The consortium behind the 5G Factory of the Future project is hosting an exhibition at the ‘Be Better Connected’ conference taking place on March 23 and 24, which is jointly delivered by the UK government’s Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) and national innovation network UK5G. The event, to be held virtually, brings together for the first time all of the projects in the government’s £200m 5G Testbeds and Trials Programme for collaboration and shared learning between the projects.
Delegates will have the opportunity to find out more about the 5G manufacturing testbed being developed by 5G Factory of the Future and how it will encourage adoption of 5G technologies in manufacturing by increasing understanding of the benefits in a real factory environment. These benefits include better insights, lower costs, higher margins, increased quality, reduced time to market and greatly improve delivery times.
5G Factory of the Future is being delivered by a powerful industrial and academic consortium that includes the University of Sheffield Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (AMRC) North West, BAE Systems, IBM and Digital Catapult, telecommunications and private 5G network provider aql, along with Burnley-based MTT, an SME developer of digitalisation technologies for machine tools, and Lancashire-based data-driven logistics specialist, Miralis.
Prof Rab Scott, Head of Digital at the University of Sheffield AMRC, will host the 5G Factory of the Future’s virtual exhibition alongside project lead Aparajithan Sivanathan from AMRC North West. Prof Scott said it is a fantastic opportunity to learn more about how the programme will develop integrated solutions for key challenges in deploying 5G technologies in industry, demystifying the technology and helping the UK to realise the benefits.
“The potential of 5G to enhance manufacturing operations is a result of the capabilities of the technology,” said Prof Scott. “The 5G Factory of the Future industrial testbed will provide potential for new ways of working and will test the most challenging and ground-breaking areas of 5G for manufacturing: increasing bandwidth, decreasing latency, ensuring security across a robust network and augmenting supply chain transparency, ensuring future industrial sustainability.
“This conference is a chance to hear from us about how these benefits are ready to be unlocked by 5G and how they will improve productivity and competitiveness for UK manufacturers.”
Charles Turyagyenda, Senior 5G Technologist at Digital Catapult, said: “With its low latency, enhanced Mobile Broadband and support for edge compute, 5G helps streamline the implementation of advanced, industrial technologies across manufacturing and the wider supply chain.
“The 5G Factory of the Future project will provide businesses with the chance to come together, test 5G’s capabilities and tap into its enormous benefits for UK industry. I’m pleased Better Connected attendees will have the opportunity to hear about the ways this project will help manufacturers sow the seeds of a 5G-enabled future.”