Allen-Bradley servo drives offer a choice of embedded safety options that meet the needs of industrial applications while enhancing productivity. The Kinetix 300 EtherNet/IP Servo Drive provides the power of the Integrated Architecture for low axis count motion applications. The drive is equipped with embedded safe torque-off functionality. This allows tasks that previously required power-down conditions to be accomplished without removing power from the entire machine, which helps improve machine uptime and productivity.- ISO 13849-1 Safety Category 3 Performance Level dThe Kinetix 6000 multi-axis servo drive and Kinetix 7000 high power drive provide a scalable safe torque-off solution with the following features:- Electromechanical design- SIL 3, PLd safety performance- No configuration required- Category 0 stop- Category 1 stop- Prevention of unexpected restartThe Kinetix 6200 servo drive offers a flexible modular design that will quickly adapt to future technology advancements. Compatibility with the established Kinetix 6000 system allows for mix drive modules within a single power rail to get the advanced safety features just on the axes where they are needed.The Kinetix 6500 EtherNet/IP servo drive also offers safety and modularity, but with the benefits of using a single, standard EtherNet/IP network for the entire machine.
George Reed, with the help of Factory Technologies, was looking to further automate the processes at its quarries and make Ignition an organization-wide standard.
Goodnight Midstream chose Ignition because it could fulfill several requirements: data mining and business intelligence work on the system backend; powerful Linux-based edge deployments...
In the automation world, the Purdue Model (also known as the Purdue reference model, Purdue network model, ISA 95, or the Automation Pyramid) is a well-known architectural framework...
Digital Transformation has become one of the most popular buzzwords in the automation industry, often used to describe any digital improvements to industrial technology. But what...