![]()

By Jack Saint
Watervliet Arsenal, the
nation's oldest manufacturing arsenal, has two types of firepower.
The products manufactured at Watervliet Arsenal comprise one type of firepower.
Located along the Hudson River, just a few miles north of the state capital at Albany,
Watervliet makes high-tech, high-powered weaponry - the kind of cannons that produce the
firepower for the United States Armys main battlefield tank, the M1 Abrams. In
fact, Watervliet is America's sole manufacturing facility for large-caliber cannon in
volume and is recognized as the nations premier cannon maker. And were
not just talking about actual cannons here; the term also encompasses
recoilless rifles, mortars, howitzers and tank guns.
Then theres the kind of firepower that Bruce Pienkoski has at his disposal.
For Pienkoski, a mechanical engineer in the Computer Integrated Manufacture Workgroup at
Watervliet Arsenal, his firepower resides in a new document management system that went
live at his plant in May of this year. And when he wields it, with his itchy trigger
finger on the keyboard, no manufacturing operation is safe from improvement.
Recently, I fixed an improper data entry for approximately 300 records, said
Pienkoski, whose job description has grown to include administration of manufacturing
software systems, as well as purchasing, maintaining, and distributing manufacturing
hardware and software to best utilize manufacturing automation systems. The
entire process took me about 20 minutes. With our previous system, we would
have never been able to identify all the incorrect data, let alone fix it.
The system that has put so much firepower at Pienkoskis fingertips is Process
Innovator, the first totally Web-centric Product Data Management and Electronic Document
Management (PDM/EDM) system. Developed by Integrating Data for Management (IDFM), a
software products and services company based in Burlington, Mass., Process Innovator
easily converts legacy data, has a solid browser interface, and offers far more
functionality than any system on the market. It is particularly beneficial in the
manufacturing environment, reducing costs and cycle times while improving quality.
Whats more, due to its Web orientation, Process Innovator can be run from thin
clients or from any workstation that supports a Web browser, as well as running on an
extranet, an intranet, or across the Internet. Most importantly, it offered Pienkoski the
firepower he needed to perform operations too complex for his previous system.
We used to have about 20 different planners entering data into our system, he
explained. Because we had no set standard for data entry, one person might put
a stock number in differently than another - some might use a dash, some might not.
I needed software that would allow me to go into the database, instantly identify all of
the discrepancies, and fix them.
The bottom line is, weve been able to clean up our data quickly and
easily. And while figures arent yet available, we know were saving both
time and money, not to mention producing more accurate routings.
It is the kind of system befitting an operation with the storied history of Watervliet
Arsenal. Founded in 1813 to support the "Second War for Independence," the
War of 1812, the arsenal has been a valuable resource ever since. In 1887, the
arsenal became America's "Cannon Factory. The arsenal is not limited to
cannon manufacturing: it is equipped with a variety of modern machining centers, mills,
profilers, and lathes, providing the versatility to machine most any part
configuration. One of the most extensive metals processing facilities in the entire
northeast is located there.
Further, a 10-year $350-million renovation program completed in 1992 has made Watervliet
Arsenal one of the most sophisticated, automated heavy manufacturing and machining centers
to be found anywhere, whether in the private or public sectors.
Ironically, the search for a new document management system was motivated less by a desire
for a more efficient system than it was the result of Watervliets effort to combat
the pesky millennium, or Y2K, bug.
"The document management system we had been using was not Y2K-compliant, and the
manufacturer had no plans to make it Y2K-compliant, recalled Pienkoski.
So, although budgets were tight, we knew we had to look at replacing the
system.
After attending a demonstration of Process Innovators functionality, Pienkoski was
comfortable making the investment. Once in place, the system certainly satisfied
Watervliets initial requirement for Y2K compliance. But he also had much more:
an extremely easy-to-use, cost-effective document management system.
I had actually been considering the purchase of a PC-based, multimedia manufacturing
software package to use on the shop floor with our previous system, Pienkoski
said. But finding software that combined both of these functions in one system
was much more useful. Whats more, the added benefit of [Process
Innovators] ODBC database, which would allow me easier access to our existing CAPP
data, was very important to our needs.
But that just scratched the surface of the systems functionality. Once
installed, any PC-based application can be integrated easily and seamlessly into Process
Innovator documents, including word processing, spreadsheets, graphics, CAD systems, and
even audio and video applications. In addition, Process Innovator can be integrated
into the Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) environment, because it stores data in a
relational database (most ERP packages run on relational database platforms). Plus,
because the system is Web-based, no one at Watervliet is forced to learn another
proprietary program to make changes.
Watervliet has over 20,000 routings in their system. To date, the biggest benefit
has been the functionality associated with our data residing on Process Innovator.
Yet the graphics capabilities of the system, says Pienkoski, will perhaps provide the most
significant benefits.
Youve heard the expression, a picture is worth a thousand
words, he said. All our routings are currently text-based; we plan
to introduce more graphics into them, to make them easier to work with. Well
feature pictures of complex setups and fixtures. We want to be able to illustrate a
revised part mix that might require too many words to describe. We want to be able
to display graphic interfaces of each part, how the part looks, etc.
But thats only the beginning, Pienkoski said. We intend to provide links to
other manufacturing data. We will soon be inputting all of our CAD drawings, and will have
live links to our NC programs, as well as establishing links to various SOPs.
The ability to easily create templates for complicated documents is also attractive to
Pienkoski. He is particularly interested in the possibility of combining two
elements of Watervliets process plan into one.
Our operation utilizes two critical process documents: the traveler document and the
shipping document. There are two types of traveler documents, so really there are three
documents. The traveler form accompanies products throughout the manufacturing
operation, which can include anywhere from four to 50 steps. It also indicates which
machines to use and in which order to use them; process approval is also part of the
traveler document. Its all part of our of statistical process control (SPC)
system.
Combining all of this information into one form would help us realize significant
time savings, not to mention making the form far simpler to follow.
Since Process Innovator is a Web-based intranet system, Pienkoski was able to train his
own personnel with relative ease. If they knew how the previous CAPP system worked -
and if they were remotely literate in web browser technology - it was very quick and easy
training.
Most of the training I have had to conduct on the system was in basic Windows
functionality such as cut and paste, not Process Innovator, he said.
Pienkoski says he will continue to familiarize himself and his staff with the potential of
the Process Innovator system. In doing so, he will be able to enter the productivity
and quality battle with both guns blazing.
Jack Saint can be contacted at jsaint@idfm.com..