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A Stroke of Brilliance - GE Aviation opens new 35,000-square-foot brilliant factory in Muskegon, Michigan

May 02, 2017

GE Aviation opened a new 35,000-square-foot brilliant factory in Muskegon, Michigan this week that will manufacture parts for the GE90 engine and will perform development work for new programs. The GE90 on the Boeing 777 is the world’s most powerful jet engine with about 2,500 engines in service and more than 67 million flight hours.

To officially open the facility, several dignitaries joined John Bowman, general manager, Supply Chain for GE Aviation and Bill Millhaem, general manager of the GE90 for GE including U.S. Senator Debbie Stabenow, State Senator Goeff Hansen, State Representatives Terry Sabo and Holly Hughes, the Honorable Gary Nelund, Mayor of Norton Shores, The Honorable Steve Gawron, Mayor of Muskegon and Jennifer Nelson, executive vice president Business Development for the Michigan Economic Development Corporation.

“The new facility in Muskegon is the first of several GE Brilliant Factories being built throughout the world where machine downtime has been reduced to less than 1%,” said John Bowman.  

The $14.5 million brilliant factory located at 6120 Norton Center Drive, expands GE Aviation’s footprint in the Muskegon area to about 220,000 square feet total including three buildings (the new facility in Norton Shores, along with existing manufacturing in Norton Shores and Muskegon).

“This state-of-the-art GE Aviation facility is creating new advanced manufacturing jobs and supporting our local economy,” said Senator Stabenow. “It’s exciting to see Muskegon County and Norton Shores leading the way in making components for GE’s most powerful jet engine.”

The idea behind the Brilliant Factory is to link design, engineering, manufacturing, supply chain, distribution and services into one intelligent system. The system collects and analyzes data from all these disciplines to make factories smarter, combining things like sensor enablement, digital design, and factory and supply chain optimization to improve quality, throughput and yield.

“GE’s brilliant factories combine the newest technologies, from advanced analytics to 3D printing to collaborative robots that work side-by-side with people,” added Bowman. “The facility represents an investment in advanced manufacturing -- our workforce is constantly adapting and updating their skills for the jobs of tomorrow.”

GE has already hired nearly 90 new employees toward a goal of 100 at this advanced manufacturing facility, bringing the total to almost 800 employees across the three buildings.

Bowman continued, “Muskegon is leading the way for GE’s transformation in the way we use big data to run our plants more efficiently and effectively.”

By equipping machines with sensors and analyzing the data in real time, GE can determine when a machine might break well before it fails. Sensor-enabled manufacturing lines feed data to GE’s cloud-based Predix platform. This has helped reduce unplanned downtime on the shop floor by up to 20 percent and has improved overall product reliability and cost. In addition to advanced processes and tools, there is also a digital thread running through the factory, both horizontally across the company and vertically throughout the value chain, which provides an integrated view of a product throughout the manufacturing lifecycle.

Watch a video on GE’s brilliant factories here:



 

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GE Aerospace is a world-leading provider of jet and turboprop engines, as well as integrated systems for commercial, military, business and general aviation aircraft.