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UR cobots reduce welding time by half and eliminates bottlenecks

Siouxland Fabricating

In short

Siouxland Fabricating has successfully deployed UR cobots on MIG welding and stamping applications, cutting cycle times in half with zero downtime at a fraction of the cost of traditional industrial automation.

Siouxland Fabricating Inc. provides custom fabrication services, including cutting, bending, assembly and welding from its facility in the small town of Rock Valley, Iowa. Facing long term challenges finding skilled labor, particularly on the welding side of its business, Siouxland Fabricating decided to automate welding and stamping tasks. Previous experience with costly and complex traditional robots persuaded the company to explore collaborative robots for these tasks due to their affordability, ease of use, and their ability to handle high mix/low volume production.

Siouxland Fabricating Inc.

Industry Metal and Machining
Country North America
Number of Employees 50-100
Cobots used UR10e
Video — Siouxland Fabricating Inc. USA

Compact, easy to integrate and flexible

Siouxland Fabricating successfully deployed a UR10 cobot on a high mix/low volume stamping application, in which the cobot picks a part, places it in a stamping machine, actuates the machine, and then palletizes the finished part. Based on these positive cobot experiences, it was a small step for Siouxland Fabricating to ask “Can we stick a welding arm on the end of our UR robot and make it weld?”

“Traditional welding robots require a lot of fixturing, programming, and a lot of tweaking between our robotic programmer and our welder. And it also takes a lot of floor space. We were looking for something that was simple that we could quickly integrate in the shop and start making parts,” says Toby Boogerd, Chief Technical Officer (CTO) at Siouxland Fabricating, noting that the price of traditional welding robots was also a significant deterrent and that Siouxland Fabricating wanted its welders to spend more time fabricating and putting parts together and less time laying beads. “We really wanted the robot to mimic what a hand-welder was capable of doing, from circular welds to butt joints.”

A mobile welding solution

A mobile welding solution

As Boogerd researched cobot-powered welding solutions, he discovered the UR10e powered BotX- Welder™, developed by Hirebotics and partners Red-D-Arc, Airgas and Air Liquide, and was immediately attracted to its mobility, ease of use, and programming features. Soon after it arrived, welders at Siouxland Fabricating were programming complicated welds using a combination of hand-guiding and the Hirebotics smartphone application, says Boogerd: “One of Hirebotics’ main strongpoints for me is their smartphone application. It just makes sense. When you move the robot, you hit a button on the robot, and it saves that spot.”

Enhanced welding

Enhanced welding

BotX can be operated by a welder alone, explains Boogerd: “BotX enables us to let the welder move the robot and create the program on the fly. This was something we had always hoped for and we found the solution. I can weld on the UR robot too; even though I can’t hand-weld.”

Matt Van DeKamp, Weld Robot Supervisor and Programmer at Siouxland Fabricating, appreciates the simplicity of the BotX programming process: “Probably the biggest thing with BotX is being able to get it from Point A to Point B in a fraction of the time. You also have corrective positioning that takes care of positioning and your angle — which is everything in welding. I no longer need the help of the hand-welder, or his opinion of how he would hold his torch. That’s a big deal.”

15 minutes to program

15 minutes to program

The usability of the BotX application took a lot of the “nervousness” around automation away, says Maintenance and Welding Supervisor, Dan DeMeester: “There’s literally like three buttons you’ve got to know on BotX,” he explains. “Our traditional robots take a lot longer to program. You can get a part and BotX takes 15 minutes to program whereas on another machine it would take a couple hours. I can program it, set the schedules, make sure the part’s good, and run it myself. BotX turned me into a programmer.”

We took our typical hand-weld settings that we’re used with our Miller welders and were pretty ecstatic to be producing parts within half a day. Traditional programming would require pendants and movements and understanding coordinates, and this takes all that away.

Toby Boogerd, CTO, Siouxland Fabricating

Advanced welding cuts cycle time in half

“Traditionally, we would just do two or three passes on welding because we didn’t understand how to use some of those more advanced features,” says Boogerd. “But having used the UR robot, we’re able to use the weaving feature, which cuts cycle time in half. It also saves on consumables since we’re not laying all that extra gas and bead.” Weld Robot Supervisor Van DeKamp adds: “That was awesome. I now pulse and weave on probably seven different programs, which has helped drastically. I have also taken the advanced welds I have learned on the UR robot and put them on our traditional robots too.”

The BotX Welder deployment has freed up workers to focus on more ergonomic, higher-value tasks such as fabricating and tacking, while the robot lays the bead. “In the end, you see more production going out the door because I can have the robot working without an operator having to babysit it,” says Boogerd. Given the success of its BotX deployment, Siouxland plans to add another welding cobot to its fleet, says Boogerd: “We have the traditional UR10 robot and the BotX welding robot. And we’ve seen the advantages and production just keeps increasing. And, instead of having to hire more people, we can utilize that time with the robots.” The company also plans to test its stamping cobot on machine tending tasks involving CNC machines, mills and lathes with a view to adding more cobots to that side of its business too.

Freeing up manual welders

Freeing up manual welders

The BotX Welder deployment has freed up workers to focus on more ergonomic, higher-value tasks such as fabricating and tacking, while the robot lays the bead. “In the end, you see more production going out the door because I can have the robot working without an operator having to babysit it,” says Boogerd.

Future applications

Future applications

Given the success of its BotX deployment, Siouxland plans to add another welding cobot to its fleet, says Boogerd: “We have the traditional UR10 robot and the BotX welding robot. And we’ve seen the advantages and production just keeps increasing. And, instead of having to hire more people, we can utilize that time with the robots.” The company also plans to test its stamping cobot on machine tending tasks involving CNC machines, mills and lathes with a view to adding more cobots to that side of its business too.

Automation challenges solved:

  • Easy deployment on stamping & welding applications
  • Low footprint saves floorspace
  • Safe to deploy around humans

Key value drivers:

  • Reduced cycle times by half
  • Led to increased production
  • Improved ergonomics for existing welders
  • Allowed welders to upskill to programmers
  • Improved programmers’ understanding of welding
  • Affordability, ease of use, and mobility
  • Enabled more complex welds
  • Reduced consumables

Tasks solved by collaborative robots:

  • Stamping high/mix low volume batches
  • High mix/low volume welding applications, including complex welds

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