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Inside the factory: a closer look at how mes software is evolving beyond production control

“Where’s the sheet?” It’s a simple question, yet too often, it halts production. Operators on the shop floor face a common friction point: material handling. While the focus is typically on programming, nesting, and cutting, delays in moving raw material from warehouse to machine regularly go unnoticed in MES strategies. It’s an operational blind spot—one that’s been hard to fix without overcomplicating workflows. Until now.
12 giugno 2025 di

A Missed Piece in the Manufacturing Puzzle

At many manufacturing facilities, the material logistics between central warehouses and workstations rely on a mix of manual tracking, verbal communication, or handwritten notes. The consequences are predictable: misplacements, incorrect materials sent to machines, idle equipment, and unnecessary downtime.

Operators often make judgment calls based on memory. When production schedules are tight, even a short delay looking for a misplaced beam can ripple through the entire process. Worse, without system-level traceability, these micro-errors are nearly invisible to managers reviewing KPIs—until delivery dates are affected.

This gap is what the latest version of Lantek MES aims to close.

A Step Forward with Lantek MES v44

The new intralogistics feature in Lantek MES v44 introduces a structured, guided process for managing the flow of raw materials—one that combines visibility, traceability, and ease of use.

Built as a web-based application, the new module leads operators through three simple steps:

  1. Select Nestings to Supply:
    Instead of guessing priorities, the system displays pending nestings queued on each machine. The operator selects which ones to prepare material for, ensuring alignment with production needs.
  2. Choose and Track Raw Material:
    Based on nesting requirements, the system identifies which sheets or beams are suitable and where they are located. Once the operator confirms which materials are being moved, the system marks those nestings as “in supply,” offering real-time traceability.
  3. Confirm Delivery to Work Center:
    The final step confirms the delivery location—helping the system record the movement and letting downstream users know that the material is ready at the input location of the cutting center.

Each step is part of a wizard-style interface, allowing users to move forward or backward as needed without losing data. It´s not a complex logistics platform—it´s a pragmatic, factory-floor solution.

Why This Matters

Manufacturing software traditionally handles nesting optimization, machine scheduling, and order management well. But the internal movement of physical resources has remained a gray area.

By enabling digital traceability for raw material transfers, Lantek MES v44 reduces material search times, minimizes human error, and improves coordination between teams. It also brings shop floor logistics into the MES conversation—where it belongs.

Another critical benefit: this feature can be activated with minimal configuration changes. It simply requires setting up “intermediate warehouses” as part of the machine configuration. Once that´s done, the tool integrates seamlessly with the existing Lantek environment.

There´s nothing flashy here—no AI predictions or futuristic automation claims. Just a solid, much-needed answer to a common operational bottleneck.

And that might be the real innovation.