Automated Design and Manufacturing Systems
(ADMS) Laboratory
The centerpiece of the ADMS lab is a state-of-the-art automated manufacturing cell.
The Lab is used in ME345, a junior-level course on Manufacturing Automation. The emphasis is
on a systems point of view of the manufacturing process and the role each component plays in
an integrated system.
The main components of the ADMS Lab are:
The ADMS Lab cell consist of a set of stations arranged around a conveyor belt as shown…

Control Station
The control station contains the central computer, the PLC (Programmable
Logic Controller) and its terminal. It does not contain a robot or any production
devices.
CNC Station
The CNC station contains the CNC computer and
controller, the CNC machines (two milling machines and one lathe) ERV7/9 robots,
sensors, buffers and a small linear conveyor.
QC (Quality Control) Station
The QC station contains the QC computer and controller, two CNC mills, one CNC
Lathe, the ERV9 Robot, a vision system, sensors and buffers. The devices
are used for inspection of part quality based primarily on machine vision.
The following elements are common to both the CNC and QC stations:
- An ACL controller which coordinates the operation of the station and controls
the robot and any peripheral devices.
- A PC for user interface to the station controller and device controllers or
other software.
- Devices that perform an operation in the production cycle, such as CNC
machines.
- Two SCORBOT-ER7/9 robots which perform material handling tasks such as
loading and unloading a part into a CNC machine, loading it onto the pallets,
etc.
- A peripheral device that aids the robot in the material handling tasks, such
as a linear slide-base that supports the robots in the CNC stations.
In addition the stations contain other devices that perform production activity
such as material removal or online inspection.
Design Stations
The design stations contain PCs loaded with several software tools: design
packages, production tools and production system simulation and control. These
include CAD/CAM software and the OpenCIM package to
run the entire setup as a single CIM system.
What students learn
As part of the ADMS lab experience in (12 modules),
students manufacture various parts
designed on a CAD system and then fabricated using computer-controlled
machines.

The CAD software package
used in the lab allows the user to not only design a part but to also generate
the CNC machine code. There are two basic types of machines in the ADMS Lab:
Universal Milling Machines and Lathes. Each of these machines requires
different types of programs in order to work. The
After the students gain experience on how CAD/CAM works, they learn how to load
a program onto a machine and how to set up the machine in order to fabricate
the required part. Additional lab sessions are geared towards teaching quality
control, process control, system integration, and information processing in an
automated manufacturing environment. Finally, the students get an exposure to computer
simulation software (Extend and SimEvents) for
performance evaluation of the entire manufacturing setup and gain insight on
how to improve on that.
The course includes a final project where students in groups of 2 or 3 select any
topic relevant to the objectives of the course.