黑料网

News

Spare parts go digital: a boost for the industrial spare parts business

Currently five percent of spare parts could聽be stored in digital warehouses. This would make parts more quickly and easily available, while creating considerable cost savings.
diva700_en_en.png

Digitalisation will also enable individual customisation and an increase in the intelligence of parts. 

A two-year project involving companies, and led by VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland and Aalto University, investigated how businesses can gain a competitive advantage from digital spare parts.

Spare parts and all of the related information can be stored and transferred digitally. Availability increases when a new spare part can be 3D-printed according to need, close to the end user.

鈥淚ndustry now has every opportunity to boost business by making spare parts into a focus area of development. Around five percent of parts can currently be manufactured digitally, according to need. 3D printing technology has reached the stage where high-quality manufacturing is possible,鈥 says Sini Mets盲-Kortelainen, VTT鈥檚 project manager for the project.

Big production plants maintain large spare-part warehouses, where a vast number of parts wait for long periods before being used.

鈥淐apital is released for more productive use when stock decreases. Demand-based manufacturing also reduces the environmental burden, because spare parts are not left unused. Another major opportunity lies in reducing downtimes through faster spare-part manufacture,鈥 says Mika Salmi, project manager of the project for Aalto University.

The research project found that digital spare parts are particularly appropriate in the case of extremely old or rarely needed parts, the warehousing or availability of which would not be viable. 鈥淲e have a lot of individual items and are keenly awaiting the new flexibility and speed 3D production will bring,鈥 says Petri Strengell, Group Vice President of Raute. 

The challenge is digitizing of parts

Manufacturers are already using 3D printing in product development and, to an increasing extent, in the production of spare parts. However, most spare parts are designed for manufacture by traditional methods 鈥 information that would enable their direct 3D printing is unavailable. The challenge lies in identifying 3D-printable parts from spare part libraries and arranging the data in such a manner that all other manufacturing information is available in addition to 3D models. The automotive industry is the first sector to engage in digitalisation.

The project also involved the development of concepts for the future. Digital manufacturing enables the customisation of parts as needed, making countless numbers of product versions or upgrades possible. In addition, various identifiers or sensors can be added to spare parts during manufacture, enabling the functioning of machines and equipment to be monitored or parts to be authenticated. If a spare part is equipped, say, with a wear sensor, as it wears the part can even initiate the manufacture of a replacement itself.

Valued at around EUR 1.4 million, the project forms part of Tekes鈥 Industrial Internet programme. Launched at the beginning of 2016, the project is funded by Tekes and the participating research organisations and companies: 3DTech Oy, ABB Oy Drives, AM Finland Oy, Hetitec Oy, Kone Corporation, Laserle Oy, Materflow Oy, Grano Oy, Patria Aviation Oy, Raute Corporation, Rolls-Royce Oy Ab, Sacotec Components Oy and W盲rtsil盲 Finland Oy.  The Finnish Technology Industries Federation is a partner of the project.

Video: Digital spare parts!

For further information, please contact:

VTT Ltd

Sini Mets盲-Kortelainen, Project Manager
+358 40 5257 815, sini.metsa-kortelainen@vtt.fi

Pasi Puukko, Project Leader Responsible
+358 40 5251 684, pasi.puukko@vtt.fi

Aalto University

Mika Salmi, Project Manager, Aalto University
+358 50 512 2746, mika.salmi@aalto.fi

Jouni Partanen, Professor, Project Leader Responsible,
+358 50 576 9804, jouni.partanen@aalto.fi

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Outdoor wooden daybeds with sheer beige curtains in a ruined courtyard garden with tall plants.
Cooperation, Press releases, Research & Art Published:

A Finnish working group鈥檚 artwork brings a cooling garden to Spain, which is sweltering in the heat

Through their garden art installation, a group of Finnish architects and artists proposes vegetation and a sense of community, among other things, as solutions to urban heat islands and the environmental crisis.
Five people holding large yellow emoji faces in front of them, standing side by side against a white background
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

RealYou AI will develop the next generation of personalized AI decision assistants

Researchers to build cognitive machine learning that will improve decision-making with instantly personalized intelligent assistance.
Round beige honeycomb-pattern mat with wicker baskets on bright blue background
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

Researchers identify new superconductors, unlocking process that could yield thousands more

Physicists have used machine-learning to discover two new superconductors鈥撯搃t represents a substantial step towards realising massive energy efficiency gains from superconductivity.
A founder pitching his project on stage in fron of an audience
Campus, Research & Art, University Published:

Join the Aalto Startup Center community of startups!

Applications are open for our main accelerator, the Business Generator program. Deadline coming up on August 7th.