NRTC AUTOMATION BLOG | INDUSTRIAL ROBOTS AND AUTOMATION
History of NRTC Automation
After a decade of growth and opportunity, NRTC Automation has established itself as the choice partner for comprehensive industrial automation and manufacturing solutions.
After a decade of growth and opportunity, NRTC Automation has established itself as the choice partner for comprehensive industrial automation and manufacturing solutions.
Learning about the history of a company is a great way to understand their mission and expertise.
At NRTC Automation, we have a multi-faceted history of growth and development that led us to become the full-service automation solutions company that we are today.
Learn more about NRTC’s history and how we can help you meet your production goals below.
History of NRTC Automation
THE VERY BEGINNING
NRTC Automation (and our sister company, iGAM) falls under the parent company NRTC Alabama.
Over a decade ago in Tilbury, Ontario, NRTC Alabama was founded under the name New Rubber Technologies by Mike Vagi.
Mike, our current President of Sales and co-founder of iGAM, is a highly driven and successful entrepreneur. He has over 20 years of experience starting and growing companies from the conceptual stage to fully operational organizations with over 100 employees.
New Rubber Technologies was a rubber reclamation business. The company would collect rubber from tire yards and other demolition sites and, using a rubber grinding machine, vulcanize the rubber into a usable product.
Not too long after New Rubber Technologies started up, Mike discovered that to get to the next level in his business, he needed an industrial robot. He decided to join an auction and found six robots available at a good price.
Even though he only needed one robot to complete the job, Mike purchased all six robots, unsure of what he was going to do with them at first. Mike decided to call one of his contacts and struck a deal with him to sell five robots for a great price.
MAKING GROUND IN THE WORLD OF AUTOMATION
This deal marked a major shift in our business, from only doing rubber recycling to also participating in robot auctions.
In 2011, Mike bid on over 100 decommissioned Kawasaki robots against another company. He won the bid and sold some of the robots to the company where Dan Hill used to work. Mike and Dan met for the first time and helped the company build its presence through automation.
The excitement of helping another company grow through automation gave Mike the idea to build our own inventory of automation equipment to provide our customers with a better deal. Around 2014, New Robot Technologies shifted into NRT Equipment Sales to provide manufacturers with affordable automation equipment.
A major turning point for our company was when we sold our first single, double, and triple spot weld cells in 2015, and started receiving more orders from other businesses such as prototyping companies.
Finally in 2018, we broke through as a reputable industrial automation company. We were hired to design, build, and engineer nine automated cells in only 10 weeks. While this was a challenging opportunity, Mike and the team took it on with eager determination, providing quality automation cells to a company looking to move to the next level of growth.
NEW GROWTH
After the work cell project, NRT Equipment Sales received another opportunity to help a large customer decommission their current facility and build a new facility with an entire paint line from scratch. While doing the e-coat work and implementing the line into the facility, Mike and Dan started discussing service parts manufacturing in Alabama.
Dan joined the company and moved to Alabama in April of 2019 to start working on the new facility for NRT’s next adventure in the United States. We started out with a 50,000 square foot facility and shipped a hood, the first service part we produced as a company, on August 5th, 2019.
Around the same time, iGAM, the online marketplace for industrial robots and manufacturing equipment, was founded alongside our newly established name, NRTC Automation.
WHERE WE ARE TODAY
NRTC Automation and iGAM have come a long way since the summer of 2019.
We’ve established locations in Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, Canada, and Michigan, and our team has grown to nearly one hundred employees since Dan started.
Now, on top of Decommissioning and Tear Outs, Automation Services, and Service Parts Manufacturing, NRTC Automation also offers services so manufacturers receive help every step of the way through the automation journey:
Industrial Robot Refurbishing
Prototyping
Robotic Engineering
Robotic Training
Industrial Tool and Fixture Storage
The best part about NRTC Automation’s growth is that we provide a solution for every industrial automation and manufacturing need. We work with our customers to help them meet their production goals from start to finish, which helps us grow in the process.
