Robotics key to area plants, but humans still needed

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Chris Johnson (left), 41, of Sterling, uses a computer to program a training robot while professor Steve McPherson, 55, of Sterling, watches. The robot is used in the Advanced Programmable Controllers class at Sauk Valley Community College. The class teaches students to control manufacturing robots and other manufacturing systems – a necessary skill in today’s factories.
Chris Johnson (left), 41, of Sterling, uses a computer to program a training robot while professor Steve McPherson, 55, of Sterling, watches. The robot is used in the Advanced Programmable Controllers class at Sauk Valley Community College. The class teaches students to control manufacturing robots and other manufacturing systems – a necessary skill in today’s factories. (Michael Krabbenhoeft/mkrabbenhoeft@saukvalley.com)
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DIXON – At UPM Raflatac’s Dixon pallet warehouse, a large, orange robotic arm takes labels made in the plant, then approaches a coil of labels that is about to be shipped out.

It adjusts as it senses where the coil is, then places the adhesive label on the coil. Its hand then moves along the length of the label to stick it to the coil, then returns to the machine dispensing the labels.

Raflatac is one of many plants in the Sauk Valley to use robots. But the plant employs about 73 production workers who have been trained in controlled programming.

Human workers never will be replaced, General Manager Ari Salminen said, but their jobs will be made easier.

“You still need someone to oversee things and maintain them, as well,” he said.

Robotics create consistency in the products’ quality because “there’s no human intervention, so there’s no difference between the people,” Salminen said.

The automation also creates a more ergonomic workplace, where workers don’t have “hard labor,” he said.

“In the past, if people had to do that kind of thing, they’d get injuries,” he said.

The company celebrated a year without injuries on July 21, he said.

His building has been automated since it was built in 1997.

Steve McPherson teaches programmable controllers classes at Sauk Valley Community College. His classes prepare students to be operators or technicians of controlled programming in businesses, he said.

In a recent session, he took students in groups of three to a computer, where they input data to control a robotic arm’s five axes of motion. They were programming the arm as though it were going to be used in a milling operation.

The arm took small, blue blocks and placed them temporarily in a square hole. The arm then waited a few seconds, picked up the blocks again and set them on a conveyor belt.

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Students were able to program the amount of time the arm delayed while the blocks were in the hole, as it would need to do if a separate machine were doing a milling operation to the blocks.

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