âSituations that would have required downtime, troubleshooting and other efforts can either be prevented or, in the event of an interruption, we can move more quickly,â said Brian Schriver at Rockwell Automation TechED this week in Orlando.
Schriver credits enterprises like Apple and Google for prompting changes in the industrial arena. âWhat they have done with smart devices raises the bar for us,â he said. âMy 18-month-old was able to play videos on my phone, while we as an industry have typically produced products that required an engineering degree to use. This was just accepted as the way things were. Now weâre making a concerted effort to make our products easier to use.â
Working smarter, working easier â not harder
The presentation summary promised to give attendees a look âunder the hoodâ of smart âedgeâ devices, and the presenter delivered just that â a video feed on one screen broadcast Schriver manipulating device controls as he described the processes for each. Â
Schriver repeatedly referenced sensors as the best examples of smart devices on the factory floor. Whereas sensors historically communicated just one message (âThis part of the process is workingâ), the modern, smart sensor performs that basic task while also providing real-time updates on its own performance (âI am not functioning optimallyâ), analysis of its own condition (âI am overheatingâ), and a projection of its own lifespan (âI need to be replaced soonâ). âThis information enables predictive maintenance, rather than reactive maintenance,â the presenter said. Â
A key component of Schriverâs presentation was using IO-Link point-to-point serial-communication protocol to communicate with sensors and/or actuators, and the troubleshooting advantages that tool provides. âWe have just had to live with spending hours troubleshooting to learn why a sensor stopped working,â he said. âTo get advanced notice of that built into a control system is a really powerful thing.âÂ
The application of (and benefits from) smart devices was highlighted throughout the presentation, as was Schriverâs simple description of what, exactly, makes a device smart. âTo me, a smart device has two aspects. One â can I get contextual, useful information out of it? Two â is it easy to use? A smart device should just work, without me having to do a whole lot of things to it to make it work.â
Tell that to the slide projector.Â