 |
 |
| The MAG4 and MMC form Makino
were selected by AIRBUS to meet the stringent manufacturing
requirements for the A380 wing rib. |
According to Chris Harland, the A380 Wing Rib
Project Manager at AIRBUS in, the United Kingdom, the nature
of this business is changing. "The trend to monolithic parts
is increasing. We must achieve economic run quantities of a
single piece. It is now about process control due to high cost
of individual pieces. Large batches and delays in inspection
are a thing of the past due to the high potential cost of quality.
It is no good to say we will inspect it later."
These requirements dictated that the AIRBUS Filton plant make significant
changes to their manufacturing processes. To meet these stringent requirements
for the A380, AIRBUS Filton UK has created an advanced wing rib-manufacturing
cell utilizing the Makino MAG-Series equipment.
Setting Objectives
 |
 |
|
AIRBUS is achieving metal removal rates 2.6-times greater with
the single-spindle than can be achieved on multi-spindle gantry machines.
|
|
 |
The A380 wing rib manufacturing team set specific objectives when
outlining the scope of the requirements for this new cell. They categorized
these objectives under three headings: Quality, Cost and Delivery.
Quality
- Low scrap rate
- Low concessions
- High process capability
- In-process verification
Cost
- Machine utilization greater than 90 percent
- Multi-machine staffing
- Reduced inventory
- Reduced floor space
Delivery
- Complete machined wing rib, start to finish, in 1 to 2 days
- Single piece production runs
With these specific objectives in mind, they began reviewing the
initial designs of the new wing ribs. These wing ribs are massive, measuring
as large as 3.1 x 2 meters. They are single-piece parts machined from
an individual billet of a new, weight saving and high-tensile strength
aluminum alloy.

Machine Investigation and Testing
The high-process capability requirements of the project led the team
to realize they wanted a single-spindle machine over a multi-spindle
gantry machine. This dramatically reduced the number of process variables
they needed to control. This included only one set of tools, one fixture
and a constant spindle interface.
To achieve their cost objectives, they determined that a single-spindle
would need to be three times as efficient at removing metal as multi-spindles
on gantry machines. In addition, they needed to achieve much greater
spindle utilization.
 |
| The AIRBUS Filton plant in the United Kingdom
made significant changes in their manufacturing processes, creating
an advanced wing rib-manufacturing cell utilizing Makino Machining
Complex (MMC) technology. |
AIRBUS was already utilizing high-speed horizontal machines for some
of its wing rib production. They determined that the horizontal machining
approach was the only way to proceed when they would be making this
quantity of chips. "You can not afford for the parts to be lost under
a sea of chips," says Harland.
Given this analysis, AIRBUS established stringent specifications
for an automated wing rib machining cell. They approached several vendors
to determine which had equipment to meet their requirements, and narrowed
their search to three potential vendors.
In order to evaluate these three vendors, AIRBUS designed a test
part that incorporated all of the critical features from the family
of wing rib parts to be produced. That test part design was supplied
to each of the vendors to review. Based on their review, and feedback
from AIRBUS, vendors developed a processing strategy for the part.
AIRBUS then went to each vendor to observe the test part actually being produced
and inspect the part quality. In describing this procurement process Harland points out, "the published
specifications mean nothing unless they follow through on the part production."
The procurement team also considered the ability of the vendor to
provide support and technical knowledge. Rapid machine installation
and part process development were also vital project considerations.
Additionally, AIRBUS reviewed which equipment and organization could
ensure the most reliable equipment performance.

Making and Operating the Selection
After this detailed analysis and review, AIRBUS determined that the
Makino MAG4 equipment with an automated pallet handling system was the
proper selection for this project. The pallet handling system from Makino
included an area for the storage of 6 pallets and a 90-degree pallet
tilt station. This enables the parts to be loaded/unloaded on a horizontal
surface and tilted vertically in order to position the parts to the
horizontal spindles of the MAG-Series machines.
Makino installed their European demonstration MAG4 machine at the
AIRBUS facility by March 2002. This enabled AIRBUS to immediately start
the part process development activities on these new parts while the
MAG4 machines for the system configuration were being produced. In September
2002, the installation of the two production MAG-Series machines and
the automatic pallet handling system was complete.
Immediately after installation, the production machines were able
to produce wing ribs for the A320. The rapid start up of production
greatly improved the return-on- investment (ROI) for this system. AIRBUS
was able to immediately start delivery of the wing ribs, with the entire
first shipment needed by May 2003. Harland believes this goal should
be achieved, which he feels is an impressive accomplishment due to the
tight time schedule.

Getting Results
In reviewing the results achieved to date by this cell, AIRBUS feels
they are well on their way to achieving their three objectives. They
indicate the Makino machines have proven themselves to be reliable,
with a very high (90+ percent) availability rate. This has been achieved
while ramping up toward 90 percent utilization.
They also note that the spindle on the MAG4 is particularly robust.
As with any new start-up, it has taken significant abuse, but without
the damage that AIRBUS has experienced with other high-speed spindles
and machines.
AIRBUS is achieving metal removal rates 2.6-times greater with the
single-spindle than can be achieved on multi-spindle gantry machines.
They also have some specific development activities underway that should
enable them to surpass the 3-times capability they originally specified.
The ribs are being produced in a three-operation sequence on the
MAG4. The first operation requires that the first side of the rib is
rough machined, and then the rib is flipped over to the second side
for rough machining. After it is relaxed, it is then finish machined
on that second side during the second step. The rib is next flipped
back over to the first side and finish machined in the third step.
The throughput time from start to finish for machining a wing rib
is one to two days depending on the specific wing rib part being produced,
which meets their original objective. The wing ribs are being run in
single piece production quantities, dramatically reducing inventory
levels. With the raw material cost of each rib exceeding 15,000 euros
(approximately $16,000), this is a critical accomplishment.

Impressive Success
Only minimal staffing increases were required for the wing rib production
facility to support the additional A380 Super Jumbo Jet machining requirements.
This is due to the multi-machine staffing capability of the Makino Machining
Complex (MMC) automatic pallet handling system. Two operators are capable
of loading and unloading the parts, with the Makino cell control software
managing the machine scheduling, the indexing of the pallets to the
machine, and the loading/unloading station.
Given all of these successes, Harland says the most important accomplishment
has been the improved process control achieved from the single-spindle
approach. "Internal process control is now a requirement of the aerospace
industry. The highly efficient single-spindle horizontal machining approach
utilized by the Makino MAG-Series machines enables AIRBUS to achieve
this requirement.
"We are holding close tolerances of +/– 0.095 mm on the extremities
of our parts. This is done with pocket thicknesses of 1.1 mm with a
tolerance of –0.08 mm /+0.25 mm. We feel that the Makino machines can
allow us to reduce to 0.8 mm with proven process capability."
The production of these wing ribs is strategically important to AIRBUS.
And, the Makino MAG-Series machines are providing the needed lift in
manufacturing productivity to ensure AIRBUS is the worldwide leader
in this capability.

Copyright © 2001 - 2009 by Makino, Inc. All rights reserved.