The number of success stories of companies using additive manufacturing in their manufacturing operations continues to pile up. For UPSA, a leading French pharmaceutical company, additive manufacturing helped it reinvigorate its manufacturing workshop.
The company, which is owned by Bristol-Myers Squibb, identified additive manufacturing as a means to revitalize its in-house workshop and attract the next generation of technicians. UPSA also sees the technology as the key to overcoming production-line challenges, which had previously limited the number of machine parts it was able to make with traditional manufacturing methods.
“We identified 3D printing as a possible solution to our needs and made an estimate of all the parts we could 3D print to see if we could save manufacturing costs and reduce our stock of parts,” explains Mathieu Dumora, Project Manager in UPSA’s Technical and Infrastructure Department. “We quickly realized that by using 3D printed parts, we could reduce part weight by 70%, which reduces machine wear-and-tear, and has a big impact on productivity and machine longevity.”
This positive evaluation led to UPSA’s investment in a Stratasys Fortus 450mc Production 3D Printer, which quickly delivered efficiency savings for the company.
“One machine in our manufacturing and packaging line is a heavy cast steel arm, used as part of the operation to grip and suction open a folding carton, so that blister packs can be inserted,” Dumora explains.
“These arms are heavy, can become distorted, and sometimes fail and break the machine, but using a 3D printed arm is safer. The ABS-M30i biocompatible 3D printing material can recover if it distorts, but if it breaks, it’s a minimal cost and a short printing time to replace. That’s a huge improvement over a costly steel one. In one year alone, we produced 55 of these parts and made a 95% cost reduction on each.”
UPSA also uses its Fortus 450mc Production 3D Printer to build a device to improve the safety of the closure caps for its Efferalgan (paracetamol) for children. Some caps received from the supplier had particles that could have inadvertently posed a risk of contamination to the medication. The 3D printed device has proven so successful that UPSA was able to discontinue the time-consuming and expensive visual inspections previously used.
“We developed a system that sucks and blows air to remove any particles,” says Dumora. “We test the air suctioned, and even sometimes place particles in caps to test efficacy. Thanks to additive manufacturing, we are able to make this solution ourselves and evolve it through development iterations quickly and cost-effectively.”
UPSA is also witnessing significant savings thanks to its deployment of Stratasys additive manufacturing for the production of camera mounts on the manufacturing line.
“We apply track-and-trace coding to our packaging, and to ensure these are being properly printed, a camera is mounted above each one,” explains Dumora. “One of our design engineers used the Fortus 450mc to create the shape he needed, before using it to make 22 units – one for each machine. Prior to this innovation, an assembly of 27 parts was needed; the new design has just two parts, which has seen us enjoy a significant reduction in production time and cost.”
“Needless to say, for those of us who use it, the Fortus 450mc is an absolute work-horse, but it’s immediate and positive impact is ultimately underscored by the fact that in the first year of integrating the machine, we more than made a return on our investment,” concludes Dumora.
“We continue to see an increasing demand for 3D printed tooling, production parts and replacement parts for industrial machinery,” says Andy Middleton, President, Stratasys, EMEA. “The speed at which UPSA has successfully integrated our 3D printer within production and realized such a huge quantifiable ROI, is testament to the way this technology can quickly and cost-effectively overcome production-line challenges for manufacturers in most industry sectors.”
Stratasys
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