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COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY MANUFACTURER LEVERAGES FLEXIBILITY IN PROTOTYPE ASSEMBLY PROCESS
At Zhone's new 17-acre campus in Oakland, Calif., only 15,000 sq ft is
dedicated to a manufacturing shop floor. Manufacturing processes are
established locally and volume manufacturing is subsequently outsourced.
Zhone requires a high degree of flexibility in routing different
networking system products to the right work stations and to the right
testing equipment in the Oakland facility. Yet, with a FloStor materials
handling system now in place and flexible routing achieved, the company
is well on its way toward meeting those tall expectations.
Zhone occupied its Oakland facility just last August. Within the
available space there, the company installed a combination of roller
conveyors, pop-up ball table transfers, a hydraulic lift table, lift
assist carts, and a sortation transfer vehicle (STV) system.
A single STV - a specialized automatic guided vehicle (AGV), which was customized for Zhone's purposes, runs back and
forth over a straight stretch of track only 72 ft long. Equipped with a
roller conveyor deck, the STV delivers configured systems to work
station test cells and later moves them on to their next destination.
"Based on past experiences with similar applications using conveyor
based delivery systems, we determined that an STV would better
accommodate the spikes in our production volume and eliminate the
inherent bottlenecks common with conveyors," says John Friedl,
senior manufacturing engineer.
This STV system also provides, he adds, "more robust routing of our
configured products by handling all transactions through software
control." Thus, there's no need for bar code scanners or similar
automatic data capture methods for tracking the location of
work-in-process. The STV carries only a single load and this system's
software then monitors what's aboard specifically, where it goes in the
facility, and when transactions take place.
This semi-automated handling system was completing a final debug phase
late last year. But thus far the system has provided many benefits,
including improved ergonomics, improved material flow, and real-time
work-in-progress reports.
This handling system, adds Friedl, "has exceeded our capacity
expectations throughout a rigorous test and evaluation period."
Handling time by technicians is "greatly reduced," he says,
and there's increased efficiency in testing procedures.
For a comprehensive review of this project, contact
FloStor for a reprint of the original Modern
Materials Handling Magazine feature article.
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