The challenge of the modern factory floor
Audi, a name synonymous with German engineering and the philosophical manifestation of "Vorsprung durch Technik"—progress through technology—operates at the pinnacle of automotive manufacturing. When drivers get behind the wheel of an Audi, the experience is exceptional and enhanced by intuitive and sophisticated modern features that range from the Virtual Cockpit digital display to Quattro all-wheel drive.
Building millions of vehicles annually across its global facilities demands an intricate dance of precision, speed, and unwavering reliability. On Audi's factory floors, thousands of robots, intricate machinery, and human operators work in perfect synchronicity, a 24/7 operation where every movement is meticulously choreographed.
"At all times, there is no room for error," says Thomas Kampa, IT Solution Architect at Audi. Yet, behind this operational marvel lays a growing challenge. The traditional approach to factory automation relied heavily on physical hardware: countless ruggedized computers and programmable logic controllers (PLCs) or "gray boxes" scattered across the shop floor. Each box performed a specific function, from controlling robot movements to ensuring worker safety.
Audi envisioned a future where its factories were not just automated, but truly software-defined and able to adapt with new levels of agility and efficiency.
Edge Cloud 4 Production (EC4P) was born from this vision, with Audi aiming to virtualize not only worker guidance systems or other classical server client applications, but also the critical control logic of the factory floor, moving it from individual hardware boxes to a centralized, flexible edge cloud environment. The core challenge was immense: how to achieve this virtualization for highly critical real-time applications like PLCs, maintaining the absolute precision, safety, and microsecond-level latencies that automotive production demands, without disrupting a single robot's movement.
"We had to deliver a platform that is capable of communication in real time," Sven Mueller, EC4P Project Lead, explains. "We had to deliver a network that is capable of doing that. And of course, the applications must also be capable of doing that."