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Many moons ago I also spent a fair amount of time in a machine shop, although never more than in an amateur capacity (I'm not sure I'd call what I did even moonlighting, mainly an enthusiast making small stuff), and I was never using really fancy machines as a result. What struck me was how just how little was automated, how stuff that was nominally automated still had quite a bit of manual labor. I had always had in my mind that with CNC machines you just stick the metal in the vise, load the program, hit start, and you're good to go, but there's manual calibration, facing off and the like that needs to be done before every run. For small, simple pieces I would often forgo the CNC automation and just manually make the piece myself, even when I had already made the piece in SolidWorks (and so could easily generate G code). I've heard that for really fancy machines it's truly a push button process (as long as you feed it precision milled blanks), but I've never had a chance to actually use those. |
I dabble in running a small machine-shop, and we are able to automate a good chunk of what people still do manually. The stock we use is cheap, straight from the mill stuff as we have the machine measure the stock with an electronic probe. The machines also have 20 pallets, so once the stock is loaded, the operator can leave the machine for 20x the cycle time of a part. The pallets don’t even have to be the same product, so we can queue up replacement of inventory with just the quantity that a customer ordered and offer a bunch of made-to-order parts with reasonable turnaround times.
The machines also monitor spindle vibration so they can tell if a tool looses an insert, and the tool-setter is used to check if solid tooling is still intact.
The only manual parts are taking raw materials off the suppliers truck, unloading finished parts (next on automation list), final assembly (working on automation for this), occasionally loading new tools as they wear/break and fulfillment.