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Robotics

The Auto Plants of the Future May Have a Surprisingly Human Touch (reuters.com) 38

Carmakers have big plans for their next generation of factories: smarter designs, artificial intelligence and collaborative robots building a wide range of vehicles on the same line. From a report: The plants will also feature a component they say is the secret ingredient to flexible manufacturing: humans. SAIC-GM's factory in Shanghai, which opened in 2016, is one of the world's most advanced auto plants, assembling Buick minivans and Cadillac sedans and SUVs, including the CT-6 plug-in hybrid for U.S. consumers. GM's Shanghai plant is expected to eventually produce new electric vehicles, primarily for the Chinese market, executives have said. The plant, which GM operates with Chinese partner SAIC Motor Corp Ltd, feels almost like a scene from a Star Wars film, with battalions of machines quietly working in self-directed harmony. Collaborative robots, or "cobots," painted matte green and unrestrained by the steel cages that surround their larger industrial cousins, are being programmed to work alongside humans on the line. One unusual operation advanced models now handle is installing gears in transmissions.
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The Auto Plants of the Future May Have a Surprisingly Human Touch

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  • In Robot repair and maintenance!

  • Hopefully it will help Ford make trucks and SUVs.
    • "Hopefully it will help Ford make trucks and SUVs."

      Since Ford will make only 2 sedans, I guess that's what they mean with "building a wide range of vehicles on the same line."

  • I love how this story is all feel-good "we need humans in factories after all," but it never describes one single job that a human is required to do. They tell us that automation can't replace critical thinking -- O RLY? "People do the work requiring dexterity and intelligence," it says. Yeah, like humans have more "dexterity" than a robot and nobody has ever automated a process requiring intelligence before. And the rest of the story describes visions of "battalions" of robots, hundreds of robots, even rob

  • I'm not sure why the poster thought that installing gears in a transmission was an odd thing for robots to do. With today's insanely complex 8 and 10 speed automatic transmissions, I don't want some high school dropout who's hungover from the night before putting my next transmission together for me!

  • Because cars last longer these days, the poor and lower middle class mostly buy used cars. The wealthy want new, of course. This means manufacturers who better cater to the finicky tastes of the wealthy get the sale.

    Cranking out the same model in large quantities as cheap as possible is no longer a competitive strategy because the poor buy used and the rich don't want generic cars. But it's hard to get flexibility with automated manufacturing, and thus the "co-bots" which are semi-managed by line workers is

  • by Z80a ( 971949 )

    *human brains

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