The Daily Collegian Thursday, March 8,1979-17 in d us t ria a 1 •,, R2.. . D25 ,, d 0 th • . k ~.t h 1 DETROIT (AP) They don't take coffee breaks or demand vacations. Whey generally don't get sick. And they are not inclined to file union grievances. , "'They don't even see the problems that most workers do. in their jobs even though these are the dirtiest, most Wing and least attractive in factories -liut more and more they do "see" and even "feel." ("This ever more popular darling of American manufacturers is the in dUStrial robot, a' mechanical• marvel eldser to R2-D2 of "Star Wars" than most people imagines He now numbers About 3,000 in the United States, some 4:000 in Western Europe, and perhaps 30,000 in Japan, according to the Detroit- based Robot Institute of America. What he lacks in the personality bf his Mdvie cousin, however, he more than Makes up for with work from his whirring land clicking tubes, hoses and fingers. I. "What comes out is of consistent quality,", says Al Williams, midwest regional manager for Unimation Inc. of Danbury, Conn., the nation's largest maker of industrial robots. "If a guy leaves out a couple of welds, someone gets a car with rattles. With the robot, .oyou get an improved product." EYE EXAMINATIONS GLAUCOMA TESTING CONTACT LENSES FITTED . , l'''_ ' DR. ARNOLD ROSS ,:. . Optometrist (Formerly of Lancaster—Park City Mall) • announces the opening of his office for the Practice of Optometry ' - In The Nittany Mall State College, Pa. 16801 : Adjacent To The PEARLE VISION CENTER .:: . Office Hours Daily 237-8010 WANTED: Technologists, almost anywhere - iii the world. Radiologic Technology at Thomas Jefferson University College of Allied Health Sciences. The only program of Its kind In Pennsyl vania, Delaware and New Jersey Our Bachelor of Science degree can put you on your way to ward an exciting career; in a job that's' in demand almost any where you'd like to live and work This professional program offers everything from clinical internships in radiologic technology to courses in research methodology, management, educational methods, and more A lot more, like graduate studies that can put you in a teaching or administrative position Call or write for more Information today NO • , - • "One of the main things it does is it doesn't get tired," adds Donald E. Hart, head of the Computer Science Depart ment at General Motors Research laboratories. Automakers are among the leaders in developing robots. Ford Motor Co., for example, has used robots since 1958, when a device was introduced in one plant to transfer hot parts. "It's a deadly, ugly, dirty business there," says Ford spokesman Ed Snyder. "The robot was accepted by the workers and there was no union objection." Ford now has 236 robots employed in such jobs as stamping, spray painting, die• casting ."areas of worker discontent," Ford says. GM, meanwhile, has about 150 robots, including 32 pioneering body welding machines installed in 1970 at its Lord stown, Ohio, assembly plant. Those are known in the industry as "pick-and place" repetitive action robots, carrying price tags starting at $lO,OOO, says Don Vincent, manager of the Robot Institute. But research now, he says, is aimed at $lOO,OOO sophisticated programmable robots who have the ability to know what they are touching and "see" what they are doing through use of cameras. "We think the idea of equipping robots Radiologic Applicants should have two years of college level course work. The Bachelor of Scienco degree in Radiologic Technology is a transfer program taught at the Junior and Senior level. . Admissions Office College of Allied Health Sciences Thomas Jefferson University Philadelphia, PA 19107 (215) 928-8891 with cameras and computers to give them vision is going to open many new avenues to increased productivity," said Frank Daley, GM's director .of manufacturing development. GM was the first U.S. firm to use computer vision, installing a system at its Delco plant in Kokomo, Ind., nearly two years ago. There, the SIGHT-I system inspects circuits and positions electrical test probes. Now, its second generation brother, CONSIGHT, relies on computerized vision to control all six joints of a robot's hand. "Our ultimate objective is to be able to pick parts out of jumbled heaps in bins," says GM's Hart. The world's largest carmaker also points to the new technology as im proving efficiency and thus generating money for "unprecedented multi-billion dollar outlays for new product programs," says Alex C. Mair, vice president of GM's technical staff. GM touts its PUMA Programmable Universal Machine for Assembly robot as "the latest and probably the most advanced robot on the world scene today." Recently unveiled at the GM Technical Center in suburban Warren, PUMA also is capable of "seeing," although its first use will be sightless The Trais The United Auto Workers union has no objection to their use, but the union's skilled trades department, readying for contract negotiations later this year, recently approved resolutions for a contractual ban on layoffs "if the in- Now. A safe, simple way to prevent pregnancy. It's Semicid, a safe, easy-to-use vaginal contraceptive suppository with an active ingredient proven effective by millions of women. If you're dissatisfied with your present birth control method, you should know about Semicid, a real alternative in contraception from Whitehall Laboratories, one of the world's leading pharmaceutical companies. Semicid is safe and effective. 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The new twist in the $l.B million experiment, however, will enable the robot to change and assemble different product styles or adjust to variations in parts, according to Richard Abraham of Westinghouse. The reliability of the devices now in the plants seems remarkable, con sidering daily absenteeism in an auto operation of up to 10 percent. Ford of ficials say robots function 98 percent of the time. i gg r ~~ ~i 4,4 ~,,‘ , N'4 , "‘ VWAXO'OWSft' '', rj' ' Ori,k,.. k,e.,,,V SNiZMAZ , Y ‘IA "O's,ett, ''e‘ '4. \N W444e's 4'k ' ' '''. : 14 . 4 , ,* \ t4AV'' . stP4si ,M,V44.,;''' \4•.‘*:‘*v` -, '•.•"'''' s k.e41,•;.\,:tkiM.A0 5 ;, ,, • , •.ki • LA,... k k ',,,,, - - . ~ ..., , , , ..7,1 . . v,A\\,%* \A5 , .1 , 4',.. , 0 r,.,,i,,,4,,,,,,,,v,,,,,,,,„ "-Awrg , twvw \lz ..iqm , ~~~~~■ ',,5*,‘,..3g.0e,...,:.r, kk . 4 .. ~ ..'4,UkW3‘, V s',4, U=\ 4 f4 ,',,",'• •t,"-, V , 4.,k,,.k ,Vt.kt444,WS,ZN k,•'-':‘,MZARA,VP troduction of a technological advance or change results in reduction of the workforce." Robot backers contend no' one is being eased out of a job, though GM's Daley says "they may be shifted around some." Despite the continuing success, Vincent at the Robot Institute said he 'believes the robot industry still is in the pioneering stage. "More and more applications are being made," he says. "The aerospace industry soon is going to drill 4,000 holes in a wing with robots." Vincent tells one story about a poultry firm looking for a robot to pluck chickens. And he says he heard a bank was interested in a robot for handling money, apparently to eliminate thefts. Regardless of their growing influence in industry, most robots are not the thing you'd want around the house. Without proper sensing devices, they'd be run ning into furniture and generally being pests. "It would be horrible," Vincent said OD 4 cD --- . 1*4 . - os® I . 1 1. AU sou can sat 00 MT AA, roc! gOalpff utgi c , zanntwißlovaac tktav 4.0115~ ," ' 4'' ; 47;- • ‘ s ?. \ \ t:>` ‘ .;* AO • •%, I;;4.VA, / ~' ,11,1 NIMMIII 1•1..11 Illustration by Della Hoke