07.12.2022

Learning to connect

Gewerbliche Schule Göppingen taps into MAPAL’s digitalisation know-how

Equipping young people for the world of industry – that’s Gewerbliche Schule Göppingen’s mission. The commercial school teaches vocational students, student technicians and the foremen and women of the future. Their curriculums are adapted to current challenges – with digitalisation and industry 4.0 among the key themes. The school draws on MAPAL’s products and know-how to offer the best learning environment in its own centre of competence for machining technology.

Teaching at the setting fixture: Harald Wöhrle (left) discusses how to measure tools with budding technician Manuel Boaretti.
  • Teaching at the setting fixture: Harald Wöhrle (left) discusses how to measure tools with budding technician Manuel Boaretti.
  • Harald Wöhrle prefers to explain how crucial the right data is for machining, right at the machine itself.
  • Two of the EMCO machines are equipped with c-Connect boxes for transferring data via scan to the machine.
  • Sven Frank and Sebastian Kreller (standing, from left, both from MAPAL) present MAPAL’s tool management at a workshop.
  • Consulting on future partner projects (from left): Sven Frank (MAPAL), Jürgen Wittlinger (Head of GS Göppingen) and Harald Wöhrle (teacher at GS Göppingen).
  • Budding technicians produce workpieces like these in the centre of competence for machining technology at Gewerbliche Schule Göppingen.
Equipping young people for the world of industry – that’s Gewerbliche Schule Göppingen’s mission. The commercial school teaches vocational students, student technicians and the foremen and women of the future. Their curriculums are adapted to current challenges – with digitalisation and industry 4.0 among the key themes. The school draws on MAPAL’s products and know-how to offer the best learning environment in its own centre of competence for machining technology.
Harald Wöhrle prefers to explain how crucial the right data is for machining, right at the machine itself.
Teaching at the setting fixture: Harald Wöhrle (left) discusses how to measure tools with budding technician Manuel Boaretti.   ©MAPAL

The ideal setting fixture for the school

When it was time to acquire a setting fixture at the GS, Wöhrle therefore took MAPAL into consideration as a supplier. “To make a sound decision, I commissioned a technical thesis project. One of our budding technicians compared various setting fixtures and worked out the best device for us,” explains Wöhrle. Sven Frank, Global Head of OEM Management at MAPAL, recalls: “The GS request for a setting fixture landed on my desk. Of course, we produced the right offer for the school.” MAPAL selected a UNISET-P equipped with many different features. “As it was a refurbished return model, we were able to offer it at an unbeatable price,” explains Frank. After all, he says, it’s incredibly important for the company to support young people’s education and training. “If the newly qualified cutting machine operators, technicians and foremen and women remember our equipment in their businesses and become customers, that’s a win for us,” says Frank.

How the data is passed from the setting fixture to the machines and which solutions the market offers for this, also formed part of the technical thesis project. The setting fixture’s properties were therefore not the only reason the technical thesis project ended up deciding a MAPAL device was the best solution for the GS. “MAPAL’s digitalisation know-how impressed us,” says Wöhrle. “Digitalisation and industry are huge topics for us. They’ve been an integral part of the curriculum for four years. For instance, we equip our technicians with iPads.” 
 

Integrating machines into the system

Two of the EMCO machines are equipped with c-Connect boxes for transferring data via scan to the machine.
Two of the EMCO machines are equipped with c-Connect boxes for transferring data via scan to the machine.   ©MAPAL

Computer Aided Manufacturing (CAM) is part of every curriculum at the GS – for vocational students, student technicians and future foremen and women alike. Accurate data and integrating machines into the overall system are correspondingly important. For privacy reasons, however, machines and setting fixtures at the GS cannot be connected to the school network. “Our machines are from 2010 – they didn’t have the prerequisites for connecting them to our system anyway,” adds Wöhrle.

MAPAL therefore offers a solution alongside the UNISET-P that nevertheless allows machines to be connected to the setting fixture: barcode labels for the tools are printed on the UNISET-P. c-Connect boxes with scanners are connected to the machines in the centre of competence. This allows the barcodes to be scanned and labels to be read. The c-Connect boxes, which connect to the machine via USB, transfer the data.

