Adapting and advancing assistive technologies for machinery and shop equipment allow blind workers at this machine shop to assume more advanced
It probably comes as no surprise to learn that there is a machine shop in Seattle, Washington, that has been a Boeing supplier for 50 years. What may be surprising is the fact that many of the parts manufactured in this shop are produced by machinists who are blind. Some are even deaf and blind.
The shop is part of the Seattle Lighthouse for the Blind, a not-for-profit agency that has provided employment, support and training for visually impaired folks since 1918. The shop primarily funds itself through its sales to Boeing and the U.S. government, which are its two principal customers. None of its machines are donated, and all income from sales of machined parts is channeled to shop upgrades and the development of technologies to assist blind workers in the use of machine tools and related equipment.
These assistive technologies, combined with thorough training from sighted and, in some cases, blind machinists, have greatly expanded the capabilities of the shop's visually impaired workforce. In fact, some of the shop's 40 blind workers can set up a machine tool, run a job and perform in-process inspection on their oxen. Though a machine shop environment is inherently dangerous, the Lighthouse has a very good track record for worker safety.
Overcoming obstacles to get parts out of the door on time and on spec is an everyday occurrence in a machine shop. This shop takes the exercise of overcoming obstacles to a higher level.
Subtle Differences
The Lighthouse machine shop is dubbed the "Boeing Department." It looks and sounds much like any other machine shop, though there are subtle differences. Its aisleways are a bit wider, and customary yellow safety lines have been built up slightly with concrete to help guide a person's cane. Some work orders are printed in a larger-than-typical font size, while others are embossed with Braille symbols for fingertip translation. Additional lighting brightens machine workstations and illuminates cutting tools in action. The din of whirring spindles and buzzing light ballasts often includes the "beep" of a modified edge finder signaling that it has contacted a part or fixture during job setup. Digital voices, beckoned with the touch of a button, can be heard relaying part measurements, machine axis positions or critical part program information to machine operators. Some workers talk to each other without saying a word.
These differences have nothing to do with how a part is machined, but rather how workers obtain feedback from their facility and equipment. The messages are the same; only the mode of communication is different.
Print To Part
Each job at the Lighthouse starts just as it would at any other shop--with a work order. However, work orders at the Lighthouse are modified per the machine operator's visual capability. For those with limited sight, all that may be required is an increase of text font size made possible by off-the-shelf text enlargement software. For workers with no vision, another piece of software converts on-screen text to Braille symbols, and then sends those symbols to an embossing printer to output a Braille work order.
Next comes machine set up. Self-sufficiency, in terms of a blind operator setting up a machine on his or her own, requires communication of a number of variables. One of these variables is machine axis position. The Lighthouse leaped over this hurdle by combining digital readout (DRO) and digital voicing technologies.
The Lighthouse worked with Mitutoyo (Aurora, Illinois) in the development of the Voiceman portable voice output device. The Lighthouse uses the Voiceman to voice position information that typically would only be shown as numerals on a DRO. The Lighthouse has fitted DROs to manual milling machines, shears, cutoff saws and custom measuring tables. Workers push buttons on compact control units to receive the position feedback.
The Voiceman can also be wired to Mitutoyo calipers, micrometers and other gages. Voiced measurement information allows blind operators to perform their own in-process and first-article inspection at a machine. Similarly, a number of Bridgeport knee mills use the Voiceman to relay head angle from digital levels mounted on the side of machine heads.
To further aid in machine set up, the Lighthouse modified edge finders by replacing the indicator lights with small speakers that emit an audible signal whenever the devices come in contact with a vise or part. Height gages and tool presetters have been customized in the same manner.
Adapting CNCs
The Lighthouse has a number of Bridgeport computer numerical control (CNC) machine tools with DX32 PC-based control. A PC-based control allows easy integration of a number of assistive software tools. For example, the Lighthouse modified an off-the-shelf text-reading software to create what it calls CNC Voice99, software that voices text shown on a machine control's screen. Once a part program stored on a floppy disk is loaded into the control, the software allows an operator to hear the job number, all necessary setup information, the tools that are required and other information that would normally be read from the control screen.
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