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Advancing Automation
July 7, 2023 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamEstimated reading time: 2 minutes
Dr. Phil Voglewede has a professional background in manufacturing and has been at Marquette University for the past 15 years, where he’s a professor and associate chair of the mechanical engineering department. He was recently named director of Marquette’s new Omron Advanced Automation Lab. In this interview, Phil shares his vision and mission for the lab, and how Industry 4.0 automation must be approached differently than the automation boom of the 1980s and 1990s.
Barry Matties: Phil, let’s start with an introduction to the lab.
Phil Voglewede: The lab is quite unique as it is a lab of failure. When Omron gave us the gift, they asked if I wanted a system integrator. I vehemently refused. I said, “I want to try to do it.” For example, I'm not a computer scientist, I don't know how to create an IT infrastructure. You learn by just stumbling through it. That’s what we're trying to do in the lab.
Matties: What’s the purpose for the lab? What is your area of focus?
Voglewede: I do most of my work in motion: How you make things move the way you want them to move, whether it's in a manufacturing environment or in products, such as label makers, CT scanners, and so on.
However, this lab is bigger than just motion. This lab is established with a million-dollar gift for teaching Industry 4.0. I call it a “lab of failure” rather than a “showcase of perfection.” We’re trying to “fail” at automation. That way, we can get better at understanding where the pinch points are when implementing automation and Industry 4.0 techniques into your overall Industry 4.0 framework.
We bought four robots to make a robotic cell: a SCARA-type robot, an anthropomorphic robot, and two 6-axis cobots. I hired some undergraduate students and told them to make it all work together. That's all the information I gave them, and we worked hand-in-hand to see what would work. The students wanted a task for the robots, so we’ve settled on putting together little DUPLO trees. It's something that toddlers can do very well, but machinery struggles with.
Even on this contrived task, we have failed early and often. We struggled to do easy things like setting IP addresses on some of the robots so we could communicate with them, because we didn't understand masks and subnets, and how those all things work together. The failure has been so beneficial because it’s synonymous to the problems with the digital twin. If we can't even communicate on the first level, we can’t get to this other data. Because we failed and learned from our failure, I understand how to add more sensors and equipment with their own IP addresses, which gets me closer to the digital twin. We just dive in, so we can see where and how we fail.
What's great about Omron is that they've allowed me to do it this way. This is not a grant; this is a gift they gave us. They said, “Just go play.” We've had some companies already ask to play in our sandbox, hoping to explore some of these questions: “How do you do this? Can you help us?” We don't promise anything except we will muddle through it like a customer would and learn from it.
To read this entire conversation, which appeared in the July 2023 issue of SMT007 Magazine, click here.
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Brent Fischthal - Koh YoungSuggested Items
The Journey from Dilution to Zero Liquid Discharge
05/11/2026 | Richard Nichols, GreenSource EngineeringIf you’re familiar with the PCB industry, and a little long in the tooth like me, you may remember the cry, “The water board is here!” (or an equivalent authority). This was the signal for a frantic but regularly rehearsed exercise to turn on all the rinses. This anecdote demonstrates that in the early days of PCB production, prevailing practices revolved around a “dilution is the solution” mentality, in which manufacturers used copious amounts of water to dilute contaminants before discharging them into regulated municipal wastewater systems or natural water bodies.
I-Connect007 Editor’s Choice: Five Must-Reads for the Week
05/08/2026 | Marcy LaRont, I-Connect007This week, I’ve selected some outstanding interviews that you’ll want to take note of. First, is a roundtable discussion featuring three dynamic industry cybersecurity experts. Please watch this important discussion that affects us all. Following that, I spotlight the IPC-2581 Consortium, which explains why IPC-2581 is the standard to replace Gerber data for manufacturing. Next, I am including my interview with PCBAA and AAM, who collaborated to release a short documentary on U.S. PCB manufacturing.
Hall of Fame Spotlight Series: Highlighting Karen McConnell
05/07/2026 | Dan Feinberg, I-Connect007In 2021, Karen McConnell was awarded the Raymond E. Pritchard Hall of Fame award in recognition of her contributions to the Association and the electronics industry. As a senior staff member and CAD/CAM engineer at Northrop Grumman Enterprise Services, her primary responsibility was to develop a common, shared EDM (Electronic Document Management) library to support the electrical and PCB design tool initiatives across Northrop Grumman Mission Systems.
A Necessary Shift From Gerber to IPC-2581
05/07/2026 | Tracy Riggan, Global Electronics AssociationIPC-2581 is an open, vendor-neutral data exchange standard developed by the Global Electronics Association to streamline the exchange of PCB design information across fabrication, assembly, and test. It replaces multiple legacy formats—including industry standards, Gerber, and ODB++—with a single, comprehensive, XML-based dataset that captures all manufacturing details.
Meet Emerging Engineers: Patrick Owen and Eric Mickenbecker, Summit Interconnect
05/05/2026 | Michelle Te, I-Connect007Patrick Owen and Eric Mickenbecker both work for Summit Interconnect, and are in their second year of the Global Electronics Association’s Emerging Engineer Program with mentor Brian Chislea. They stopped by the I-Connect007 booth at APEX EXPO and shared a bit of their story with me. Patrick has worked at the Hollister, California, plant since 2018, while Eric has been at the Chicago site since 2023. Like many of their peers, they came to the electronics industry from different paths, but are both excited about making an impact.