Plus, our employees benefit from working with us, too. They get a complete picture of the automation process and gain meaningful experience in how to help manufacturers grow their companies with automation, training, troubleshooting, and more.
SCHEDULE A FREE CONSULTATION
All around, NRTC Automation is the best place to go for manufacturers of any size and phase looking to optimize production, minimize downtime, and build their revenue. We have a consistent track record of high-quality performance, as shown by our partnerships with top automotive manufacturers like Toyota, BMW, and Mercedes, as well as small- to mid-sized manufacturers.
With a wide range of automation services and capabilities, NRTC Automation can help. Our team of experienced and qualified professionals will support you in your journey to growth.
Schedule a free consultation with NRTC today to see what it’s like working on your production needs with us.
NRTC AUTOMATION IS YOUR PREFERRED PARTNER
NRTC Automation is dedicated to providing high value industrial automation and manufacturing equipment solutions to all its customers.
From decommissioning and tear out to industrial robotic training services to custom flexible work cells, NRTC is the key to integrating into your workplace. With personalized training and custom-built designs, NRTC Automation is the destination for all your industrial automation and manufacturing equipment services.
Contact us today to learn more about how we can help you meet your production goals.
Why is Manufacturing Important?
Although manufacturing accounts for only 12 percent of the U.S. economy, it has exponential and widespread impacts across the economy, societies, and humanity.
Although manufacturing accounts for only 12 percent of the U.S. economy, it has exponential and widespread impacts across the economy, societies, and humanity.
Throughout history, manufacturing has improved quality of life, enabled the growth of human populations and societies, and drives innovation through the efficient mass production of materials.
History of Manufacturing
While manufacturing may be associated with high-tech facilities and modern methods such as Lean, Six Sigma, and JIT, it actually began long before the emergence of Homo Sapiens.
PREHISTORY AND ANCIENT HISTORY
Stone tool making, also known as the “Oldowan Industry”, is at least 2.3 million years old. The manufacturing of stone tools was partially responsible for human evolution as a result of hunter-gatherer lifestyles.
The manufacturing of stone tools optimized over many eons. Though little is known about production over that period, archaeologists found the longest-producing manufacturing site in Africa. At the site, stones were processed on a ten-kilometer stretch between two mountains for around a million years.
Specialization and the division of labor began to emerge in toolmaking during the Neolithic age (70,000 BCE) and more advanced tooling occurred as early as 35,000 BCE.
In ancient times, Greek philosopher Xenophon observed division of labor.
“In a small city the same man has to build beds, chairs, ploughs and tables and often even to build houses. […] But in the big cities [an artisan will get] his living merely by stitching shoes, another by cutting them out, a third by shaping the upper leathers, and a fourth will do nothing but fit the parts together.”
The division of labor that Xenophon observed in large cities allowed ancients to produce goods faster, better, and cheaper.
Manufacturing first began to loosely resemble modern processes during the Stone age (6,000 BCE), where Neolithic people manufactured pottery. The pottery technology, which produced high temperature kilns, is believed to led to advances in copper smelting.
By adding and smelting elements such as arsenic with copper ore deposits, ancient craftsmen engineered arsenical bronze. The Bronze age saw a transition from stone to metal, which was stronger and easier to shape. Similarly, the Iron Age saw widespread weapon and tool manufacturing using iron.
Ancient civilizations innovated and mass produced new technologies including the wheel and axel in and the six classic simple machines Mesopotamia, as well as Egyptian papyrus and pottery in the Mediterranean basin.
MEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN
In the 1960s through 1830s, the Industrial Revolution transitioned to new European and U.S. manufacturing processes. The manufacturing process transformed from hand made production to machine production powered by steam and water power. Additionally, machine tools and mechanized factory systems developed and the first industry to trial modern production methods was textiles.
After a decade-long economic recession followed by a few decades of technological innovation outside manufacturing, the Second Industrial Revolution in 1870 saw the emergence of modern manufacturing practices. Innovations included mass production, assembly lines, and electrical grids.
