Intelligent Integration
Intelligent Integration

In this issue’s cover story, Stefan Hantke describes an evolving marketplace that requires smarter components and more integrated solutions.
In fact, Hantke, who was recently named head of global industrial sales for the Schaeffler Group, goes so far as to predict that within a few short years, every bearing will have a wire coming out of it.
Those wires will carry all sorts of useful information about the operation of the bearing, letting maintenance staff know about any problems with lubrication, temperature or vibration. The wires will also allow various components to communicate speed, torque and other information with each other and with intelligent controls, making individual smart components even smarter by combining information and creating smart systems.

The organizers of Hannover Messe and many of the exhibitors there focused quite heavily on Industry 4.0—the largely European concept of the fourth industrial revolution, wherein manufacturing becomes computerized and smart factories use connected systems to monitor physical processes and enable centralized control and decision making. At Hannover Messe, a lot of companies demonstrated the smart capabilities of their components.
So clearly the transition to more intelligent components isn’t just Hantke’s vision. It’s a vision that’s already begun taking shape in industries around the globe. We’ve noticed the trend not only at Schaeffler, and not just with bearings, but throughout the mechanical components industry.
Nowhere was that more clear than at the 9th CTI Symposium in Novi, MI, which I attended in May. There, automotive engineers gathered to discuss the future of transmission technology. Obviously electronics and controls make up a big part of that discussion: Millions of lines of code are required to control and coordinate the various mechanical functions of an automobile. On top of that, engineers are beginning to think very seriously about autonomous vehicles.