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The Art of Manufacturing

The Art of Manufacturing

By : Ninad Deshpande, Sivaram Pothukuchi
5 (13)
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The Art of Manufacturing

The Art of Manufacturing

5 (13)
By: Ninad Deshpande, Sivaram Pothukuchi

Overview of this book

Engineering disciplines focus mainly on programming control systems, while the challenges they overcome or their industry applications largely go uncovered, leaving a huge gap between the theory and industry practices. This leads to engineers learning about subjects without actually understanding their purpose and entering the industry needing months of training. The Art of Manufacturing cuts across pedantic theory and reaches practical applications. You’ll begin your learning journey by starting from the product and moving backward to the manufacturing landscape, factories, machines, and finally to the automation and control challenges faced in manufacturing. The book builds on the authors’ valuable on-field experience, providing a detailed view of the manufacturing of real-world products, while simultaneously providing various analogies and references to daily tasks. As you advance through the chapters, you’ll work on interesting control problems and find out how to overcome them in applications. The concluding chapters offer you a sneak peek into the future of automation and factories. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to relate a real-world product with an associated control challenge and discover ways to overcome these challenges.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Introduction to the Manufacturing Landscape and Innovative Automation in Everyday Life
8
Part 2: Automation and Humans

The Interplay of Humans-Machines-Automation

It all began with the wheel. With a wheeled cart, it was much easier to transport a heavy load, rather than carrying the load on your shoulders or the back of a donkey. From such humble ideas, the concept of machines grew. The invention of the wheel was a significant point in human evolution. It was fundamentally different from objects like a lever. The idea was always there, to increase the mechanical advantage; that is, the ratio of the load to be moved versus the effort to be exerted. The determining factor was that the human or the animal exerting the force—the prime mover, in other words—had a limited strength or capability. So, methods were sought which could multiply the force which was exerted by the animal or human. The early means of a lever, inclined plane, wedge, and pulley were intended to change the application of force, either in direction, such as in the case of a pulley, or in magnitude, such as in the case...

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