PARTNER PROFILE BARRETT CENTRE FOR TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION
NEWSLETTER
MARCH 2019
SEW-EURODRIVE’s partnership with Humber will provide Industry 4.0 technologies training and applied research opportunities that will expand faculty, student and employee learning. “We see great value in investing in Humber students and providing them with the chance to develop the skills and gain the practical experience that today’s employers demand,” says Anthony Peluso, SEW-EURODRIVE Canada, COO. “We look forward to working with fellow industry partners to lead and build a world-class automation and learning systems centre at Humber.” The partnership will offer: • Employment and exchange pathways for Humber students to work at SEWEURODRIVE locations in Canada and around the world; • Educational programs in the areas of drive automation and Industry 4.0; • $125,000 to establish new scholarships through the SEWEURODRIVE Ernst Blickle Awards. “There is unique innovation taking place at Humber and the Barrett CTI. The convergence of industry, higher education and government on how we can improve advanced manufacturing applied research is a forwardthinking approach,” says Lyall Watson, Sales Manager, SEW-EURODRIVE Canada.
On the second floor of the Barrett CTI, SEW-EURODRIVE engineers, Andrew Keyzers and Brendan Daniel are standing in the company’s first living laboratory in North America, designed to advance Industry 4.0 skills, provide hands-on learning and showcase industrial technology to students.
A sneak peek of the SEW-EURODRIVE live lab As the Barrett CTI nears completion, SEW-EURODRIVE engineers Andrew Keyzers and Brendan Daniel are finalizing the installation of the company’s first laboratory showcase in North America.
This ‘live lab’ encompasses Industry 4.0, virtual reality, mobile technology and drive systems from SEW-EURODRIVE to showcase industrial technologies to students who will be able to manufacture real products combined with the latest technologies.
This living laboratory focuses on Automated Guided Vehicles (AGVs), mobile worker assistants and connected automation equipment, while demonstrating how mobile technology interacts with both people and stationary automation. By collaborating with both large Canadian companies and small and medium-sized enterprises, the partnership and the lab will help to explore how aspects of Industry 4.0 can help enhance manufacturing processing and increase productivity.
“The lab will provide small demonstrations where operators [students] will use technology to make it easy to assemble parts and components automatically. By working with the augmented reality headset, Hololens,
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they will be directed to which parts to use and tasked to follow instructions, followed by having their work tested using a robot,” says Keyzers. ARTICLE CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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