Siemens Digital Industries Software announced Ather Energy, one of India’s foremost electric motorcycle brands, has expanded its adoption of the Siemens Xcelerator portfolio of industry software to help the company reduce its design and engineering cycle time, improve product quality, and achieve faster time to market.
Ather Energy was founded in 2013 by Indian institute of Technology (IIT) Madras alumni, Tarun Mehta, and Swapnil Jain. In 2018, it launched India’s first truly intelligent electric scooter - Ather 450, followed by the new flagship offering Ather 450X in 2020, the 450S in 2023 and Ather’s special edition scooter, the Ather 450 Apex in January 2024.
Ather has also installed a comprehensive public charging network, Ather Grid, designed and built in India. With 1600+ charging points across India, Ather Grid is one of the country’s largest fast-charging networks for electric scooters. The company currently has 175+ Experience Centers across India and plans to add a total of 250 outlets by March 2024. Ather recently forayed into the international market with two Experience Centers in Nepal.
|
In the fast-evolving EV industry, speed to market is an important lever to succeed,” says Swapnil Jain, Co-founder & CTO at Ather Energy. “Siemens' expanded PLM management enables parallel processing of engineering deliverables, a departure from the sequential approach, thereby reducing the lead time for introducing new products and features.”
“Startups are the lifeblood of the electrification revolution in mobility and we’re proud to work alongside the Ather Energy team to help them expand their capabilities to bring their breakthrough products to the Indian market,” says Robert Jones, Executive Vice President, Global Sales and Customer Success, Siemens Digital Industries Software, during a recent visit to the Ather Energy facility. “Our work with Ather Energy is another proof point of leading innovators and pioneers choosing the Siemens Xcelerator portfolio as the platform of choice for product development in the electrification of mobility and helping the world achieve cleaner, more sustainable transportation.”
Ather Energy adopted Siemens’ Teamcenter software for Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) in 2018 to help it achieve its critical key performance indictors (KPIs) including faster time to market, reducing its design and engineering cycle time with the removal of design iterations, and adopting a right first-time approach. Since then, the Ather Energy team has also taken advantage of Simcenter STAR-CCM+ software for Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) and Simcenter physical testing solutions to help with its in-house testing regime for durability and noise, vibration, and harness (NVH). Most recently, the Ather Energy vehicle engineering team has moved to Siemens’ NX software for new product development and engineering from its legacy system for all existing and new vehicle platforms.
Ather Energy, one of India’s foremost electric motorcycle brands, has expanded its adoption of the Siemens Xcelerator portfolio of industry software to help the company reduce its design and engineering cycle time, improve product quality and achieve faster time to market (Image credit: Ather Energy)
“The simulations and virtual testing we perform using Siemens’ tools enable us to crush timing and provide us with great savings in resources and money spent on repeating testing,” adds Swapnil Jain. “The stack-up analysis enables us to get the design right the first time and avoids engineering changes. We are looking at expanding the Siemens tools into controlling the manufacturing processes by introducing the management of ‘Bill of Processes’.”
Latest from EV Design & Manufacturing
- Best of 2024: #10 Article: A dicing proposition: driving zero defects in today’s intelligent vehicles
- Best of 2024: #10 News: General Motors rebrands Ultium battery platform, modifies EV strategy
- Hundreds of ultra-fast electric vehicle charging ports to be installed across United States
- Hyundai Mobis introduces electric vehicle battery cooling technology
- Wide-creepage option now available for integrated circuits
- New study delivers promising news for future electric vehicle battery manufacturing
- Technology promises to make shrink fit holder processing easier, safer
- Latest Battery Workforce Challenge partner introduces recyclability into competition