• Research Paper on:
    Software System Known as Computer Aided Process Planning

    Number of Pages: 7

     

    Summary of the research paper:

    In seven pages this report considers CAPP in terms of purpose as well as its time and production benefits. Eight sources are cited in the bibliography.

    Name of Research Paper File: D0_BWcapp.rtf

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    Unformatted Sample Text from the Research Paper:
    entity. Such a process both simplifies and expedites the exchange of information. Year after year, computer-aided manufacturing systems have become increasingly more complex. More often than not, designing them has  required expertise in areas other than pure system design. Understanding the multiplicity of such systems is only the first step in the overall process. The simplest and most succinct  way to explain or describe the purpose of such software is to say that it exists purely to simplify the manufacturing or business process through priority planning that calculates the  needs and supply schedules of all products produced in one or more plants. It might even be described as the means by which the left hand can always know  what the right hand is doing! Students of process planning, as well as those actually implementing the design and using the information sharing processes must be fully cognizant of  the various aspects of the design process in a way that may even be considered purely Socratic - if this means that, then what and how? As with all other  aspects of life, whether creative or mechanical, it is essential that all components are inter-related and that one serves more than a singular purpose. Ultimately, the computer-aided process planning system  can facilitate management of volumes of work instructions and serve as a valuable means of interfacing with the various production systems controlling the production shop floor. Manufacturers have come to  understand that the key to their success in the 21st century will be their ability to learn faster and put what they learn into practice faster than those with whom  they are competing. In fact, as the world leaves the "information age" and enters the "electronic communications age," it is apparent that the means of gathering information are in place. 

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