A third industrial revolution ---Apr 21st 2012
As manufacturing goes digital, it will change out of all recognition, says Paul Markillie. And some of the business of making things will return to rich countries
OUTSIDE
THE SPRAWLING Frankfurt Messe, home of innumerable German trade fairs, stands
the “Hammering Man”, a 21-metre kinetic statue that steadily raises and lowers
its arm to bash a piece of metal with a hammer. Jonathan Borofsky, the artist
who built it, says it is a celebration of the worker using his mind and hands
to create the world we live in. That is a familiar story. But now the tools are
changing in a number of remarkable ways that will transform the future of
manufacturing.
One
of those big trade fairs held in Frankfurt is
EuroMold, which shows machines for making prototypes of products, the tools
needed to put those things into production and all manner of other
manufacturing kit. Old-school engineers worked with lathes, drills, stamping
presses and moulding machines. These still exist, but EuroMold exhibits no oily
machinery tended by men in overalls. Hall after hall is full of squeaky-clean
American, Asian and European machine tools, all highly automated. Most of their
operators, men and women, sit in front of computer screens. Nowhere will you
find a hammer.
And
at the most recent EuroMold fair, last November, another group of machines was
on display: three-dimensional (3D) printers. Instead of bashing, bending and
cutting material the way it always has been, 3D printers build things by
depositing material, layer by layer. That is why the process is more properly
described as additive manufacturing. An American firm, 3D Systems, used one of
its 3D printers to print a hammer for your correspondent, complete with a natty
wood-effect handle and a metallised head.
This
is what manufacturing will be like in the future. Ask a factory today to make
you a single hammer to your own design and you will be presented with a bill
for thousands of dollars. The makers would have to produce a mould, cast the
head, machine it to a suitable finish, turn a wooden handle and then assemble
the parts. To do that for one hammer would be prohibitively expensive. If you
are producing thousands of hammers, each one of them will be much cheaper,
thanks to economies of scale. For a 3D printer, though, economies of scale
matter much less. Its software can be endlessly tweaked and it can make just
about anything. The cost of setting up the machine is the same whether it makes
one thing or as many things as can fit inside the machine; like a
two-dimensional office printer that pushes out one letter or many different
ones until the ink cartridge and paper need replacing, it will keep going, at
about the same cost for each item.
Additive
manufacturing is not yet good enough to make a car or an iPhone, but it is
already being used to make specialist parts for cars and customised covers for
iPhones. Although it is still a relatively young technology, most people
probably already own something that was made with the help of a 3D printer. It might
be a pair of shoes, printed in solid form as a design prototype before being
produced in bulk. It could be a hearing aid, individually tailored to the shape
of the user's ear. Or it could be a piece of jewellery, cast from a mould made
by a 3D printer or produced directly using a growing number of printable
materials.
But
additive manufacturing is only one of a number of breakthroughs leading to the
factory of the future, and conventional production equipment is becoming
smarter and more flexible, too. Volkswagen has a new production strategy called Modularer
Querbaukasten, or MQB. By standardising the parameters of certain
components, such as the mounting points of engines, the German carmaker hopes
to be able to produce all its models on the same production line. The process
is being introduced this year, but will gather pace as new models are launched
over the next decade. Eventually it should allow its factories in America , Europe and China to produce locally
whatever vehicle each market requires.
They
don't make them like that any more
Factories
are becoming vastly more efficient, thanks to automated milling machines that
can swap their own tools, cut in multiple directions and “feel” if something is
going wrong, together with robots equipped with vision and other sensing
systems. Nissan's British factory in Sunderland, opened in 1986, is now one of
the most productive in Europe . In 1999 it
built 271,157 cars with 4,594 people. Last year it made 480,485 vehicles—more
than any other car factory in Britain , ever—with just 5,462
people.
“You
can't make some of this modern stuff using old manual tools,” says Colin Smith,
director of engineering and technology for Rolls-Royce, a British company that
makes jet engines and other power systems. “The days of huge factories full of
lots of people are not there any more.”
As
the number of people directly employed in making things declines, the cost of
labour as a proportion of the total cost of production will diminish too. This
will encourage makers to move some of the work back to rich countries, not
least because new manufacturing techniques make it cheaper and faster to
respond to changing local tastes.
The
materials being used to make things are changing as well. Carbon-fibre
composites, for instance, are replacing steel and aluminium in products ranging
from mountain bikes to airliners. And sometimes it will not be machines doing
the making, but micro-organisms that have been genetically engineered for the
task.
Everything
in the factories of the future will be run by smarter software. Digitisation in
manufacturing will have a disruptive effect every bit as big as in other
industries that have gone digital, such as office equipment, telecoms,
photography, music, publishing and films. And the effects will not be confined
to large manufacturers; indeed, they will need to watch out because much of
what is coming will empower small and medium-sized firms and individual
entrepreneurs. Launching novel products will become easier and cheaper.
Communities offering 3D printing and other production services that are a bit
like Facebook are already forming online—a new phenomenon which might be called
social manufacturing.
The
consequences of all these changes, this report will argue, amount to a third
industrial revolution. The first began in Britain in the late 18th
century with the mechanisation of the textile industry. In the following
decades the use of machines to make things, instead of crafting them by hand,
spread around the world. The second industrial revolution began in America in
the early 20th century with the assembly line, which ushered in the era of mass
production.
As
manufacturing goes digital, a third great change is now gathering pace. It will
allow things to be made economically in much smaller numbers, more flexibly and
with a much lower input of labour, thanks to new materials, completely new
processes such as 3D printing, easy-to-use robots and new collaborative
manufacturing services available online. The wheel is almost coming full
circle, turning away from mass manufacturing and towards much more
individualised production. And that in turn could bring some of the jobs back
to rich countries that long ago lost them to the emerging world.
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