Machine Retrofits, Upgrades & Rebuilds
Instead of scrapping an older machine, AutoMotion Dynamics upgrades the motion hardware, controls, safety, and mechanics so you can extend equipment life, improve reliability, and unlock new capability with less disruption than a full replacement.
Typical scopes: motion axis replacements, actuator and gearbox upgrades, control panel rebuilds, PLC/HMI modernization, safety upgrades, and complete mechanical refreshes.
Why Retrofit Instead of Replace?
Preserve What Works
Keep your frames, guarding, utilities, and upstream/downstream equipment while refreshing what is obsolete or unreliable.
- Reuse machine base & structure
- Leverage existing fixturing where possible
- Minimize plant floor disruption
Reduce Risk & Downtime
Retrofitting focuses on the highest‑risk components first: motion axes, controls, and safety. The result is a known process with modern guts.
- Shorter install & commissioning windows
- Known process, updated hardware
- Planned changeover instead of surprise failure
Improve Capability
Use the retrofit as an opportunity to add recipes, data, diagnostics, and tighter tolerances without redesigning the entire line.
- Additional modes & setpoints
- Better positioning, force, or speed
- Live diagnostics and alarms
What We Upgrade & Modernize
Motion Hardware
Replace tired mechanicals with modern motion components sized and tuned for your application.
Controls & Safety
Modernize controls while respecting your plant standards and preferred vendors.
Mechanical & Conveyance
Refresh the moving pieces around your process so the machine runs smoother, quieter, and more repeatably.
Data, Diagnostics & IIoT
Add the visibility you wish the original machine had.
- Production counters & OEE data hooks
- Alarm and downtime tracking
- Trend logging of critical values (position, force, temperature)
Documentation & Training
Every retrofit is delivered with clear documentation and training so the system is maintainable long‑term.
- Updated electrical & pneumatic schematics
- Bill of materials & spare‑parts list
- FAT/SAT checklists and sign‑off forms
- Operator & maintenance instructions
Our Retrofit & Rebuild Process
1. Assess & Benchmark
We start on the floor: watching the machine run, talking with operators and maintenance, and capturing loads, cycle times, and failure modes.
- Document current state & pain points
- Measure forces, speeds, and duty cycles
- Review safety and guarding
2. Concept & Scope
Define what will change, what will be reused, and how downtime will be managed.
- Retrofit concept sketches
- Preliminary bill of materials
- Phased implementation plan if needed
3. Engineering & Sizing
Calculate thrust/torque, inertia ratios, structural loads, and safety factors to properly size actuators, motors, gearboxes, and drives.
4. Build & Pre‑Test
New panels, motion axes, and assemblies are built and tested before the main outage.
- Panel build and power‑up
- Axis dry‑run and tuning
- Program simulation where possible
5. Install & Commission
During the planned downtime, we remove obsolete components, install new hardware, and commission the system.
- Mechanical swap‑out or rebuild
- Wiring, I/O checks, and safety validation
- Motion profile tuning and recipe setup
6. Verify, Train & Handoff
We run acceptance tests with your team, then hand over documentation and training.
- Factory & Site Acceptance Tests (FAT/SAT)
- Operator and maintenance training
- Spare‑parts and preventative maintenance recommendations
Typical Machines & Industries
By Machine Type
- Conveyors & indexing systems
- Material‑handling carts & shuttles
- Test stands & inspection stations
- Assembly & packaging cells
- Gantry and multi‑axis stages
By Industry
- Aerospace & NDT
- Electronics & semiconductor handling
- Medical & lab automation
- Packaging, food, and consumer goods
- General industrial & OEM equipment
Common Retrofit Triggers
- Obsolete drives, PLCs, or HMIs
- Frequent actuator or gearbox failures
- Insufficient thrust/torque or speed
- Safety or guarding concerns
- Need for better data, recipes, or diagnostics
What to Send for a Retrofit Review
To evaluate whether a retrofit, upgrade, or full rebuild makes sense, share as much of the following as you can:
Machine & Motion Details
- Photos or short video of the machine running
- Existing drawings and panel layouts (if available)
- Payload, speeds, stroke lengths, and cycle times
- Known pain points or recurring failures
Constraints & Preferences
- Acceptable downtime window
- Plant standards for PLC/HMI and drives
- Safety or regulatory requirements
- Budget range and timing
We’ll respond with a written concept, budgetary range, and next steps.
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