@RobinSweden The paint gun is opened and closed using compressed air. The signal that controls the air is linked to the exact location in the robots path where it is needed thereby reducing paint usage
@RobinSweden We don't use the MultiMove function for this concept (Enercon). We have developed a standard 7 axis robot and we use 6 axis to control the robot manipulator and the 7th axis to control the movement along the blade. For the second question we use pressure sensors on the outlet of the pumps to sense possible pressure build up in the spray tip and give alarm to the operator.
@ABBrobotics: Hi, do you have any robots which can 3D scan the product and then do the painting since in our industry, CAD to reality the tolerance is comparatively high
less than a week for one guy( offline programmation). It's easy to do with robcad or robotsudio. Specialy here, with a trolley and it's stop and go... You need just be carreful of interference between robot... It's really more complicate to paint a bumper
Adding more robots wont solve this one. Everything along the line would have to upgraded to keep the speed. There is also running costs, it's probably greener to spray with two robots, the paint booth wouldn't fill with chemicals which would need more filtering etc. The whole process of adding more robots has exponential implications on everything involved in a production lifecycle. For welding etc, thats fine, but sometimes you can't just add more robots. Also paint dry times, etc.
If Honda built turbine blades, thee would be 50 robots painting is. Honda plants pack more robots in a cell than any other manufacturer of ANYTHING anywhere. Most car manufacturers have robots applying 60-90 spot welds per robot. Honda has rack robot applying about 20. But it's like I say, more equipment in manufacturing, more problems. (Currently, no North American Honda plant is meeting daily production)
Professional looking video but almost ridiculous productivity. Why would ABB use such a small spray device? It's like painting a house with a small brush. Come on ABB, use a 30mm bell and estats and get it done.
I could watch videos like theese for hours, more plz :)
@RobinSweden The paint gun is opened and closed using compressed air. The signal that controls the air is linked to the exact location in the robots path where it is needed thereby reducing paint usage
@RobinSweden We don't use the MultiMove function for this concept (Enercon). We have developed a standard 7 axis robot and we use 6 axis to control the robot manipulator and the 7th axis to control the movement along the blade.
For the second question we use pressure sensors on the outlet of the pumps to sense possible pressure build up in the spray tip and give alarm to the operator.
@tomcokis The very special coating helps the blades resist the elements when it has to be outside for 50 plus years.
@ABB robotics Wich system is used for positoning of the rotor in the combiboth?
I don't know whats cooler, the robots or the turbine blade :D
@davepamn The cycle time for the manufacture of the blade itself dictates the number of robots required to balance that cycle. In this case it is two.
When painting the long rotors wouldn't it be quicker for the robots to spray in long longitudinal stripes rather than lateral ones?
wouldnt eloctrostatic bell application be more efficent?
Is that what you call multimove? How do the robots handle stop in the spray-tip?
Very good video. This gives excellent quality of coating. What is approximate cost?
Just for information, how wide is this paint cabin (wall to wall?)
@ABBrobotics: Hi, do you have any robots which can 3D scan the product and then do the painting since in our industry, CAD to reality the tolerance is comparatively high
hello, what model of abb robots are they, i need for a project for my degree.
I like robots......for now
How many years do i have to save, to buy one of this things?
ok how many hours writing code ?
less than a week for one guy( offline programmation). It's easy to do with robcad or robotsudio. Specialy here, with a trolley and it's stop and go... You need just be carreful of interference between robot... It's really more complicate to paint a bumper
Adding more robots wont solve this one. Everything along the line would have to upgraded to keep the speed. There is also running costs, it's probably greener to spray with two robots, the paint booth wouldn't fill with chemicals which would need more filtering etc. The whole process of adding more robots has exponential implications on everything involved in a production lifecycle. For welding etc, thats fine, but sometimes you can't just add more robots. Also paint dry times, etc.
@deniskatashkentskiy Oh no we are not robots. There are real people back here.
Hanzhen harmonic drive gear , strain wave gear , over 30 years experience
If Honda built turbine blades, thee would be 50 robots painting is. Honda plants pack more robots in a cell than any other manufacturer of ANYTHING anywhere. Most car manufacturers have robots applying 60-90 spot welds per robot. Honda has rack robot applying about 20. But it's like I say, more equipment in manufacturing, more problems. (Currently, no North American Honda plant is meeting daily production)
Isn't it a bit of a waste painting the thing?
The robots were cooler than the blade
Why use two robots and not ten?
ABBRobotics, I am talking to this nickname hoping it's human. Or are you a robot too?
Lefty wins!
A companies only purpose is to be greedy. Dont complain when it is.
Professional looking video but almost ridiculous productivity. Why would ABB use such a small spray device? It's like painting a house with a small brush. Come on ABB, use a 30mm bell and estats and get it done.
If Honda built turbine b
@ABBRobotics ahhhhh