Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Cloos India has officially launched its all-new Experience Center in Pimpri, Autocluster, Pune!

    June 18, 2025

    Precision Ball Screw Spline-PBSA Series

    June 14, 2025

    3D Printing: India’s Next Manufacturing Frontier

    June 14, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About Us
    • Contact US
    • Advertise
    • Subscribe Magazine
    Publications Media Kit
    Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp X (Twitter)
    MACHINE TOOLS WORLD | Machine Tools Industry Update | Machine Tools Manufacturer | CNC machine Manufacturer | Manufacturing Industry | Indian Machine Tools Magazine | Indian Machine Tools Industry | Machine ManufacturerMACHINE TOOLS WORLD | Machine Tools Industry Update | Machine Tools Manufacturer | CNC machine Manufacturer | Manufacturing Industry | Indian Machine Tools Magazine | Indian Machine Tools Industry | Machine Manufacturer
    • Top Stories
    • People in Focus
      • Interview
      • Opinion
      • Inside Story
    • News Updates
    • Tech Innovations
      • Aerospace / Defense
      • Allied
      • Automation
      • CAD / CAM
      • CNC
      • Cutting Tools
      • DIE / Mould
      • EDM
      • Grinding
      • Metrology
      • Metalworking fluid
    • Case Studies
    • Demo Room
    • Directory
      • Product Updates
    • Special Zone
      • Cutting Tools Zone
      • Metalworking Fluid Zone
      • Metal Cutting Zone
      • Modern Metrology Zone
      • Smart Automation Zone
    • Blog
    MACHINE TOOLS WORLD | Machine Tools Industry Update | Machine Tools Manufacturer | CNC machine Manufacturer | Manufacturing Industry | Indian Machine Tools Magazine | Indian Machine Tools Industry | Machine ManufacturerMACHINE TOOLS WORLD | Machine Tools Industry Update | Machine Tools Manufacturer | CNC machine Manufacturer | Manufacturing Industry | Indian Machine Tools Magazine | Indian Machine Tools Industry | Machine Manufacturer
    Home»TECH INNOVATIONS»How will robotic blacksmithing help US manufacturing?
    TECH INNOVATIONS

    How will robotic blacksmithing help US manufacturing?

    DINESH GBy DINESH GDecember 13, 2019Updated:July 24, 2020No Comments0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    How-will-robotic-blacksmithing-help-US-manufacturing
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Although it may not be obvious, there’s a close link between manufacturing technology and innovation. Elon Musk often talks of the “machines that build the machines” as being the real enabler in both his space and automotive businesses.

    Using less-expensive, more scalable processes allows Space X to launch missions on budgets and with speed that would be unthinkable using NASA’s old-school manufacturing methods. And the new Tesla Cybertruck’s unorthodox design appears to take advantage of a simplified manufacturing process that does away with “die stamping” metal in favor of bending and folding metal sheets.

    Now a new manufacturing method dubbed “robotic blacksmithing” has the potential to revolutionize the way high-quality structural parts are made, resulting in a new class of customized and optimized products. I am part of a loose coalition of engineers developing this process, a technique I believe can help revive U.S. manufacturing.

    Today’s technologies

    Metal parts are used in all kinds of high-performance and safety-critical applications in transportation, mining, construction and power-generation equipment such as turbine engines. Most are made using one of a small number of classical manufacturing processes that haven’t changed much in decades.

    Machining cuts away raw material to get a desired shape; casting involves pouring molten metal into a mold; and forming or forging deforms and squeezes metal into new shapes. Casting and forging to shape usually needs custom molds or dies that can take considerable time and expense to design and manufacture, but once running are very productive; parts are inexpensive with highly reproducible properties. This is why nuts and bolts can be cheap and reliable.

    Starting shortly after World War II, digital manufacturing ushered in more agile production, first with computer numeric control machining that cuts components of all kinds of shapes from metal blocks. Producing a different component was as simple as launching a new computer program. One common downside of computer numeric control machining is a low “fly-to-buy” ratio, where a 1,000-pound titanium block might be carved away to produce a 100-pound aerospace component. This is expensive and environmentally wasteful, but no new investment is needed and lead times are short.

    Right now, there is also deserved enthusiasm about making such parts by 3D printing, also referred to as additive manufacturing. This process also makes parts from a computer file on demand by building a part one layer at a time. Shapes that are impossible to make by machining can be printed, allowing new shapes that, for instance, have internal passages for cooling or communication.

    While these techniques have their advantages, they also have drawbacks. They often don’t produce the highest levels of strength or toughness and these processes are wasteful.

    Robots plus blacksmithing

    Metal implements made by blacksmiths oftentimes have legendary strength because the working of the metal, like kneading of dough, makes its structure finer, more homogeneous. As the material is shaped, it develops directional strength, much like wood is stronger along the direction of its grain. However, no human blacksmith can deal with parts the size of aircraft landing gear or have the reproducibility and stamina to make the parts needed for our economy.

