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Quickstep Technology selects Jetcam and Crosstrack

31 Jul '20
5 min read
Pic: Jetcam
Pic: Jetcam

Quickstep Technologies, a leading global manufacturer of composite solutions for the defence and commercial sectors, has chosen and already installed Jetcam Expert nesting and the CrossTrack composite manufacturing suite to manage nesting and pre-preg composite location and life tracking for its facility in Bankstown, west of Sydney, Australia.

The company had initially identified potential improvements that could be made in nesting for their three CNC knife cutters, but after investigation saw that further benefits could be achieved in surrounding departments handling operations further on in the process, such as layup, tooling and at the autoclave. David Doral, CTO and head of Engineering at Quickstep commented; "We were already investigating several nesting software systems, most of them limited only to nesting. We came across Jetcam in January 2020, after being recommended by an existing CrossTrack user and looked at the wider implications of such a system."

The project has been broken down into two phases – the first was to roll out CAD import and nesting, to immediately benefit from the material efficiencies of Jetcam’s high performance nesting. Phase two will expand CrossTrack to the shop floor, allowing staff to schedule nests for cutting, track layup tools and monitor the location and shop/shelf life of both raw material and kits around their facility. After performing a nesting benchmark comparison with several systems, it was clear for Quickstep that the ROI in material savings alone would offer a payback in just six months for phase one of the project.

Future expansion plans include Industry 4.0 and paperless factory.

The decision to select CrossTrack was made in May 2020 based on both affordability and current and future functionality. Due to the COVID-19 outbreak, it was decided that both installation and training had to be performed remotely. Jetcam created a virtual environment, based on Quickstep’s CNC configuration, and generated and tested a replica installation in-house. Once proven, the software was installed and tested remotely the following month, with sample NC code immediately proven. The first test nest was produced within two hours of the first remote installation connection and further training provided online. A virtual machine was created on the same server with a replica of their JETCAM/CrossTrack setup, allowing Quickstep to plan and test the rollout of phase two in a duplicate environment without impacting on their day-to-day operations and system configuration.

Martin Bailey, general manager of Jetcam International, noted; "The pandemic forced us to think about this implementation in an entirely new way, which will become a blueprint for future installations. We worked closely with Quickstep’s IT and engineering staff along with our own staff across multiple time zones to minimise the installation and configuration time online. The implementation was fast because CrossTrack is a standard off-the-shelf solution. It’s designed specifically for composite manufacturers and bridges the gap often left by financial-driven ERP system."

Doral commented about this point that "remote installations across different time zones can be challenging and grind a project to a halt. Jetcam has been very responsive and flexible when providing training and support. Clear communication and transparency from both teams have been crucial in delivering a solution that not only suits Quickstep's needs but is on-time and budget."

Quickstep also benefitted from the Jetcam University – an online portal for customers providing hundreds of tutorial videos covering every aspect of the software. This allowed staff to back up their knowledge obtained through the online training with short videos focussed on specific tasks.

As Quickstep had many legacy nests in DXF format that they wanted to import they also took a short-term subscription of Jetcam Order Controller (JOC), which includes DXF splitting. This drastically reduced the work required to get this data into CrossTrack. Once split, they were able to create a CSV file containing both individual ply and assembly (part) information and import them with just a few clicks.

Just two weeks after installing the software the company is entering the final stage of testing, after which they will switch to CrossTrack to generate all of their nests. Quickstep’s preliminary results indicate a 3 per cent savings in pre-preg material consumption is almost a given. These benefits will be applied to Quickstep’s main programme, but the company is expecting to increase the magnitude of those savings when the system is applied to all their cutting operations. They will then start the testing of phase two before rolling it out later this year. Investigation is already underway as to how CrossTrack might help with managing layup tools and scheduling for the autoclave.

Doral said: "As part of our strategic plan to constantly drive operational improvements through new technology investment, we are looking at various options going forward, where CrossTrack will be integrated with our ERP system, provide Industry 4.0 functionality and help us enable a completely paperless shop floor. With the system already paying for itself in a few months on material savings alone, any further savings will go straight on the bottom line."

Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SV)

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