Computer Vision Advances Zero-Defect Manufacturing

Second Government Cloud Computing Survey

By G C Network | April 1, 2009

Earlier this week I had the pleasure of presenting at the Sys-con International Cloud Computing Expo in New York City. My presentation, The View from Government Cloud Computing Customers, reviewed…

Navy NGEN and Cloud Computing

By G C Network | April 1, 2009

I spent half of today in downtown DC at the Navy Next Generation Enterprise Network (NGEN) Industry Day.  In case you’re not familiar with NGEN, this project will be the follow-on…

An Ontology for Tactical Cloud Computing

By G C Network | March 25, 2009

This week I’ve had the pleasure of presenting at two fairly unique conferences. On Tuesday I was in San Diego at the Simulation Interoperability Standards Organization (SISO) Workshop. SISO is…

Federal Cloud Computing Roadmap

By G C Network | March 24, 2009

ServerVault, a long time provider of IT hosting services to the Federal government, has been discussing cloud computing quite a bit with their current (and future) customers.  The repetitive nature…

Booz Allen Hamilton Lays Out Path To Cloud

By G C Network | March 23, 2009

Now that cloud computing is seen as a viable technology for the government marketplace, management consulting leader Booz Allen Hamilton is now providing cloud transition guidance. In his article “Cloud…

Is Sun Rising or Setting?

By G C Network | March 19, 2009

Today was strange. First Sun announces it’s open cloud computing platform. Sun Unveils Open Cloud Computing Platform “Sun on Wednesday announced plans to offer its own Open Cloud Platform, starting…

A Conversation with Emil Sayegh, Mosso General Manager

By G C Network | March 16, 2009

Last week, Mosso announced their new “Cloud Server” and “Cloud Sites” offerings. They also exited “Cloud Files” from beta, positioning themselves as a challenger to Amazon. With this as a…

Playing the Cloud Computing Wargame

By G C Network | March 12, 2009

Today at FOSE I tried my hand at balancing traditional IT, hybrid cloud offerings and commercial cloud offerings on a craps table. Just to set the scene, the Booz Allen…

Vivek Kundra Nominated for Federal CIO

By G C Network | March 10, 2009

Mr. Kundra’s quote from the Wall Street Journal says it all: “I’m a big believer in disruptive technology. If I went to the coffee shop, I would have more computing…

7th SOA for E-Government Conference

By G C Network | March 5, 2009

On April 28, 2009, Mitre will be holding its biannual SOA for E-Government Conference. This conference is one of the region’s premier opportunity for federal managers and MITRE Subject Matter…

by Kevin L. Jackson

Electronics manufacturers operate in a challenging environment. It’s hard enough to keep up with the ever-accelerating rate of change in the industry. Now customers want increasingly specialized product variations in less time and of higher quality.

Meeting this demand for increased product variation can seriously impact the bottom line. Such variability increases warranty cost that, in the US, currently averages 2.7 percent of electronics manufacturers’ revenue. This means that for every $1 billion in revenue, a company spends $27 million to support its product warranties.

Case Study: HPE Server Manufacturing Challenge

These factors explain why Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), a leading manufacturer of servers and other IT hardware, is undertaking an Industry 4.0 strategy to modernize and automate assembly processes.

A key part of the process it wanted to automate is server assembly quality assurance, which was being done manually by quality operators. This labor-intensive process is prone to error due to human eye fatigue and the inability of quality operators to catch critical defects.

The company’s portfolio of server products is complex and highly customized. These characteristics made it difficult to find a machine vision system that could handle the product mix.

This situation is hardly unusual. According to Kemal Levi, Founder and CEO of Relimetrics, there is “a strong demand for computer vision to replace manual visual inspections. Yet, due to a high production variability, particularly in the case of discrete manufacturing, computer vision systems today are not able to keep up with the rate of change in configurations.â€

Quality Audit by Relimetrics

To address these concerns, HPE is implementing Relimetrics Machine Vision Systems to automate end-of-line quality inspections at their server assembly lines. The Relimetrics Quality Audit Solution for Electronics (RELI-QA) is a proven Zero Defect Manufacturing (ZDM) solution that uses machine learning to achieve a high level of flexibility and scalability for computer vision systems (see Figure 1). The solution can be rapidly deployed, trained models from one line and data can be shared across lines, and existing camera hardware can be leveraged.

