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Automated surface processing at BMW Group Plant Regensburg – trio of digital paint shop processes
02.05.2023 Press Release
+++ BMW Group Plant Regensburg becomes first car plant worldwide to use end-to-end digitalised, automated process for inspection, processing and marking of painted vehicle surfaces +++ New: AI-controlled robots process every vehicle individually to meet objective quality standards +++
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Saskia Graser
BMW Group
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Saskia Graser
BMW Group
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+++ BMW Group Plant Regensburg becomes first car plant worldwide to use end-to-end digitalised, automated process for inspection, processing and marking of painted vehicle surfaces
+++ New: AI-controlled robots process every vehicle individually to meet objective quality standards +++
Regensburg. BMW Group Plant Regensburg has become the automotive industry's first plant worldwide to use an end-to-end digitalised and automated process for inspection, processing and marking of painted vehicle surfaces in standard production. In an innovative new approach, AI-controlled robots process each vehicle individually to meet objective quality standards. This ensures more stable operations, shorter lead times and a consistently high level of vehicle surface quality. Data stored in the cloud also enables optimal analysis of causalities and therefore represents another step by the BMW Group towards the digital and intelligent connected factory referred to as BMW iFACTORY.
Painting, sanding, polishing – with artificial intelligence (AI) for unique processes
The scene resembles a well-rehearsed play: Four robots stand in the processing booth, surrounding a freshly painted body. As if on command, the robots begin working on the surface of the body. They sand it, apply the polishing compound, polish, change the attachments and switch out the sandpaper. Cameras track the scenario. “What is unique here is that the robots work on each body exactly where needed – because the tiny specks and bumps that can appear after the topcoat is applied and that we want to remove are in different spots on each vehicle,” explains Stefan Auflitsch, head of Production Paint Application and Finish at BMW Group Plant Regensburg. “Robots are normally programmed to follow the same pattern until they are reprogrammed. Using artificial intelligence allows them to work in a more tailored manner. With up to 1,000 vehicles going through the finishing process every working day, that adds up to 1,000 unique processes.”
Automated Surface Processing has been used in series production at BMW Group Plant Regensburg since March 2022. The plant is the first car plant worldwide to use the AI-based process on this scale. To ensure everything runs smoothly, this step is preceded by another automated process that has been considered state of the art in the automotive industry for some time: The Automated Surface Inspection begins by identifying and recording the features that require processing after the topcoat has been applied.
Black and white for greater transparency: from light strip to digital profile
In the Automated Surface Inspection, the system first uses deflectometry to identify deviating characteristics. While large monitors project black and white striped patterns onto the vehicle’s surface, cameras scan it and detect even the slightest variation in the reflective paintwork through the change in the striped pattern. Like a perfectly trained eye, the camera registers areas that deviate from the ideal and transmits this data directly to the connected computer system. The computer saves the exact position, shape and size of the deviations, creates a digital 3D image from the data and classifies it, based on objective criteria. In this way, all vehicle surfaces are inspected for customer quality assurance purposes and treated as needed. “The system already knows as much today as our best employees combined. We used the knowledge of our entire team to finalise the system; the functioning of the equipment relies on our associates’ unique expertise. We channelled their experience into the programming – on this basis, the algorithm now recognises and objectively decides which features need post-processing,” explains project manager Daniel Poggensee, a structural planner for Surface Technology. From the data collected, the system creates a separate profile for each body that then serves as the basis for custom surface processing. This means no bump, no matter how small, can escape detection.
The new method offers even more advantages than just reliable detection of characteristics and a shorter process lead time: Automated Surface Processing not only processes all deviations recorded in the optimal order, and with the appropriate speed, but also with stability, repeatability and always with the same premium quality.
All data in the cloud – step by step to the connected factory
However, there are limits to the use of robots. For example, they cannot process the edges of the body or the final millimetres next to the door and other joints. The fuel filler flap is also too fragile. For this reason, it is ultimately trained employees who add the finishing touches and conduct the final inspection of the body. Here, the previously recorded data with the characteristics once again supports their work: A laser projector digitally marks the relevant areas of the body surface to ensure nothing is overlooked. Automated Surface Marking is therefore the final step so far in the automated finishing process. However, according to Poggensee, there are more ideas for the future: “On the one hand, thanks to the data in the cloud, we expect to soon be able to intervene in the process even earlier if there are any inconsistencies – which will enable us to prevent faults from occurring in the first place.” On the other, the equipment used should be able to automatically record operations performed by employees – so they do not have to go back and forth between the body and the computer for documentation. In addition to saving time, this also reduces complexity and increases the added value.
BMW Group Plant Regensburg is the first plant to use this three-stage automated process in standard production. It is also currently being rolled out to other plants.
If you have any questions, please
contact:
Saskia Graser
BMW Group Corporate and
Governmental Affairs
Acting head of Communications Regensburg
and Wackersdorf
Cell phone: +49 151 6040 3232
Email:
Saskia.Graser@bmw.de
Media website:
www.press.bmwgroup.com
Email: presse@bmw.de
BMW Group Plants Regensburg and Wackersdorf
The BMW Group has viewed itself for decades as the benchmark for
production technology and operational excellence in vehicle
construction – including at its locations in Regensburg and
Wackersdorf.
The BMW Group vehicle plant in Regensburg has stood
since 1986 and is one of more than 30 BMW Group production locations
worldwide. A total of up to 1,000 vehicles of the BMW 1 Series, BMW X1
and BMW X2 models come off the production line at Plant Regensburg
every workday – destined for customers all over the world. Different
types of drive trains are flexibly manufactured on a single production
line – from vehicles with internal combustion engines to plug-in
hybrids, to fully-electric models.
High-voltage batteries for the
electric models built in Regensburg are also produced locally, in
direct proximity to the vehicle plant. They are assembled at the
electric component production facility, which opened in 2021 at the
Leibnizstrasse location.
BMW Innovation Park Wackersdorf also
belongs to the Regensburg site. The 55-hectare campus built in the
1980s was originally intended as a nuclear reprocessing facility. The
BMW Group has located its cockpit production there, as well as its
parts supply for overseas plants. Alongside BMW, which is the largest
employer, other companies are also based at the Wackersdorf Innovation
Park. A total of around 2,500 employees work there.
The BMW Group
core staff at the Regensburg and Wackersdorf locations in eastern
Bavaria is made up of around 9,000 employees, including more than 300 apprentices.
www.bmwgroup-werke.com/regensburg/de.html