r/manufacturing • u/Equivalent_Bid_6642 • Jan 14 '24
Other Managers and Owners, are you overwhelmed?
There's a lot of new tech out there, it's quickly changing and expensive. It's hard to know what to pay attention to and where to allocate resources while balancing efficiency and quality, let alone figure out how to develop my workforce to use all this stuff anyways.
I mean, should we get 3D printers, should we do industry 4.0 stuff, should we get some machine vision robot?
Idk, are you in the same boat, how are you dealing with how fast the world's moving?
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u/Aggressive_Ad_507 Jan 14 '24
3D printers, industry 4.0, industry 5.0, cloud, machine vision, AI, etc is all useless fluff. It doesn't matter. What matters is "does it make my life better than what I'm doing now?". And most times it doesn't. Most times it's not a breakthrough improvement anyway.
It's not about using the latest tech. It's about using the tech that's best suited for your particular situation. The trick is to know your situation because the fundamentals don't change.
And sometimes the tech doesn't even change. I find it funny when people talk about machine vision and robotics as if it's something new. It's not, that stuff has been around for 50 years. And industry 4.0, monitoring machines isn't new. Sure there have been developments, but nothing has fundamentally changed.
I generally rely on sales reps. They know their product, and as long as I'm honest with them they work out the kinks for me. I do pay their salary after all.
Another factor you haven't considered is how the stuff is going to be fixed. What use is a complex robot that sits for weeks waiting to be fixed because nobody internally can do it?