“The solution is incredibly simple and works brilliantly for us. It’s easy to use, we don’t have to make complicated interventions in machine control, and the costs were well within budget,” says Wöhrle with satisfaction. The machine operators – in this case, the school’s students – no longer need to manually input anything into the machine.
 

GS maps out the entire machining process

Consulting on future partner projects (from left): Sven Frank (MAPAL), Jürgen Wittlinger (Head of GS Göppingen) and Harald Wöhrle (teacher at GS Göppingen).
Consulting on future partner projects (from left): Sven Frank (MAPAL), Jürgen Wittlinger (Head of GS Göppingen) and Harald Wöhrle (teacher at GS Göppingen).   ©MAPAL

The results of a variety of project tasks that Harald Wöhrle set his students demonstrate how intensively cutting machine operators, technicians and foremen and women work with the setting fixture and c-Connect boxes today. Accordingly, a variety of different text and video guides on the setting fixture and how it is used at the GS have been created.

The setting fixture also fulfils its duties from a practical perspective. “Before the students machine their workpieces, they equip the machine accordingly. Before that, they measure the tools and adjust them if necessary. They transfer the data into the CAM system and simulate machining. Only then do they move onto actual machining at the machine.” Just like in all manufacturing. Harald Wöhrle is particular proud of this: “We’re mapping out the entire process here – including all calculations.” This is why, for instance, the school operates a cutting database for all teachers and students to access. “That was another technical thesis project in which MAPAL was always on hand to help with any queries and issues,” says Wöhrle.
 

Plans for tool management

Während eines Workshops stellen Sven Frank und Sebastian Kreller das MAPAL Tool Management vor.
Während eines Workshops stellen Sven Frank und Sebastian Kreller (stehend v. l., beide MAPAL) das MAPAL Tool Management vor.   ©MAPAL

Und so ist ein Ausbau der Zusammenarbeit geplant. „Wir möchten ein Tool Management inklusive Prüfmittelverwaltung aufbauen“, blickt der Gewerbeschullehrer in die Zukunft. „Und dafür ist MAPAL prädestiniert“, freut sich Sven Frank. Um den Verantwortlichen sowie den angehenden Technikern an der GS einen Einblick in die Möglichkeiten zu verschaffen, die MAPAL im Bereich des Tool Managements bietet, veranstaltete Sebastian Kreller, Global Head of Tool Management bei MAPAL, einen entsprechenden Workshop an der GS.  

„Auch beim Tool Management überzeugt uns MAPAL“, sagt Wöhrle. Denn: „Im Gegensatz zu den Ausgabesystemen und Softwares anderer Anbieter ist es bei MAPAL egal, was genau verwaltet wird. So könnten wir beispielsweise nicht nur all unsere Werkzeuge, egal welchen Herstellers, sondern auch unsere Prüfmittel mit der UNIBASE-Software und den dazugehörigen Ausgabeschränken verwalten.“ Ein Thema, das Harald Wöhrle sich gut als Technikerarbeit vorstellen kann. So stehen unter anderem dazu weitere Projekte und spannende Technikerarbeiten an der GS in Zusammenarbeit mit MAPAL in den Startlöchern. 
 

Die Gewerbliche Schule Göppingen

Werkstücke, die die angehenden Techniker im Kompetenzzentrum für Zerspanungstechnik an der Gewerblichen Schule Göppingen fertigen.
Werkstücke wie diese fertigen die angehenden Techniker im Kompetenzzentrum für Zerspanungstechnik an der Gewerblichen Schule Göppingen.   ©MAPAL
An der Gewerblichen Schule in Göppingen sind eine Berufsschule für Metall, Elektro und Kfz, ein Technisches Gymnasium, eine Meister- und eine Technikerschule untergebracht. Rund 90 Lehrer unterrichten die circa 2.000 Schüler. Das Kompetenzzentrum für Zerspanungstechnik ist Trainingspartner von Siemens, hält Fortbildungen für Lehrkräfte und Ausbilder für die Nachwuchsstiftung Maschinenbau sowie für unterschiedliche Unternehmen ab und ist Prüfungsstätte der Handwerkskammer für den Teil 1 der Prüfung zum Zerspanungsmechaniker. 

Kathrin Rehor, PR Project Manager bei MAPAL

Kontakt

Kathrin Rehor Public Relations Kathrin.Rehor@mapal.com Tel.: +49 7361 585 3342


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