Northwest Aerospace News June | July Issue No. 3 | Page 52
Rapid Advances With
Industry 4.0
Takes a Common-Sense Approach
By: Mary Kaye Bredeson, executive director; and Jennifer Ferrero, APR, marketing communications Center of Excellence for Aerospace and Advanced Manufacturing
Jennifer Ferrero
APR, Communications and Marketing
COE for Aerospace and Advanced
Manufacturing
www.coeaerospace.com
A ttend an aerospace industry conference this year, and you are bound to hear buzz words
like, “Industry 4.0” and the “Internet of Things.” Key terms like “virtual and augmented
reality,” and “robotics and mechatronics,” are teased out from keynote speeches over snack
time at the convention center. When listening to what’s up-and-coming on the manufactur-
ing floor, while drooling over images of 3-D printed cockpits, it seems that there has been
rapid adoption of technology in manufacturing. We even wrote about Industry 4.0 on our
website: http://www.coeaerospace.com/industry-trends/industry-4-0/
But how much has Washington’s aerospace industry adapted to Industry 4.0?
Mary Kaye Bredeson
Executive Director, COE for Aero-
space and Advanced Manufacturing
www.coeaerospace.com
COE SPOTLIGHT
52
AMT Senior Aerospace out of Arlington, Washington, is home to about 450 employees, and
has an annual revenue of $150 million per year. They are a Tier 1 supplier to Boeing and
are busy enough to run the factory 24/7. They produce machine parts and assemblies for the
Boeing 737, 777 and 787, as well as aircraft made by Bombardier and Sikorsky. They could
be a good example for other aerospace manufacturers in the area regarding how they are
adapting to Industry 4.0.
Case Study: How has AMT Senior Aerospace adapted to Industry 4.0?
Matt Washburn is a training manager with AMT Senior Aerospace. He can see applications
of using mixed reality when diagnosing a problem on a machine, “I can see sliding on vir-
tual reality glasses and getting information on a machine instead of pulling out a 2 1/2-inch-
thick maintenance manual,” he notes. But for AMT Senior Aerospace, that it won’t happen
until, “the technology is more refined.”
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