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These days, cars are high-tech. Car enthusiasts are no longer “grease monkeys” but “car geeks”. People who started out as mechanics with wrenches are now engineers with computers. Even the people building these high-tech cars are operating robots that churn out cars with highly accurate torque range, cleaner welds, and smoother paint finishes. As more work gets done with less and less people, we find ourselves questioning: “What is the role of people in this new era of hightech manufacturing?”
Robots may reduce headcount, and technology can reduce waste in the process, but merely going through the motions of “technological innovation” often generates mixed results. Regarding robots: • Robots will be at work every day but may not work. •Robots will do exactly what you program it to do. Sometimes, exactly wrong. • We need food. Robots need power, air, and hydraulic fluid. When it’s empty, it stops. • We take a 30-minute lunch at noon. Robots take a “break” any time of day or until you come back from lunch. • It takes a few minutes to change standardized work. Program changes can take hours, or even days. •People can proactively find issues outside their scope of work. Robots require optional parts and hours of programming, and yet still miss obvious issues because they’re “out of scope” Regarding technology: •Computerized standardized work takes 7 minutes to boot up and log in. •Wireless torque check takes 4 minutes longer if Wi-Fi reception is bad. • Weekly Skype meetings cannot solve problems on the production floor.Robots and technology are great tools for producing high-tech cars, but they are not replacements for people. People are the only resource that can think and develop unique ideas to improve both man and machine operations
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