MODERN MANUFACTURING
The manufacturing industry gradually transitioned to modern practices in the 1890s as electricity became more practical and cost-efficient. As a result, many factories experienced a 30 percent increase in output.
Mass modern production became more attainable and consumer goods became widely available in the first two decades of the 20th century. Mass production was popularized by Henry Ford’s Ford Motor Company, which introduced sequential (or assembly line) production.
Toyota similarly innovated in the 1930s, when the car manufacturer developed lean manufacturing practices. Also known as ‘just-in-time’ manufacturing, the process reduced production and response times from suppliers.
Impacts of Manufacturing
Over the last two decades, China’s emergence as a global manufacturing leader has challenged domestic manufacturing bases.
As the deindustrialization of developed nations occurred (and continues to progress) as a result of outsourcing manufacturing offshore, employment shifted to the services sector. Many analysts believe that manufacturing is essential and raise concerns about the loss of domestic manufacturing.
Economies reap numerous benefits as a result of manufacturing including:
Economic growth is dependent upon manufacturing. In the United States, manufacturing productivity increases 3 percent each year as a direct result of technical innovation. In comparison, service industries report very slow growth because innovation is limited.
Because we have reached a point where machines can build, engineer, and maintain other machines, automation in the manufacturing industries leads to exponential economic and technological growth.
National power is also related to manufacturing productivity, which is used to generate wealth as well as military supplies and equipment. Consider that in the last 100 years, four to five of the most powerful countries have controlled three quarters of global machinery production. Some experts postulate that in the absence of manufacturing power imbalances, global power would also be balanced and result in fewer wars.
Trade relies heavily on manufacturing since goods constitute 80 percent of interregional trade, according to the World Trade Organization. Globally, countries who aren’t able to trade with other countries create large trade deficits and a reliance on other nations. Trade deficits eventually impact the value of national currency, which has trickle down effects on the cost of imported consumer goods.
Although the service industry represents the majority of global economies, manufactured goods are required to provide services. For example the business model for retail and warehousing industries (which constitute 11 percent of gross national product) revolves around selling manufactured goods. Airlines, utilities, and software companies rely on airplanes, telephone lines, and computer hardware.
Manufacturing jobs create more jobs. The Economic Policy Institute in the U.S. reports that every single manufacturing job creates three other jobs because wages are spent in other parts of the economy. Moreover, manufacturing creates middle class jobs and reduces poverty. Many manufacturing jobs are unionized, giving employees collective bargaining power.
The U.S. is one of the most innovative economies, consistently developing disruptive technology. Interest in domestic manufacturing within the U.S. is seeing a resurgence as a result of programs and initiatives aimed at rejuvenating the industry.
Industry and government leaders recognize the astounding benefits and advantages that come with a manufacturing economy. History provides assurances that investments in manufacturing innovation produce large dividends, if the American culture can rise to the challenge.
MANUFACTURE EFFICIENTLY WITH NRTC AUTOMATION
NRTC Automation is dedicated to providing high-value industrial automation and manufacturing equipment solutions to all our customers.
From decommissioning and tear out to industrial robotic training services to custom flexible work cells, NRTC is the key to integrate your workplace. With personalized training and custom-built designs, NRTC Automation is the destination for all your industrial automation and manufacturing equipment services.
Contact us today to learn more about how we can help you meet your production goals.
Top 3 Modern Innovations in Industrial Automation
Industrial automation is constantly changing and adapting to our needs with landmark innovations.
Industrial automation is constantly changing and adapting to our needs with landmark innovations.
Comparing early industrial robots to automation of today is a direct representation of how quickly technology has developed in the past few decades.
As a result, manufacturing has changed drastically across all industries. Advanced automation and software have made success available to more manufacturers around the globe.
Learn more about the history of industrial automation and some of the top modern innovations today.
Top 3 modern innovations in industrial automation
How long has industrial automation been around?
