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Lecture

Lasers in manufacturing

Mar
04
04 Mar 2025 /  
12:00pm - 1:30pm
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Online event

About

Lasers are one of the most popular tools in the manufacturing industry with benefits that include:

  • Increased accuracy
  • Ease of Automation
  • Fast cutting and welding
  • Enabling technology for metal additive manufacturing
  • Wide range of other processes including surface engineering, marking
  • Flexibility
  • Environmental

The webinar will focus on opportunities in Manufacturing arising from new developments of laser technology, including, for example, handheld lasers for welding and cleaning. It will include a keynote presentation on the use of Laser Technology in Manufacturing, present and in the future, and will illustrate the potential and benefits of this technology by the inclusion of specific case studies.

The webinar will give attendees a broader view of how lasers can have a significant impact for manufacturing processes and to think about how they will be able to utilise this technology in their own manufacturing operation.

The webinar will be held jointly with the Robotics and Mechatronics TN and the Manufacturing Management Group of the Merseyside & West Cheshire LN. It will be scheduled to precede the Industrial Laser Applications Symposium (ILAS) to be held 26th-27th March 2025 in Kenilworth, UK.

Design and Manufacturing

1

Continuing Professional Development

This event can contribute towards your Continuing Professional Development (CPD) hours as part of the IET's CPD monitoring scheme.

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04 Mar 2025 

12:00pm - 1:30pm

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Organiser

  • Manufacturing TN

Speakers

Dave MacLellan

Executive Director - Association of Industrial Laser Users (AILU)

Dave MacLellan has a degree in Electrical & Electronic Engineering from Manchester University and more than 30 years of industrial experience. Initially working in power electronic design of welding sources, then optimising  manufacturing for CNC lathes and machining systems, he joined the laser industry at Lumonics, Rugby in 1990. Moving to Baasel Lasertech in 1999 (which became ROFIN-Baasel UK) he served as Sales Manager for the UK Micro Division. In 2014 he established Anode Marketing, providing digital marketing services to laser and motion system clients and has been Executive Director of AILU (the Association of Industrial Laser Users) since 2015. 

 

Matt van den Braak

Robot and Mobile Robot Related Business - SICK UK

My name is Matt van den Braak.  I am responsible for Robot and Mobile Robot Related Business at SICK UK.  I have worked at SICK in a variety of roles over the past 12 years and have worked in the industry for nearly 20.  SICK are one of the world’s leading producers of sensors and sensor solutions for industrial automation applications.  SICK are based in Waldkirch, South West Germany and employ over 12,000 employees worldwide with global sales of 2.3 billion Euro in 2023.

Picture of speaker not available

Louise Geekie

Director - Croft Additive Manufacturing

Louise Geekie joined the team at Croft Filters Ltd as Project Manager in 2013. Her role is to support and develop innovations at Croft to improve filtration solutions. They identified metal additive manufacturing as a manufacturing process to produce filter designs and other products that cannot be manufactured conventionally. Croft took delivery of their AM machine in April 2013 and Louise was invited to become a Director of Croft Additive Manufacturing in 2014. Louise currently operates and runs the AM manufacturing processes and co-ordinates the approach to maximise the technology’s capabilities and product specifications. She believes that the extensive capabilities of metal 3D printing can create new opportunities for industrial processes across many industrial sectors. Her project management and delivery skills were developed as a Researcher in Biomedical Sciences at University of Edinburgh.

Reasons to attend

CPD

Unique opportunity to learn directly from active and experienced professionals in their respective fields

Comprehensive overview of subjects with latest industry trends, developments, and challenges

Q&A to allow you to explore specific, related issues

Programme

Keynote: Dave MacLellan

Talk 1:  Where Additive Manufacturing has taken us-the journey of an SME, Louise Geekie, Director, Croft Additive Manufacturing Limited

Croft identified the potential of additive manufacturing to create complex filtration design that added value through an increased efficiency during the filter’s end use. The company engaged in a Knowledge Transfer Partnership to explore this potential and after a successful project they invested in metal AM technology.  The steep learning curve in using this technology as an SME and how engaging with open innovation with academic and industrial partners was essential as an SME to develop their processes to successfully deliver products to market will be described. 

Talk 2:  Lasers in Manufacturing – Use in Autonomous Mobile Robots (AMR’s), Matt van den Braak, SICK UK

Synopsis: Lasers are used widely in mobile robotics, specifically with the current trend for Autonomous Mobile Robots to aid flexible manufacturing.

Introduction to SICK – Innovator in Laser Detection
What is LiDAR?
What is SLAM?
(Where is this technology used and why?

Use Case 1 – Localisation: (picoScan100 - Precise 2D LiDAR measurement data for diverse applications

Use Case 2 – Virtual Line Guidance (on board)
Use Case 3 – Safety Rated Anti-Collision (Human): Use Solutions for Mobile Robots 
Use Case 4 – 3D Object Detection (Anti-Collision):  multiScan100 – reliable 3D environment perception (rosbag replay) 

 

Register

Registration

Please register to attend this event.

Free of charge