    The idea of robotic blacksmithing is to extend the blacksmith’s art with new digital capabilities. Parts are shaped by repeatedly and incrementally forming a piece of metal which is precisely positioned into a press. This powered press or hammer system will interchange tools depending on the shape needed.

    By automating the process of shaping a part, but using the basic approach of a blacksmith, a machine can treat larger parts and be more efficient and reproducible than a human ever could.

    This new approach has the potential to efficiently and consistently make the structural ‘bones’ inside aircraft, ships, submarines and locomotives. Or the concept could be scaled down to make small individualized medical implants.

    Where will technology take hold?

    The basic concept for robotic blacksmithing, formally called metamorphic manufacturing, was demonstrated in 2017 when a team of undergraduates from The Ohio State University added hardware and software to a conventional computer numeric control milling machine to adapt it for controlled deformation. The work was in response to a US$25,000 challenge by the government-funded consortium LIFT (Lightweight Innovations for Tomorrow) to demonstrate the key concepts of digitally controlled deformation-based shaping.But that was just a start. Today, much research and development remains before we have autonomous machines shaping metal into unique safety-critical items.

    Fully developing the robot blacksmith requires a synthesis of technologies. The system must be able to know the shape, temperature and condition of the material at each location of the part being formed. Then it must be able to control the temperature to produce the right structure and properties. The press must squeeze the component where needed with robotic control, deforming the part bit by bit. And, a computer must make decisions on how to move and strike the part next in order to optimize shape and properties, often learning from how previous parts were made.

    All of these base technologies are progressing rapidly, and there is no reason they cannot be quickly melded together as a useful and practical manufacturing technology, as a recent roadmapping study has shown. History shows that when diverse groups come together to form a new industry, the birthplace of that innovation (turning the idea into businesses) reaps the long-term benefits.

    Detroit with automobiles and Silicon Valley with computers are obvious examples, but there’s also glass manufacturing in Toledo, polymer engineering in Akron and medical device engineering in Minneapolis. The more recent examples of thriving technical clusters are often outside the U.S., with personal electronics manufacturing centered around Shenzhen, China, and advanced semiconductor devices in Singapore. The early clusters were serendipitous. The later ones are usually the result of deliberate and smart policy decisions.

    There are already many examples of great technology that is born in the United States, then manufactured elsewhere. For example, many of the core technologies in smartphones were developed in labs in the U.S., but production is now spread across the world. The next wave of innovation will likely be located where skills are deep due from staffing and improving current factories. Robotic blacksmithing provides an opportunity for the United States to be the leader if it wants to. The core in keeping this virtuous cycle going in any location is in developing the factories, or the machines that build the machines.

    Read complete article here.
    Share feedback and join the discussion on the Telegram Group
     https://t.me/joinchat/KMczvFb8wiUlmJEaE-Ugnw
    Business Detroit Manufacturing News Robotic blacksmithing Robotics Silicon Valley
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    DINESH G

    Related Posts

    Precision Ball Screw Spline-PBSA Series

    June 14, 2025

    3D Printing: India’s Next Manufacturing Frontier

    June 14, 2025

    Gas consumption down 40 percent thanks to intelligent control

    June 13, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Machine Tools World – April 2025

    April 28, 202516

    FACCIN Ergonomic Console With Wireless Control System. Unlock The Power Of Freedom!

    November 25, 202416

    3D Printing: India’s Next Manufacturing Frontier

    June 14, 202511

    Machine Tools World – May 2025

    June 6, 202510
    Don't Miss
    Events

    Intralogistics & Warehousing Expo 2025 Pune – A Massive Success

    By MTWJune 9, 20252

    Pune, India- 3rd edition of Intralogistics & Warehousing Expo, co-located with the Material Handling Expo,…

    Countdown begins for AMTEX – First biggest face-to-face event on machine tools & metal cutting post lockdown

    March 17, 2021

    MMT Expo 2020 showcases world class manufacturing practices in its First Edition

    March 11, 2020

    Intech Additive Solutions

    February 24, 2020
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us
    About Us

    MACHINE TOOLS WORLD magazine is a monthly machine tool industry magazine in India since from last 10 years, catering to Indian & global machine tools, CNC machine manufacturers, Cutting tools, Metal Forming Machine Manufacturers, CAD-CAM, Metrology, Lubricant, Grinding Machine Players.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    The Scenario of Metal Cutting Fluids & Lubricants – An Overview

    June 12, 2025

    Honda Expands Production Capacity by Adding New Production Line at Fourth Motorcycle Plant in India

    June 12, 2025

    Hitachi Vantara Launches Virtual Storage Platform 360, a New Data Management Software Solution that Delivers a Simplified, Streamlined Experience

    June 12, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2025 MachineToolsWorld.
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.