THE DEFINITION
What is manufacturing process engineering?
Manufacturing process engineering designs, analyzes, and optimizes how a
production process runs — material flow, line layout, throughput, and the
process logic that connects each step — to make it efficient, repeatable, and ready
to automate. It's the discipline that decides what your line should do and in what
order, before anyone decides which machine does it.
It's easy to confuse with automation engineering, so here's the clean line:
process engineering defines what needs to happen; automation engineering
determines how to build it. One produces the requirements — flow, layout,
cycle times, sequence. The other produces the PLC code, the controls, and the robot
cell that meet them. PITCO works on the planning side and makes the build side go right.
Why does the order matter so much? Because automation doesn't fix a broken
process — it makes a broken process run faster. If material backtracks,
stations are unbalanced, or the real bottleneck was never found, a six-figure cell
just produces the same problems at a higher speed. Process engineering is the work
that makes sure there's a sound process to automate in the first place.