A July 13, 2017 article in The Economist explains the digital twin evolution, and how millions of things will soon have digital twins. Zero article inspection is analogous to a validation of the digital twin.
If manufacturing and design models are equivalent, they contain only negligible variations and will pass first article inspection. But like human identical twins, a digital twin may have slight yet significant differences that are not apparent on visual inspection. Therefore, engineers need a way to discern if the variations in 3D models are significant or negligible before first article inspection.
Before we delve further into ZAI, let’s take a closer look at first article inspection. The first article inspection process (also referred to as “nominal article inspection” or “digital article inspection”) involves manufacturing a physical part and inspecting the initial physical part to ensure that it satisfies all requirements specified in the engineering design on a “pass-fail” basis.
When a part fails first article inspection, delays in the overall schedule are expected and rework is usually required both upstream and downstream. If the first parts are supposed to roll into your second, third, or hundredth parts, then you appreciate the exponential – and potentially very costly - impact of such a delay.
When the 3D model is moved through the digital enterprise, there are several sources of variation that can be introduced between design and manufacturing. The 3D design model and the 3D manufacturing model should be digital twins with only negligible variations. Issues such as out of synch versions, diverging modifications, and human negligence typically are not identified until first article inspection. And if they are missed, they can cause expensive product warranty issues, product recalls, or worse.
When ZAI is added to your manufacturing process, model variations can be identified early, and dispositioned more efficiently and at a much lower cost than after FAI or later
It is important to note that when we talk about a CAD model, we mean 3D geometry representing a nominal shape. When we talk about an MBD (model-based definition) model, we mean 3D geometry representing a nominal shape plus 3D PMI that represents the allowable variation in the nominal shape. These sources of variation apply whether you’re using CAD or MBD models.
Translation changes made to the digital model during the initial handoff from design to manufacturing
An unintentional change to a hole is identified by CADIQ (on right).
Changes made to the digital manufacturing model after the initial handoff
Manufacturing change example: Material added to cast model did not synchronize with machined model.
Changes made to the digital design model after the initial handoff
Design change example: When adding material, this fillet failed. The designer suppressed the original geometry, and then re-created a new fillet. This was considered model clean-up and was undocumented.
Regardless of where, how, or who makes a change to the design or manufacturing model, these sources of variation are possible whether the product lifecycle environment is multi-CAD or single-CAD, and whether the manufacturing team is directly reusing a design model or remodeling it. The effect can be minimized in a single-CAD environment but never completely eliminated.
The bottom line is that there will always be differences between identical twins – between the design model and the manufacturing model. Zero article inspection answers the important and potentially costly question: Are differences between the design and manufacturing model acceptable?
Manufacturers who wish to optimize the digital enterprise, avoid non-value-added rework, and avoid downstream costs, need to embrace zero article inspection. They need a process to identify variations before first article inspection; and they need to address any significant variations before any physical manufacturing is done.