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Volume 4, Issue 14

In this issue of Quality Magazine's UPDATE: 

-Manufacturing Technology Consumption Up

- Surface Metrology Tools, Hardness Testing and Laser Tracking 

Sponsored By:

 

35_image

 

Pocket-Sized Ultrasonic Thickness Gages with Live Waveform

 

The Series 35 Ultrasonic Precision Thickness Gages make accurate measurements on parts where access to the opposite surface is difficult. With the optional live Waveform and Adjust Mode you can view the ultrasound waveform in real-time and make adjustments to maximize performance in challenging applications. Please see www.olympusNDT.com for details.

Product Spotlight:

Machine Vision Application Guide – 83 Applications in 5 Industries

The Machine Vision Application Guide from Keyence is a 28-page, comprehensive and illustrated collection of 83 successful machine vision applications across 5 Industries. The Automotive section includes engines, bearings, chassis, glass, drivetrains, tires and more. Food/Pharmaceutical includes packaging, labeling, printing, tablet counting and liquid level monitoring. In the Semiconductor/Electronics section you’ll find wafer orientation, BGA inspection, robotics, LCD, IC, PCB and solder inspection. Plastic/Rubber/Paper contains plastic sheeting, cap seals, mold residue, PET flaws and more. Download guide here.

 

Quality News

March Manufacturing Technology Consumption Up 34.9%

March U.S. manufacturing technology consumption totaled $371.10 million, according to AMTDA, the American Machine Tool Distributors’ Association and AMT, The Association For Manufacturing Technology. This total, as reported by companies participating in the USMTC program, was up 34.9% from February, and up 1.4% from the total of $365.89 million reported for March 2006. With a year-to-date total of $945.27 million, 2007 was up 7.1% compared with 2006. VIEW FULL STORY

Coming Events

June 11-13            Sensors Expo & Conference, Rosemont, IL. Questex Media Group Inc., (888) 552 4346. www.sensorsexpo.com

 

June 12-14            International Vision & Robotics Show, Rosemont, IL. Reuter Exposition Services, (203) 483-5774. www.robots-vision-show.info

 

June 19-21   Measurement Uncertainty Workshop, Wixom, MI. Quametec Corp., (810) 225-8588, www.quametec.com

 

July 29-Aug. 2            NCSL International Workshop & Symposium, St. Paul, MN. NCSL International, (303) 440-3339. www.ncsli.org/conference/2007/

July 30-Aug. 3            Lean Experience Workshop, Novi, MI. Lean Learning Center, (248) 478-1480. www.leanlearningcenter.com

Aug. 21-23            AutoTech 2007, Novi, MI. Automotive Industry Action Group, (248) 358-3003. http://autotech.aiag.org 

Sept. 25-27             Quality Expo, Rosemont, IL. Canon Communications, (310) 445-4200. www.canontradeshows.com

Sept. 16-20            Materials Science & Technology Conference (MS&T), Detroit, MI. American Ceramic Society, (614) 794-5894. www.matscitech.org/2007/home.html

Check Out Our New Vision & Sensors Web Site

QM0507-coverNot So Hard

by Ed Tobolski


Performing accurate micro/macroindentation hardness—Vickers and Knoop—tests can be a difficult process, even under the best conditions. Preparing the surface properly to allow the optical measurement, and the manual indent measurement process, using a high-powered microscope, is time consuming and costly.

Fortunately, current state-of-the-art, micro/macroindentation hardness testing automation systems can handle these difficult challenges with relative ease. VIEW FULL STORY

Quality 101: Laser Tracking Fundamentals
 

by Joel Martin

Laser tracking systems entered the manufacturing marketplace in 1991. At the time, pundits speculated the new mobile measurement system was just a passing fad, unstable and expensive. More than 15 years later, laser tracking has withstood the test of time with several thousand installations worldwide. The technology has established itself as a standard-issue metrology tool for in-place inspection of large parts and assemblies in both the automotive and aerospace industries. Major inroads are being made in other precision industry applications that require accuracies of a couple thousands of an inch. VIEW FULL STORY

Copy of Syringe Roughness

Quality measurement: Surface Metrology Tools Support Quality Needs

by Geoff Anderson and Hector Lara

Quantitative measurement of surface topography is now a key QC/QA requirement in an increasingly broad range of industries, products and materials. This includes measurements on finished products, research and development (R&D) into new surfaces and surface treatments and in-process monitoring during volume production. Materials include metals, composites, plastics, paper, painted and plated surfaces, porous surfaces and glass. Drivers for these measurements range from critical functional and performance impact, as in the case of a partially processed semiconductor wafer surface, to expected lifetime, such as for hip implant bearing surfaces, to aesthetic considerations, an example being orange peel in automotive paint. 
      A number of different contact and noncontact techniques currently support this application diversity, the two most widely used being white light interferometry and stylus profilometry. Now another technique with even higher resolution—atomic force microscopy— is poised to transition from the lab to at-line and on-line applications. VIEW FULL STORY

 

Case Study: Dimensional Measurement Success

Ogihara America Corp. (OAC, Howell, MI) is a subsidiary of the Japanese Ogihara Corp., a large independent automotive die manufacturer. The company motto is “Comply or surpass our customers’ most demanding quality requirements.”

In 2001, as part of the ongoing effort to improve operational performance, Ogihara conducted a thorough evaluation of their quality processes and systems. Ogihara’s objective was to raise their quality standards higher by transforming reactive quality processes to proactive ones, thus considerably lowering customer reported quality issues and maintaining best quality ratings. As a result of this evaluation, Ogihara’s engineers developed a process to be fully integrated into their product development and manufacturing program.

This new comprehensive quality process called for an advanced noncontact dimensional measurement system that could be easily operated in a shop floor environment and help resolve quality concern using root cause analysis methodology. However, it initially seemed that there was no product that could fully meet the various Ogihara requirements. VIEW FULL STORY

BNP Media