Aida Engineering : P03-04_Creating Added Value to Meet the Needs of the Times | MarketScreener

2022-10-08 12:54:21 By : Mr. Zway Zhou

Creating Added Value to Meet the Needs of the Times

Our history began in 1917 when Yokei Aida founded AIDA Ironworks in Honjo, Tokyo.

We have been dedicated to "forming" for over 100 years. As a leading company in the field of forming systems related to metalforming, we have been engaged in the development of a wide array of forming systems, such as press machines, as well as factory automation, industrial robots, and forming methodologies.

As a companyOUR that has continued to grow by understandingHISTORY the issues and the requirements of each era to create value, we will inherit the "manufacturing DNA" of our founder, while evolving and supporting diverse industries with our

unique technology development capabilities in order to contribute to people and community.

1970 - Expansion of Global Operations

• Start of the electric consumer

• The Great Kanto Earthquake

• Japan's high economic growth

• Labor reform laws enacted

• Contributing to postwar infrastructure

• Contributing to the automation and

• Contributing to the manufacture of

• Contributing to full-scale production

• Promoting even higher performance and

• Contributing to a carbon-free society

• Contributing to the widespread use of

• Contributing to digital transformation

• Promoting the prevalence of the home

IT-related products such as personal

A wide array of motor cores

Aluminum outer panels for vehicles

Motor cores for electric vehicles

Separators for fuel cell vehicles

Founder Yokei Aida established AIDA Ironworks with the grand vision of creating his own world-leading press machines that would outperform those of Europe and the United States.

Promoted automation and streamlining of production with the development of the world's first transfer press stamping center

Mark IV Stamping Center System

2,500-ton transfer press-the largest in Japan and among the largest in the world (at the time)- also with world-leading speed, contributing to a dramatic increase in production capacity

Introduced the world's first direct-drive servo press

AIDA's independently developed and manufactured high-capacity,low-speed,high-torque servo motor

Reduces energy loss by employing a direct drive mechanism that does not use a speed reducer. These motors are equipped with power storage equipment that suppresses peak current and reduces the required capacity of the factory power supply. The system also saves energy by storing regenerated electricity and effectively utilizing energy.

Contributed to the electrification of automobiles by means of a press machine

optimized for producing electric vehicle motors, etc.

Net-shaped forming* reduces the amount of materials and resources that are used and reduces the number of process stages, thereby enabling lower electric power consumption and resource and energy conservation.

Development of the D-MATPress-to-Press Transfer System

Using two arms to convey workpieces

Higher degrees of freedom in conveyance motion that enables workpiece orientation changes when it is being placed and removed from a die enables the stable conveyance of even complex-shaped workpieces and contributes to efficient automated production.

To increase fuel efficiency by reducing automotive chassis weight and increasing chassis strength, manufacturers have been increasingly adopting frame components made from difficult-to-form

high-tensile steel and aluminum materials. AIDA developed one of the largest servo transfer systems in the world (at the time) that improved forming technologies for automotive frame components and boosted production efficiency.

SMX-D Series Large Servo Tandem Line

Aida Engineering Ltd. published this content on 07 October 2022 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 07 October 2022 03:11:06 UTC.