of our
measurements and logging of data in the spreadsheets,” he concluded.
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