Figure 1. Relimetrics Quality Audit Solution for Electronics (RELI-QA) uses computer vision and machine learning to improve quality.

With this innovative approach to ZDM, the following can be achieved:

  • 40-second inspection time for 80 components in an entire server
  • Greater than 99.9 percent probability of defect detection
  • 50 percent cost reduction in the company’s quality audit costs
  • 80 percent cost reduction in the company’s final testing and rework

By implementing this solution, an IT electronics manufacturer producing 30,000 servers per month can reduce the cost of rework by half a million euros per manufacturing line per year. What’s more, the solution slashes the time to pinpoint the root cause of quality issues from days to minutes.

The Value of ZDM

HPE is not unique in its move toward automating quality audit (QA) as part of a larger ZDM strategy (see Figure 2).

Figure 2. The Zero-Defect Manufacturing concept that supports Industry 4.0.

Many other manufacturers are pursuing this approach thanks to valuable aspects of ZDM such as:

  • Its ability to considerably reduce the costs of handling defective products
  • Removing all redundant elements within a manufacturing process
  • Reducing scrap production and associated expenditures
  • Continuous production supply chain improvement
  • Increased safety and customer satisfaction

A recent International Journal of Production Research study stated that the evolution of Industry 4.0 has made ZDM implementation easier due to the availability of large data sets required for modern machine learning techniques. Increases in computer power and storage have combined with decreasing cost of sensors to the point that it now makes ZDM a much more cost-effective option.

A Practical ZDM Solution

The Relimetrics platform demonstrates the power of these advances. The solution can quickly evolve and adapt to changes in production parts and configurations, and enable the customer to sustain a high (>99.9 percent) level of accuracy by filtering inspection results automatically and continuously updating deep-learning models at the edge using advanced HPE edge-computing technology.

The advantage of this approach is the reduction of downtime associated with reconfiguring algorithms in high production variability manufacturing environments without any expert knowledge required. Levi explained, “Existing machine vision solutions cannot handle high production variability. Either manual intervention is required to reconfigure the algorithms or dependency on the tech vendor for updates leading to downtimes.â€

In fact, in today’s QA, the downtime associated with reconfiguring algorithms is a recurring problem experienced by many plants owned by a global manufacturer. Often, the same products or parts are being manufactured on different lines in different geographies. But these plants are not able to actively share the QA learnings with one another and take advantage of one another’s data.

Another advantage of the Relimetrics approach is its ability to leverage data produced at different lines and plants to deliver a comprehensive QA solution for a customer’s global manufacturing environment. Levi also explained, “Today, the learnings from configuration changes in, let’s say, a plant in Singapore cannot be immediately transferred to another plant in Mexico. Whereas with Relimetrics solution, the learnings from one plant can be immediately shared with another plant in another part of the world.â€

HPE Servers Inspected by HPE Servers

These ZDM accomplishments are made possible by using advanced Intel® edge-computing technologies. Running computationally intensive machine-learning calculations at the edge enables error detection accuracy of more than 99.9 percent.

In an amusing twist, the Relimetrics QA system used to inspect the server production line is itself based on HPE servers. Specifically, Relimetrics uses HPE Edgeline EL4000 servers based on powerful Intel® Xeon® processors.

But the critical contributions from Intel go beyond hardware. Levi said, “Intel provides the software and the architecture that enables Relimetrics to make the best use of their CPUs. Their technology is critical to the quality assurance solution because it enables us to run computationally intensive calculations at high speed.â€

Originally published by insight.tech on May 29, 2020.  https://www.insight.tech/industry/computer-vision-advances-zero-defect-manufacturing

Sponsored by Intel Corporation

Posted in

pwsadmin