Browse by Editorial Category
Browse by Edition Date

December 2023

Skip Navigation Links.
Expand Applying TechnologyApplying Technology
Expand Automation Equip and SystemsAutomation Equip and Systems
Expand ControlsControls
Collapse Current NewsCurrent News
Allendale Machinery Systems Hosted Local Events
American Precision Museum Celebrates New Vision and Planned Expansion
Chaparral Machinery Purchases Gage Machine Tool
Concept Adds Companies Expanding Capabilities and Reach
Dallas Industries Delivers Additional Feed Line to Toledo Tool and Die
SMART Machine Tool Names 520 Machinery Sales as Sales Partner for Northern Illinois
Flexxbotics Becomes Certified System Integrator for Universal Robots
Forest City Gear Attains Level 2 CMMC 2.0 Compliance
FortuneVictor Taichung Machinery Expands
Guill Tool Adds Grinder and Scanner
LNS North America Relocates Air Filtration Products
Lockheed and Xaba Collaborate on AI-driven Industrial Robots
Marposs Corporation Celebrated 60 Years Anniversary
Medical 3D Printing Facility Brings Personalized Care Closer to U.S. Patients
NSK Presented with Motions Supplier of the Year Award
Murata Machinery Appoints Methods and Equipment Associates for MI
Celebrating 40 Years of Linear Motion Solutions
Platinum Tooling Now Offers REV Broaching Tools
Chuck Change System Enhances Turning Milling Grinding
Intelligent Architected Materials for Industry Applications
Purdues Semiconductor Innovation Ecosystem Grows
LAZZATI Line of Horizontal Boring Mills Joins RBR Machine Tool Products
Simple Way to Keep Your Shop Air Clean
SME Partners with Community Technical Colleges
SME Scholarship Winners Paired with Manufacturing Professionals as Mentors
3D Binder-Jet Metal Printing Technology for Medical Components
Mass-Produce Aircraft Components with AM
US Motor Works to Build $19 Million Fulfillment Center in Kansas City Metro
Expand Literature-Web TutorialsLiterature-Web Tutorials
Expand Metalforming-Fabricating-WaterjetMetalforming-Fabricating-Waterjet
Expand People In The NewsPeople In The News

show all editions →

Click here to watch Tutorial Videos >

Lockheed and Xaba Collaborate on AI-driven Industrial Robots



Xaba, developer of AI-driven robotics and CNC machine controller, and Lockheed Martin recently completed a collaboration to evaluate the automation of crucial manufacturing operations using the global aerospace company's industrial robots integrated with Xaba's proprietary physics-informed deep artificial neural network model, xCognition.

Xaba and Lockheed Martin identified a use case focused on a typical robotics work cell used in any aerospace factory to test how Xaba's xCognition "synthetic brain" could empower a commercial robot with greater intelligence and understanding of its body and the task it is about to execute while ensuring required quality and tolerances are achieved.

The test consisted of two phases:

  • Phase 1: Assessing the robot's performance in maintaining accurate and consistent trajectory positioning with and without Xaba's xCognition.
  • Phase 2: Performing a set of drilling tests on an aluminum test plate with specified positional tolerances.

Based on the data collected by the Lockheed Martin and Xaba teams, Xaba's xCognition improved accuracy and consistency of the commercial robot by a factor of 10x. This test shows how industrial robotics augmented with xCognition can perform crucial manufacturing operations that until now have been exclusively done by more expensive and less flexible CNC machines.

"The accuracy performance of a robotic system limits the type of process it can perform based on the cost efficiency of the accuracy hardware," said Matthew Galla, Applications Engineer Staff for Lockheed Martin's Aeronautics business. "The test with the xCognition controller allows us to rethink how we can accelerate innovation in manufacturing."

According to a spokesperson, "Accurate drilling historically requires expensive (both in hardware and real-estate) static machine tools, or the task is manually performed by skilled operators. Using industrial robots and collaborative robots (cobots) instead of the two options currently embraced by aerospace companies is appealing because they are much more flexible, adaptable and less costly than CNC machine tools. However, commercial industrial robotics systems have struggled to perform critical manufacturing operations such as drilling, laser welding, light machining and precise assembly. The reason for this is the lack of robotics intelligence required to deliver accuracy, repeatability and to work in path programming mode rather than point-to-point. This challenge is solved with the xCognition AI-driven control system."

"Our xCognition AI-driven control system opens a new world of application opportunities for industrial robots and cobots," said Massimiliano Moruzzi, CEO of Xaba. "It positions Xaba at the center of intelligent automation for sustainable manufacturing."

Unlike analytical AI used for predictive modeling, industrial artificial intelligence (AI) focuses on the physical world. It can model and drive a vehicle, a complex machining center and more complex industrial applications. Xaba is empowering commercial robots and cobots with its proprietary industrial AI software. Xaba's xCognition is a synthetic brain that integrates seamlessly with every commercial robotics brand to make them more consistent, robust and autonomous, significantly increasing robotics applications and throughput.

For more information contact:

Xaba

info@xaba.ai

www.xaba.ai

Lockheed Martin

www.lockheedmartin.com

< back