Forms of industrial automation have been around for centuries. For example, in 1856, the two-horse straddle row cultivator was patented, a device that made the back-breaking work of turning soil much easier for farmers.
Industrial automation has a long history of helping humans make work simpler and more efficient.
In the 1960s, an invention was brought to the market that would change the face of manufacturing forever.
Unimate, the first industrial robot, was patented in 1961 by the late George Devol. With a simple arm and controller design, hundreds of Unimate models performed diecasting applications on General Motors production lines.
Modern day industrial automation
One invention led to another, and now we have several top name robot brands, such as KUKA, ABB, and FANUC.
These companies are consistently producing new models with cutting-edge technology. Changes include software, end of arm tooling material, robotic vision, artificial intelligence, design, and more.
While each industrial robotics company is unique, they all have the common goal of making manufacturing as lean, efficient, and safe as possible.
Plus, robotic work cells make it even easier for manufacturers to automate without having to piece together the parts.
NRTC Automation can design, build, and engineer a custom work cell to suit your production needs. Learn more about our Automation Services here, and check out our YouTube video below!
Top 3 modern innovations
There is a plethora of fascinating developments in robotics today. NRTC Automation lists three of them below.
1. COBOTS
Collaborative robots, or cobots for short, are named for their collaboration with human workers.
Industrial robots can be dangerous to work with due to their heavy weights and movements, but cobots are specifically designed to safely work with humans on repetitive and monotonous tasks.
Cobots achieve this with advanced software that make them highly sensitive to humans working nearby.
2. BUILD-YOUR-OWN ROBOT
Now, you can build your own fully functional robot with a kit produced by Professor Neil Gershenfeld and researchers from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
Inspired by the 20 amino acids that make up all living beings, Gershenfeld created a kit composed of only five parts: rigid and flexible components, a coil, electromagnetic parts, and a magnet.
Gershenfeld and his team are now working on developing a manufacturing robot kit that technicians and other production staff can assemble and disassemble with ease.
3. ADVANCED GRIPPING SENSORS
Watching a robot handle an egg with gentle care is a sight to behold.
With soft “fingers” and advancing gripping technology, these robots can pick up and place a raw egg without cracking the shell.
The food manufacturing industry benefits from these sensors since breaking certain foods like pretzels, chips, and other fragile foods can severely affect production output.
Meet your production goals with NRTC Automation
NRTC Automation can help you create a fully customized work cell for your unique production line. We use refurbished robots and equipment so manufacturers of any size can afford to automate their facilities.
Learn more by visiting our website or give us a call at (888) 990-7606.
SCHEDULE A FREE CONSULTATION TODAY
NRTC Automation is dedicated to providing high-value industrial automation and manufacturing equipment solutions to all our customers.
From decommissioning and tear out to industrial robotic training services to custom flexible work cells, NRTC is the key to integrate your workplace. With personalized training and custom-built designs, NRTC Automation is the destination for all your industrial automation and manufacturing equipment services.
Click the button below to schedule a free consultation with our automation experts.
Histories and Profits of 10 Leading Manufacturing Companies Around the World
Since the turn of the 20th century, manufacturing has taken over the global market. Advancements in technology and increasingly efficient manufacturing processes have given the world cars, planes, and robots, to name a few.
Manufacturing has made access to products and services easier than ever. Learn about some of the leaders in manufacturing with NRTC Automation’s list of 10 manufacturing companies below.
Since the turn of the 20th century, manufacturing has taken over the global market. Advancements in technology and increasingly efficient manufacturing processes have given the world cars, planes, and robots, to name a few.
Manufacturing has made access to products and services easier than ever. Learn about some of the leaders in manufacturing with NRTC Automation’s list of 10 manufacturing companies below.
10 Leading Manufacturing Companies Since 1892
SAMSUNG
Samsung is headquartered in South Korea and made over $222 billion in 2019. As a relatively new company, Samsung has climbed the ladder to consistently make the top lists of manufacturing companies in the world. They are traditionally a home appliance and technology store, but they are beginning to focus on B2B demands for electronics. In 2019, Samsung unveiled the “Samsung Bot,” a next-generation AI robot with household capabilities, and they recently celebrated their 50th anniversary.
