The Denver Post

REMANUFACT­URING: FINDING NEW LIFE FOR OLD EQUIPMENT

What’s old can be new again for businesses

- By Ellen Rosen Whitten Sabatini, © The New York Times Co.

Derrick Gaddis knew his equipment was nearing the end of its useful life. Two of his logging skidders — the heavy-duty machines that haul cut timber — needed to be replaced. But most manufactur­ers at the time had shifted gears to bigger and heavier models, he said, and no longer made the size of skidders required for what is known as selective harvesting, the type of logging his company does.

He and his co-owners at Henderson Timber Inc. in Sigel, Ill., devised a solution: What if John Deere, the original manufactur­er, could remanufact­ure the skidder to repair and upgrade it, comporting with current technology? Deere, which already had remanufact­ured some of its products, was receptive. A beta test in the woods was in the works.

“When you take a puzzle apart with that many pieces, I thought there would be something wrong. But that was not the case,” said Gaddis, whose company is near the middle of the state, between St. Louis and Indianapol­is, and who subsequent­ly had a second skidder “relived,” as he called it.

Welcome to the expanding sector of remanufact­uring. The practice essentiall­y involves taking products or components, whether in disrepair or at the end of their useful lives, to a like-new condition. Accomplish­ed through a variety of processes and advanced by new technologi­es such as 3-D printing, products as small as a coffee maker and as large as a medical imaging machine can now be upgraded. Rather than recycling or merely refurbishi­ng the item to its original state, the process also enhances the product to make it comport with the latest technology.

While at first glance it seems similar to refurbishi­ng, the results differ. A refurbishe­d engine, for example, might be equivalent to one in excellent working condition but has already been in service for 30,000 miles, while a remanufact­ured engine should be equivalent to one that has not yet been in service, so it is like new, said Nabil Nasr, the director of the Golisano Institute for Sustainabi­lity at the Rochester Institute of Technology.

While still a relatively small subset of manufactur­ing, its use is likely to grow as a result of recent technical advances such as additive manufactur­ing, data analytics and the “internet of things.” And it is an integral part of the circular economy that strives to keep materials in the economy and out of landfills.

“Remanufact­uring is a smart way to continue to advance without creating a lot of waste. The developmen­t of new technology is allowing remanufact­uring to grow stronger,” Nasr said. “Most of the emission and waste from manufactur­ing comes from material mining and processing.”

From an environmen­tal standpoint, the process is superior to recycling,

which captures materials, but loses the labor used in initial manufactur­ing and uses significan­t amounts of energy, Nasr said.

While remanufact­uring does not have a glamorous connotatio­n, companies involved are on the cutting edge of both manufactur­ing and data privacy.

CoreCentri­c Solutions, for example, processes close to 2 million pieces of core — or components — each year for use in both industrial and consumer products, said Tom Healy, the company’s president and chief executive.

CoreCentri­c’s remanufact­uring process identifies the parts that have already failed, and with an intricate propriety database, it can predict which parts “are highly likely to fail.” The company, based in Carol Stream, Ill., identifies and replaces the broken parts, and replaces components that have a high probabilit­y of failing.

But technology also creates new issues. The refrigerat­or with the touch screen that allows you to send notes home as well as order food? It can store personal data. That smart sous-vide machine that you got as a gift? It can access your devices for recipes. And the robotic vacuum cleaner that spares your back? It not only remembers furniture placement, but also uploads a map of your home to the cloud.

When those products break, remanufact­uring requires another layer because of the inherent privacy risks. CoreCentri­c, as a result, needs to ensure not only that the smaller appliances are physically cleaned, “but these devices need to be cleared and the data removed from the cloud before it can be remanufact­ured and resold,” Healy said.

A growing trend for companies is to plan for remanufact­uring in the initial design of a product.

“The circular economy starts at the design phase — you can’t remanufact­ure a product if it’s not designed to be recycled,” said Zoe Bezpalko, a manager of sustainabl­e strategy at Autodesk, which makes both industrial design and consumer software products and is based in San Rafael, Calif. “For example, gluing can prevent recycling. Even black plastic can interfere, because it’s not recognized by machines at the waste management facility.”

While Gaddis of Henderson Timber suggested remanufact­uring to John Deere for his machinery, the company actually began remanufact­uring in 1996, said Jena Holtberg-Benge, who oversees the company’s global remanufact­uring.

“We quickly realized that it’s a wonderful opportunit­y for dealers because the remanufact­ured parts improve their capabiliti­es,” Holtberg-Benge said.

 ??  ?? An employee works on a coffee maker during the remanufact­uring process at CoreCentri­c Solutions in Carol Stream, Ill. Products as large as a medical imaging machine can now be upgraded.
An employee works on a coffee maker during the remanufact­uring process at CoreCentri­c Solutions in Carol Stream, Ill. Products as large as a medical imaging machine can now be upgraded.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States