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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Monday, September 23, 2024
When paired with other next-generation technologies, AR has the potential to alter how many of these sectors operate. Regarding health and safety, augmented reality can assist in reducing risk while increasing adherence to regulatory standards.
Fremont, CA: Health and safety audits by international and local regulatory authorities are built into the fabric of many sectors. They provide a check on business owners, requiring them to create a safe workplace and setting for their employees, contractors, and customers.
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Health and safety authorities and a company's operations staff have traditionally undertaken offline workplace inspections. However, recent technological breakthroughs have enabled the automated execution of safety audits and inspections. The arrival of the Internet of Things (IoT) has accelerated these advancements by allowing sensors to gather and report data in near real-time. However, there are drawbacks to using wireless sensors, such as the expensive cost, the need for maintenance, and the influence of temperature interference.
Augmented reality (AR) technology has the potential to overcome such difficulties while also providing a more cost-effective and efficient method of conducting health and safety inspections.
Here are significant ways in which AR might be applied in this field:
Training and Validation
Workplace health and safety inspections and upkeep must be performed regularly and should be the duty of a group of employees rather than a single person.
Augmented reality can improve relevant documentation such as user manuals or product upkeep videos and photographs, allowing employees to participate in the process and preventing a health and safety incident.
Furthermore, in a non-digital work setting, it is difficult to verify that an inspector of a massive piece of machinery with several checkpoints physically visited each one. Augmented reality may confirm the inspector's physical location, enabling remote audits. This feature can also track employee access to dangerous or prohibited areas.
Reporting and Tracking Issues
Augmented reality, when paired with building management systems and ticketing software programs, may assist engineers in checking any equipment concerns discovered during an inspection. For example, a disparity discovered during a daily inspection or maintenance exercise might be submitted with specifics such as a picture or video and the coordinates. This will give the engineer the necessary information to locate and resolve the issue. If the problem requires quick attention, the inspector can employ an AR content guide to take the necessary actions.
Augmented site and infrastructure material may assist new and experienced employees in accessing operational information with a portable device or even headgear. Furthermore, all employees may participate in frequent visual health and safety tours. From a skillset aspect, this will assist the organization in ensuring that more individuals are prepared to handle regular operations, thereby enhancing productivity and efficiency.
The limits imposed on numerous companies under COVID-19 have, in many cases, significantly limited the number of employees permitted on-site at once. When paired with other next-generation technologies, AR has the potential to alter how many of these sectors operate. Regarding health and safety, augmented reality can assist in reducing risk while increasing adherence to regulatory standards.
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