If Rolls-Royce engineers are in charge of parts design, their suppliers are in charge of defining the best possible manufacturing process. Often times, manufacturing defects or “nonconformances” are found late in the manufacturing development process. Rework is needed, and sometimes even, design engineers must go back to the drawing board just when parts production should have been ready to start – this resulting in avoidable costs and delays, impacting the cost-effectiveness of product development. This situation is even more likely to arise as Rolls-Royce design engineers try to come up with bold designs to improve the sustainability aspects of aircrafts – moving away from conservative designs and thereby being unable to rely on experience.
In line with its Digital First approach, Rolls-Royce engineers are shifting away from physical try-out towards a digital workflow based on ESI’s casting simulation software ProCAST. Nick Calcutt, Materials and Process Modelling Engineer at Rolls-Rolls in Derby, UK, calls it the “smart customer” approach.
Whether creating new geometries or looking for a new supplier, Rolls-Royce engineers have adopted a “smart customer” approach. They now try to design with manufacturing in mind right from the start.
Relying on a co-design workflow embedded in ProCAST enables them to be more proactive, and to support the work of Rolls-Royce’s design, stress, and manufacturing experts. They can integrate the output of the co-design workflow in their Design for Manufacturing sessions (DfMs), which empowers them to identify most manufacturability issues, such as thickness and porosity defects, before the part design is sent to the supplier. The team can immediately look for potential solutions, and even evaluate the cost of rework, all very early in the manufacturing process development.
When it comes to tackle current manufacturing issues in the supply chain, Nick Calcutt’s team can also be more reactive. They can use ProCAST to find the root cause of a recurring defect – whether on their side or the supplier’s – and take corrective steps, such as correcting the geometry.
Again, the co-design workflow provides a solid basis to discuss the cost of rework and enables teams to check suppliers’ diagnoses if needed.
Rolls-Royce engineers use the co-design workflow embedded in their casting simulation software. In around ten minutes, the team can run a detailed prediction for their part and get early confidence in whether a part is castable.
With a simulation run of around ten minutes, our newly implemented co-design workflow gives us the ability to locate 97% of potential casting issues associated with designs. It is accessible to most engineers, not only FEA simulation specialists. It would be difficult to justify why you wouldn’t run a co-design simulation, especially for large and/or expensive cast parts
Nick CalcuttMaterials and Process Modelling Engineer, Rolls-Royce
Rolls-Royce’s design engineers also routinely perform a cooling simulation they call “Magic Fill”. It quickly predicts the parts properties after the cooling of the molten alloy – assuming an instant cooling set-up, which does not require material or process data that may be belong to the supplier’s intellectual property.
Watch the full presentation | Get more insights from Nick about how Rolls-Royce is using casting simulation software and how they benefit from co-design. Click here to watch Rolls-Royce’s full video presentation, delivered during ESI’s digital global event ESI LIVE 2021 as part of the Aerospace Track.
Knowledge Transfer | Learn from other casting simulation experts how they predict, analyze, measure, and avoid casting defects in the earliest stages of design. Join our ESI Casting Live event in June 2022 - digital and free of charge. Click here to watch on demand.
Loïc Calba obtained a MSc. in Mechanical Engineering at University of Metz-Lorraine (France) in 1995. He then joined Howmet Castings (now Howmet Aerospace) to establish the group's European Foundry Modeling Center. His main mission was to support factories for the production of aeronautical blades and structural parts, as well as gas turbines in Nickel / Cobalt-based superalloys for equiaxed, DS and SX processes. Loïc joined ESI Group in 2005, where he took charge of the business development of ESI ProCAST before heading the central support for the solution. He is now responsible for the ESI casting solution ProCAST, one of the pillars of ESI’s Smart Manufacturing solution. In 2022, Loïc obtained the Digital Excellence Diploma from IMD – Lausanne (Switzerland). He is supporting the digital transformation with implementing new digital capabilities such as cloud calculation, calculation on demand and Digital Twins for casting.