BMW is utilizing artificial intelligence (AI) at its Spartanburg factory in South Carolina to cut production costs. The AI-powered system is used in the body shop to inspect and check the placement of 300 to 400 metal studs welded onto the SUV frames by robots

Speaking with CNBC, BMW Group Manager Curtis Tingle says that if the AI detects a stud that has been misplaced, the system will automatically tell the robot to fix it. This system has allowed BMW to remove six workers from the line and deploy them to other jobs. The tool is already saving the company over $1 million a year.

“It’s a fully closed loop,” Tingle described. “[AI] removes the human thinking, the human manual intervention, directly out of the equation. We’re achieving five times of what we thought was even possible before, with what the AI is achieving now.”

BMW has also introduced AI to improve its inspection process. The firm’s IT Project Lead, Camille Roberts, says that 26 cameras on the production line floor take photos of vehicles as they move down the line. AI then analyses these photos and determines if there are any issues that human workers need to fix.

Additionally, workers at the site wear factory scanner devices which take measurements and images of every inch of the factory. These images have then been used to create a digital twin of the factory where BMW can test any changes it wants to make in the virtual world to improve production efficiency before actually implementing these changes in the real world. The scanning devices mean the process of scanning the factory takes just days instead of months.

Tags: BMW
Евгений Ушаков
Evgenii Ushakov
15 years driving