INDUSTRIAL AUTOMATION
FOR SMOOTH PROCESSES
With increasing competition on the industrial world market, the level of automation continues to increase. As a result, technologies, products and systems aimed at production and assembly rationalization are becoming considerably more complex. Today, machines change their tools themselves, more and more processes run in parallel, whereby each individual process is increasingly refined. Surface qualities in the nano range, for example, are no longer a question of feasibility.
The EMC Competence Center is your competent EMC partner in the area of industrial automation, in which we contribute many years of experience across all areas: starting with the area of motion control, in other words, everywhere where sensors are involved in automatic production processes, via measuring and control technology, control cabinets, SPS, robotronics, biotronics, cargo transport, conveyor belts right through to special fields like bio-robotronics. In this medical-technology theme it is a matter, for example, of helping people with muscular dystrophy to gain new mobility - through sensors on nerve ends for the control of servomotors in support of the locomotor system. An ambitious project, in which, incidentally, Mitsubishi Electric supports the research of the department at the University of Osaka.
CHECK WHERE IT IS CHEAPEST
Depending on the size of the plant or the equipment to be tested, transport to the testing location can be complicated and expensive. Our customers, therefore, are very appreciative of the fact that they can decide for themselves where testing is conducted, because they can thus positively influence the cost factor.
EMC cluster test in the laboratory:
- Highly complex configurations are assigned and assessed locally according to their individual interference potential.
EMC system test on the spot:
- If our EMC specialists come to you, the high transport costs for heavy equipment are avoided. An initial test is conducted on the spot when the machine is assembled for the first time at the manufacturers. Then the machine is dismantled once again and transported to its final location. It is checked a second time there within the context of the Onsite Verification, in order to compare these test results once more with those of the acceptance test. Highly complex configurations are locally assigned, assessed and limited according to their overall interference potential.
This approach makes a clear distinction possible between components, equipment and stationary plants. The EU Notified Body within the EMC Competence Center supports you with the final assessment.