Cambo, Thursday December 13, 2007.
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The Engine Test and Development Laboratory is the last part of the new structure to be completed and is also the most complex part of the construction – the triple storey layout features all the services in the basement and on the first floor, allowing a simple and efficient layout of the engine dynamometers on the ground floor.
Recent developments in Stamping
Over the past three years, substantial investment and major civil works have also transformed Ford’s Stamping Operations in Geelong, with new buildings, new press lines and new press equipment added to the facility in support of the launch of a new, eighth-generation Falcon.
Total investment in the stamping facility of $55 million incorporates a new "wide-body" press line, a hydraulic try-out press and a new blanking press, along with the accompanying building extension, civil and ancillary works in preparing and modifying the plant.
"To accommodate the three new press facilities, the stamping plant had to be expanded, while at the same time continuing to operate efficiently and to capacity for the manufacture of current Falcon and Territory models," Mr Gorman said.
"In delivering the complex matrix of new facilities and services that are now on line and operating in the stamping plant, around $15 million of the total investment was spent with local and regional companies in Geelong and Melbourne to complete the new buildings and civil works."
Foundation works and the main building extension involved a number of key items, including building construction, sub-station fit-out and connection of services, installation of a 50-tonne overhead crane, basement works for the Press Line, Blanking Line and Try-Out Press, and scrap conveyors for the Press Line and Blanking Line.
Existing equipment, such as the Baler, had to be relocated to a temporary position and then repositioned in its new location once the building expansion and associated construction was completed.
The new wide-body press line, Press Line 21, consists of four integrated, state-of-the-art mechanical presses with robot automation, which will produce a ‘single-piece body side’ panel – a first for Ford in Australia.
Serviced by six robots and five automated guided vehicles, the new press line is capable of producing between 380-520 parts per hour and will eventually press up to 28 unique parts.
The tandem presses are also capable of stamping left- and right-hand side doors simultaneously for every cycle courtesy of smart tooling design, which both improves productivity and lowers costs.
The new press facility provides Ford’s local manufacturing operation with a number of world-class features, including:
The new hydraulic tryout press will enable testing and quality improvements to be initiated outside of the main press line, as well as supporting the addition of the Focus small car to Ford’s manufacturing operation in 2011.
The new blanking press line delivers numerous productivity improvements to the stamping process, including the elimination of case stock, which is now pre-blanked before delivery.
The new blanking press includes a servo oscillation die, which performs angular cuts at high speed, and a curved cut-off die for hood blanks, and can produce up to 3,000 parts per hour.
When the new Falcon is launched in 2008 it will be the first locally-manufactured Ford model to feature a single-piece body side (SPBS) panel, which will deliver improved quality, vehicle rigidity and vehicle refinement, among other benefits.
From a manufacturing standpoint, utilising SPBS panels also increases efficiency inside the stamping plant by reducing both the number of dies required and the die changeover times.
Project specifications:
New automotive test facilities
An array of new facilities have been commissioned for Ford Australia’s You Yangs Proving Ground (YYPG) during 2007, as the company takes on an enhanced role as a design and engineering ‘centre of excellence’ for the Asia Pacific and Africa region.
In addition to the new automotive test facilities being developed under the Advanced Centre for Automotive Research and Testing (ACART) banner, Ford’s YYPG has been upgraded with a number of major new facilities, including a Vehicle Semi Anechoic Chamber, a Vehicle Dynamics Area, a Kinematics & Compliance Rig and a High Speed Centre.
"More than $29 million has been invested in the new facilities, which will contribute significantly to Ford Australia’s leading-edge design and engineering capability," Mr Gorman said.
Semi Anechoic Chamber
The only one if its kind in Australia, Ford’s new Vehicle Semi Anechoic Chamber has been designed to replicate a moving vehicle during open road driving, but in a controlled environment.
Vehicle Dynamics Area
The new Vehicle Dynamics Area (VDA) was modelled on specifications for similar facilities at the Lommel (LPG), Dearborn (DPG) and Michigan (MPG) Proving Grounds, with specific detail placed on the design of the surface to ensure full design life useability.
The VDA has been designed to accommodate current test procedures as well as provide for future test capabilities, with consideration given to future low friction surfaces and wet test facilities.
Layout of the VDA was designed against a list of mandatory requirements and corporate test procedures for vehicle dynamics that could not be performed anywhere at the Ford Australia’s YYPG.
The list also includes up to 27 other vehicle dynamics sign-off tests, as well as development testing and other vehicle systems tests for powertrain and wind noise.
The core vehicle dynamics test area is 935 metres in length and 100 metres across at its widest point, and is serviced from both sides by 650 metre acceleration roads.
