Machine Safety & Cableless (Wireless) Safety – with comments
COMMENTS
In response to: Machine Safety & Cableless (Wireless) SafetyLundin commented:
There are approximately somewhere between 20 to 40 companies around the world doing exactly these kind of products. Here in Sweden we had an official legislation for them back in 1984, so I don’t quite see what’s so revolutionary.
If you want a HMI device with graphic display, fieldbus support etc I can sell you one 🙂
In response to: Machine Safety & Cableless (Wireless) SafetyLundin commented:
You can find such a HMI device here:
www.datek.net
In response to: Machine Safety & Cableless (Wireless) SafetyLundin commented:
Just as Star Trek, this technology arrived 30 years ago.
I happen to work at a company designing industrial radio remote controls. In our branch, the safety debate is ever-present. If you don’t know about and conform to the safety standards, you won’t sell any systems. It is a major sales argument.
At least in Europe, all serious companies designing industrial remote controls label their systems "safety components", and thereby the systems sort under for example the European machinery directive. And as soon as the product does, you will have to perform risk analysis, conform with ISO 13849 and so on.
Manufacturers of industrial radio remote controls have labelled their products safety components for as long as anyone can remember. Even though they have had the possibility to interpret the fuzzy machinery directive in many ways.
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Note that specific standards under the machinery directive, such as IEC 60204-32 for lifting equipment, explicitly states that you may not label a wireless stop, or a stop based on advanced electronics, as "emergency stop", even though the stop function is implemented in a safe way.
In response to: Machine Safety & Cableless (Wireless) SafetyJohn Presley commented:
What a great innovation; a wireless, graphical display with safety. Who would have thought this was possible. I see many applications this could solve or provide a better way of doing things in the manufacturing enviroment I work in each day. My biggest question at this point is, where is it? What vendor has such an animal, or will be the first to develop a wireless HMI device with safety built in. Also will innovations like this be delayed in standards committees? With safety approved wireless protocols like Profisafe, and i’m sure others as well, already being in the market place you would think additions like a safe, wireless, HMI and other technologies like this would be coming out of the wood works. Thanks for the blog, I found it informative and thought stiring.
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