Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDoreen Garrett Modified over 8 years ago
1
Richard Pearson President and CEO
2
6/10/2016 Page 2
3
6/10/2016 Page 3
4
6/10/2016 Page 4 This is NCMS Organized under the National Cooperative Research Act of 1984; formed in 1986 Largest cross-industry collaborative R&D consortium in North America Only consortial effort in the U.S. devoted exclusively to manufacturing technologies, process, and practices Nearly 20 years of experience in the formation and management of complex multi-partner collaborative R&D programs
5
6/10/2016 Page 5 Upcoming Events NCMS/AMT Joint Technical Forum “Take Your Blinders Off! –July 26-27, 2005 –Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
6
6/10/2016 Page 6 NCMS Track Record Nearly two decades of experience in the formation and management of complex multi-partner collaborative R&D programs Over 62 Cooperative Research & Development Agreements and Memoranda of Understanding 325 multi-participant projects, $588M in collaboration funds involving over a 1000 participants and 37 Universities, including: –Over 155 DoD projects totaling more than $383 Million Four consecutive R&D 100 Awards Four Defense Manufacturing Excellence Awards
7
6/10/2016 Page 7 “NEW MANUFACTURING” IN THE GLOBAL KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY The challenges of Research and Development Technologies at the atomic level The impact of Sustainability
8
6/10/2016 Page 8 CHALLENGES Quicker Response time Rapid Prototyping Simultaneous Engineering Direct Engineering
9
6/10/2016 Page 9 CHALLENGES GLOBAL COMMUNICATIONS Personal –Direct Interface –Video/Audio link –Electronic Mail Data Common CAD/CAM/CAE languages Real time and beyond
10
6/10/2016 Page 10 Meeting the Challenge of Limited Resources How and When to Leverage Who to partner with? Suppliers Government Academia Competitors
11
6/10/2016 Page 11 TRYING TO COLLABORATE “…felt like we just had a corporate root canal.”
12
6/10/2016 Page 12 Subcontractor Y Company C $150,000 in-kind Company B $50,000 in-kind Company A $200,000 in-kind $50,000 cash Contractor X Company D $250,000 in-kind Seed Funding $300,000 cash Project Management Expertise $1MM R&D Project A Typical Project- What We Do
13
6/10/2016 Page 13 Commercial Technologies for Maintenance Activities (CTMA) Program Unique DoD/Industry/University partnership to bring new technologies into the DoD maintenance community to increase weapon systems readiness through increased reliability, improved maintenance procedures, and reduced costs. http://ctma.ncms.org
14
6/10/2016 Page 14 CTMA PROJECTS 21 Active projects with a total budget of $59,128,886
15
6/10/2016 Page 15 Current Emerging CTMA Projects (http://ctmaideas.ncms.org) 1.Rapid Manufacturing Process & Material Insertion for DoD Part Applications, RM&R - Phase II 2.Synthetic Instrumentation Phase II 3.Integrating Sensors and Predictive Maintenance Systems with Performance Support Technology to Achieve Increased CH-53E Readiness and Reliability 4.Laser Coating Removal for Helicopter Blades - Phase III 5.Ultrasonic Consolidation of Titanium Alloys for High Performance Military Aircraft Damage Repair 6.High-Productivity Portable Laser Depainting Device
16
6/10/2016 Page 16 Current Emerging CTMA Projects (http://ctmaideas.ncms.org) 7. Durable, Ant-Counterfeit, Low-Cost, 2-D Data Marking for DOD Logistics 8. Gear Isotropic Finish Generation General Process Control & Alternate Tooth-by-Tooth Process for Large Gears 9. Integrated System for Reading Visible and Hidden Data Matrix Marks 10. Assembly Design and Document - Phase II 11. Legacy Lifecycle Management 12. OptiCAM - Phase IV 13. Casting Knowledge Re-use Based Cost Advisor 14. Erosion Coatings
17
6/10/2016 Page 17 SMART MACHINE PLATFORM INITIATIVE
18
6/10/2016 Page 18 Smart Machine Platform Initiative First part correct – every part correct
19
6/10/2016 Page 19 SMPI PARTNERS
20
6/10/2016 Page 20 $2 Million Award through Department of Defense for FY2006 $1.35 Million Award For FY2007 Smart Machine Platform Initiative
21
6/10/2016 Page 21 IS THE NEXT “BIG” THING A LITTLE THING? 2005 NCMS Survey of Nanotechnology in the U.S. Manufacturing Industry (Sponsored by NSF)
22
6/10/2016 Page 22 NANOSTRUCTURING Revolutionary new age in the ability to manipulate materials for the good of humanity –Customized drugs –Energy storage –Bioelectronics –New materials Ceramics Structural materials
23
6/10/2016 Page 23 SUSTAINABILITY IS A BUSINESS IMPERATIVE Manufacturing as we know it may not be sustainable. Damage to eco-systems arising from human activity is occurring at a faster pace than improvements in industrial processes.
24
6/10/2016 Page 24
25
6/10/2016 Page 25
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.