The VDA surface is asphalt with a very specific tolerance for coefficient of friction, while basalt tile and brushed concrete surfaces are intended future additions.
Consultation with Ford facility staff worldwide and local asphalt contractors resulted in tests on pavement core samples from MPG and design verifications of LPG by Auburn University Alabama’s NCAT (National Center of Asphalt Technology). These tests enabled a localised design to be developed and tested at NCAT which was the best fit for required friction levels and cost.
Project specifications:
Kinematics & Compliance Rig
The new Kinematics and Compliance (K&C) rig, to be installed at YYPG in early 2008, is designed to determine the elastokinematic properties of suspension systems. It originates from a flight simulator background, with Ford of Europe heavily involved in its development for application in vehicle testing.
With a K&C rig, a vehicle suspension can be loaded with cornering forces, braking forces, wheel alignment torques and simulated road undulations, to facilitate measurement of the following characteristics:
Ford’s K&C rig is used for measuring against system level targets, as well as for root-cause analysis when system behaviours are not according to expectations. The data format and analysis is 100 per cent compatible with Ford operations in Europe and North America.
System specifications for the Ford Australia K&C rig, including displacement, force and movement ranges, are equivalent to or better than all existing rigs of its kind within Ford Motor Company.
Project specifications:
High Speed Centre
The new High Speed Centre at YYPG has been designed for conducting vehicle high speed powertrain durability, powertrain system durability and catalyst ageing mileage accumulation.
The facility can operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week unmanned, courtesy of an automated driver robot, which reduces test times, improves safety and guarantees a repeatable test regime.
Robotic vehicle control in the high speed centre extends to key switch actuation, throttle control actuation, gear shift actuation (manual and automatic), and clutch control actuation, while potential future upgrades for the facility could incorporate brake pedal control.
Project specifications:
ACART
The Advanced Centre for Automotive Research and testing (ACART) is a collaborative venture between Ford Australia and the University of Melbourne, which is funded in part by the Victorian State Government through its Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) infrastructure grants program.
Once operational, ACART will provide the local automotive and transport industries with state-of-the-art infrastructure and highly skilled personnel for advanced automotive research and testing.
The Ford Australia node of ACART is located at the company’s You Yangs Proving Ground and includes two major facilities for vehicle testing ? an Environmental Wind Tunnel and an Emissions Test Cell.
Both facilities are certified to ISO 9000 and ISO14000, while the Emissions Lab that houses the Emissions Test Cell is accredited by the National Association of Testing Authorities (NATA – Australia’s national laboratory accreditation authority) to ISO 17025.
Environmental Wind Tunnel
The new Environmental Wind Tunnel is located close to the Emissions Lab and will be used to develop future automotive heating, ventilation, air conditioning (HVAC) and engine cooling systems, as well as conduct research.
The new, high-tech facility will be the most powerful wind tunnel in the southern hemisphere and will provide the automotive, off-road and military sectors with a controlled and repeatable environment to develop products suitable for all global markets.
It will assist Ford, and other customers in the Asia Pacific and Africa region, in delivering a ‘quicker to market strategy’ for new products, as it is capable of performing 24/7 testing in consistent and predictable test conditions versus the real world.
Currently in the final stages of construction, the Environmental Wind Tunnel will be correlated with other Ford wind tunnels, as well as with real world road testing.
Project specifications:
Future upgrades projected:
Emissions Test Cell
The Emissions Test Cell is located in the existing Ford Australia Emissions Laboratory, which has a long track record in emissions testing and development – both for internal Ford customers as well as for external customers from Australia and overseas.
First established in 1972, the Emissions Lab enables Ford’s development engineers to maximise fuel economy, achieve low exhaust and evaporative emissions, and optimise performance and driveability on new vehicle designs.
Now a multi-fuel cell, Emissions Test Cell 2 has been completely redesigned and re-equipped as part of the ACART program, adding diesel testing capability along with an extensive list of new test equipment, such as the all-wheel drive dynamometer.
Project specifications:
You Yangs Proving Ground
Opened in 1965, Ford Australia’s You Yangs Proving Ground (YYPG) was established to improve the durability of the original US-design Falcon product and make it better suited to the unique Australian conditions.
The 2,300 acre (930 hectare) facility features more than 80 kilometres of test surfaces and contains full capability for car and light truck durability testing, which has been correlated to global proving grounds.
The PG facility, located at the You Yangs southwest of Melbourne, is set within a unique eco system – Western Basalt Plains Grassy Woodlands – and has a Landcare team on site to assist with managing the natural resources of the area. There is also a wildlife management plan in place for eastern grey kangaroos.
It is the base for key vehicle attribute teams within Ford’s Product Development group, who conduct activities for:
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