“The journey is the SmartMill and we are on the way to the fully automated mill. We still need the miller, who is the expert that will set up the autopilot according to the mill’s specific needs,” explains Sonderegger. “To reach that stage we need short innovation cycles rather than trying to develop everything to perfection in one go, and it is our relationship with Whitworth that allows us to have a hypothesis and then try and adapt rather than building the perfect world in one go.”
Another key feature of the Mill E3 that is still in its infancy is blockchain. It is a technology that is generating a lot of interest among Whitworth’s major clients as it has the potential to provide the secure transfer of data to clients, providing transparency around the exact production parameters being used to mill their product.
“Eventually you won’t have to continually sample for additional laboratory testing with the SmartMill being able to provide certain parameters into the blockchain as part of the delivery notice to the client,” explains Peters. “It means having a quality record for that bulk consignment that could form part of a blockchain trail that goes from that customer down the value chain providing entire integrity.”