Die-Driven Manufacturing
ProAlert's Die-Driven Manufacturing module tracks OEE (Overall Equipment Effectiveness) production targets and scrap thresholds at the die cavity level... the right level for metal stamping and injection molding environments where the tooling determines quality, not just the machine. Die scheduling, cavity scrap monitoring, instant email alerts when thresholds are exceeded, Kanban workflow, and changeover cost analysis... all connected to the same OEE and CMMS (Computerized Maintenance Management System) data driving the rest of the floor.
The bottom line: In die-driven manufacturing, a machine running at 100% OEE with the wrong die is still a quality problem. ProAlert tracks production targets and scrap thresholds at the cavity level... so your OEE metrics always reflect what tooling is actually in the press, not just that the press is running.
The Die vs. Machine Disconnect
Generic OEE platforms track performance at the machine level. For stamping and molding operations, machine-level metrics hide the actual quality and efficiency story.
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Machine OEE is a blended average that masks tooling-specific problems.A 16-cavity die running at 94% quality looks acceptable in a machine-level OEE system. But if cavity 7 is responsible for 80% of the rejects, you'll never see it unless your quality system attributes scrap to the specific cavity that produced it.
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Production targets vary by die, not by machine.The same press running a high-cavity die produces dramatically more parts per minute than when running a prototype single-cavity die. If OEE targets don't change when the die changes, every run compares actual output against the wrong benchmark.
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Scrap thresholds should follow the tooling, not the machine.Acceptable scrap rates differ between a production die running automotive components and a prototype die doing first-article runs. A machine-level threshold that works for one is wrong for the other... leading to either missed quality signals or constant false alarms.
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Die changeover cost is invisible in most OEE systems.Die changeover time is captured as downtime in generic OEE systems, but the cost attributed to each die change... tooling setup labor, line downtime cost, and changeover frequency... is never analyzed at the die level. You can't optimize what you can't see.
Die Scheduling and Run Management
ProAlert schedules production at the tooling level, not just at the machine and product level. Operators select the active die at run start... which drives the correct OEE targets and cavity attribution for the entire run.
| Capability | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Die-Driven Scheduling UI | Production schedule entries include die and tooling assignment alongside machine and product. Supervisors schedule by tooling, not just by output. Scheduling UI accessible from web and mobile. |
| Die/Tool Selection on Production Start | Operators select the active die or tooling at the EdgeSense touchscreen or mobile app before starting a run. Selection drives OEE performance targets, scrap thresholds, and cavity attribution for the full run duration. |
| DieRun CRUD and Finalization | Each die run is a first-class record: created at run start, updated continuously as cycles accumulate, and finalized at run end. Finalized runs are immutable records for tooling history and ROI (Return on Investment) analysis. |
| Die Changeover Cost Analysis | Changeover time and labor cost recorded per die change event. Reports show changeover frequency, average duration, and cost per die... enabling data-driven decisions on tooling investment and changeover optimization (SMED). |
| Tooling Product Type | Tooling-driven product types are classified separately from standard products in scheduling and OEE calculation. Prototype runs, first-article runs, and production runs each carry different threshold configurations. |
| Die-Grouped Mobile Guidance | Mobile app displays production guidance grouped by active die, including cavity layout, acceptable ranges, and operator instructions. Technicians on the floor see tooling-specific information, not generic machine procedure. |
Cavity-Level Scrap Monitoring
Every scrap entry is attributed to the specific die cavity that produced it. Thresholds are configured at the cavity level. Violations trigger instant notification and enter an approval queue.
Violation Approval Workflow: Every threshold violation generates a structured approval record: cavity ID, scrap count, threshold value, time of violation, and the supervisor's disposition (Approve Continue, Pull Die, or Reduce Run). Corrective action notes are attached to the violation record. The complete history is available for quality audits and die repair analysis.
Kanban and Tooling Source Tracking
How Die-Driven OEE Calculation Works
In die-driven mode, ProAlert's OEE engine substitutes die-level targets and thresholds for the generic machine-level defaults at the moment the operator selects the active die.
| OEE Component | Standard Mode | Die-Driven Mode |
|---|---|---|
| Availability | Machine downtime vs. planned run time | Same calculation, but changeover time is attributed to the specific die change event rather than generic unplanned downtime |
| Performance | Actual cycles vs. machine's rated cycle target | Actual cycles vs. the cycle target configured for the specific die... a 16-cavity die has a different PPH (Parts Per Hour) target than a 4-cavity die on the same press |
| Quality | Good parts vs. total parts at machine level | Good parts vs. total parts with cavity attribution... Quality score reflects the per-cavity scrap configuration, and cavity-level violations are visible within the composite Quality metric |
| Composite OEE | Availability x Performance x Quality at machine level | Same formula, but all three inputs use die-level configurations. OEE for the run reflects the actual tooling in the press at every moment of the shift |
Generic OEE vs. Die-Driven OEE
Generic Machine-Level OEE
- OEE targets fixed to the machine regardless of tooling in the press
- Scrap tracked at machine level — no cavity attribution
- Die changeover treated as generic unplanned downtime
- No die scheduling — schedule is product and machine only
- No cavity-level scrap thresholds or approval workflows
- Die storage location and status managed in separate spreadsheet
ProAlert Die-Driven Manufacturing
- OEE targets adjust automatically when the operator selects the active die
- Every scrap unit attributed to the specific cavity that produced it
- Die changeover time and cost tracked at the die change event level
- Schedule entries include die and tooling assignment alongside machine
- Per-cavity thresholds trigger instant email and approval queue
- Kanban board shows every die's current state from storage to press
See cavity-level scrap monitoring and die-driven OEE in a live demo.
Book a 30-minute demo... we'll walk through die selection, cavity threshold configuration, and the scrap approval workflow on actual stamping line data.