Breaking the mould: achieving high-volume production output with additive manufacturing

Author:

Huang YuanORCID,Eyers Daniel R.ORCID,Stevenson MarkORCID,Thürer MatthiasORCID

Abstract

PurposeThe study aims to examine a discrepant industrial case that demonstrates how to achieve economies of scale with additive manufacturing (AM), thereby expanding the scope of AM beyond high-variety, customised production contexts.Design/methodology/approachAbductive reasoning is applied to analyse a case of using AM to compete with conventional production, winning a contract to supply 7,700,000 products. Comparing this case to existing theories and contemporary practices reveals new research directions and practical insights.FindingsEconomies of scale were realised through a combination of technological innovation and the adoption of operations management practices atypical of AM shops (e.g. design for volume, low-cost resource deployment and material flow optimisation). The former improved AM process parameters in terms of time, cost and dependability; the latter improved the entire manufacturing system, including non-AM operations/resources. This system-wide improvement has been largely overlooked in the literature, where AM is typically viewed as a disruptive technology that simplifies manufacturing processes and shortens supply chains.Originality/valueIt is empirically shown that an AM shop can achieve economies of scale and compete with conventional manufacturing in high-volume, standardised production contexts.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Management of Technology and Innovation,Strategy and Management,General Decision Sciences

Reference15 articles.

1. On the economics of additive manufacturing: experimental findings;Journal of Operations Management,2019

2. Manufacturing in the world: where next?;International Journal of Operations and Production Management,2015

3. The flexibility of industrial additive manufacturing systems;International Journal of Operations and Production Management,2018

4. The impact of additive manufacturing on the product-process matrix;Production Planning and Control,2021

5. Industry 4.0 technologies: implementation patterns in manufacturing companies;International Journal of Production Economics,2019

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