GENERAL MOTORS
In 1908 in New Jersey, William Durant created General Motors. Over the course of a century, General Motors grew into the powerhouse of classic American cars and, as of this year, the first company to produce self-driving vehicles. General Motors saw a revenue of $147 billion in 2019.
NISSAN
Nissan is a Japanese automobile manufacturer founded in 1928 with a Japanese translation of Automobile Manufacturing Co., Ltd., and officially joined the stock market in 1933 with its new name, Nissan. The company was the first Japanese automobile manufacturer to win the Deming Prize for engineering excellence in the 1950s and saw a rise in profits throughout the ‘60s and onward. With over $104 billion in revenue and continued innovations on their automobiles, Nissan makes the list.
TOYOTA
Toyota was founded over 75 years ago in Japan by Sakichi Toyoda, an inventor who used his funds from his inventions to create the company. Sakichi’s son, Kiichiro Toyoda, took over the business and established the car operations, producing the first Toyota engine in 1934. They changed the name from Toyoda to Toyota to make it easier to pronounce. Toyota cars are known for their dependability, and their $273 billion in revenue proves their reliability.
VOLKSWAGEN
Volkswagen was established as the “people’s car” in 1937 in Germany. The factory was initially under Nazi management until the war when the Allies destroyed the factory in an air raid. It was rebuilt under British control and grew rapidly from there. Volkswagen competes with the other top auto manufacturers, pulling in $278 billion in 2019.
APPLE
In 1976, Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak founded Apple for computers. In less than 50 years, Apple rose the ranks to one of the leading companies in the world. With the event of the smartphone, Apple became a household name and generated a revenue of $266 billion in 2019.
FORD
Ford is a classic American company founded in 1903 by Henry Ford, building international fame with his Model T car. Fun fact: Ford also established the assembly line as we know it today, increasing manufacturing productivity to new heights. Ford’s cars were used extensively during both World Wars. In 2019, Ford Motors Company made $160 billion in revenue.
MICROSOFT
Bill Gates and Paul G. Allen created Microsoft in 1975, the name of which is inspired by the terms microcomputer and software. They started out with computers and branched out into video game consoles in 2001 with the release of the Xbox. Microsoft was tangled in many legal struggles in its 45-year history, but it continues to lead manufacturing around the world with a $110 billion revenue.
HONDA
Honda is known for its cars, but when Soichiro Honda and Takeo Fujisawa founded the company in 1949 in Japan, the first automobile they introduced was the “Dream” D-type motorcycle. Their first car was sold in the United States in 1969 and developed ASIMO, a humanoid robot to assist those with limited mobility. Honda generated over $115 billion in revenue in 2019.
GENERAL ELECTRIC
Last but not least, General Electric is the oldest company on this list. It was incorporated in 1892 and became one of the top manufacturing companies in the world with its diverse product range. Consumer products such as home appliances and electronics only make up a small portion of its profit, however; the company’s sales are mostly supported by the U.S. Department of Defense. GE’s revenue in 2019 was $120 billion, continuing to prevail in manufacturing after nearly 130 years.
THE FUTURE OF MANUFACTURING
Manufacturing has come a long way in the past century. With the development of cars, airplanes, robots, and more, the world has changed drastically due to manufacturing. Looking ahead to the future, many of the companies on this list are innovating their products to be more sustainable and efficient. With advancements in technology and an increasing awareness of our production, manufacturing has a challenging, yet bright, future.
NEED SERVICES FOR YOUR GROWING MANUFACTURING BUSINESS?
NRTC Automation is the leader in decommissioning and tear out services. With over a decade of experience, we are trusted by the top auto manufacturers around the world. NRTC Automation also offers robotic solutions to minimize disruption and downtime in the work area while emphasizing safety, speed, and efficiency. Visit NRTC Automation today for more information on our services.