THANK YOU FOR SUBSCRIBING
Manufacturing Technology Insights | Friday, September 02, 2022
IoT data may transform operations in linked factories from a broad array of wireless sensor systems.
Fremont, CA: The Fourth Industrial Revolution, often known as Industry 4.0, continues to advance thanks to the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT). In this industrial era, manufacturing and production get driven by integrated automation technologies and potent wireless sensors in linked smart factories.
Stay ahead of the industry with exclusive feature stories on the top companies, expert insights and the latest news delivered straight to your inbox. Subscribe today.
A TREND TOWARDS MORE AUTOMATION
For real-time, interactive data transfer, smart factory autonomous systems integrate many IIoT devices with artificial intelligence (AI), mobile edge computing (MEC) infrastructure, cameras, control systems, computer vision, augmented reality (AR), robots, and machine learning (ML). These cutting-edge automation technologies are always developing from "science fiction" to widespread commercial usage.
As the digital transformation age progresses, robotics powered by the IoT, AI, ML, and other advances in smart connected factories are becoming more prevalent. Humans live in a remarkable era of automation, interoperability, and connectivity beyond standard machine-to-machine (M2M) communication. IoT data may transform operations in linked factories from a broad array of wireless sensor systems.
CONNECTED MACHINES PROVIDE VALUED DATA INSIGHTS
In the industrial sector, uptime is crucial. When a piece of equipment malfunctions or breaks down, it can hurt customer service, product delivery, and time to market.
The "currency" of the smart, linked factory is data from the IIoT. It fundamentally affects how and when a human or machine takes charge, makes adjustments, performs maintenance, and optimizes production, producing reactive, predictive, and even revolutionary value. The key advantage of a connected factory is the actionable data from the IIoT.
ASSIST FACTORY SENSOR DATA THRIVE
People and machines must cooperate and communicate information in real-time to coordinate the best manufacturing performance. The information managers need to keep the production running smoothly and improve operations may be delivered by wireless sensors integrated or attached to nearly all assets.
Manufacturers have various options for ensuring that wireless sensor data provides them with the greatest benefit from a connected factory.
WIRELESS SENSOR PLATFORMS SUPPORT BUSINESS OPTIMIZATION AND MAINTENANCE
Factory automation should get approached carefully and methodically. No matter how automated any manufacturing is, if employees don't notice when a machine is vibrating excessively, it might not matter. On the other hand, the machine's vibrations might indicate that a failure is imminent. An automated system of machines may therefore fall whole or part due to this malfunction, resulting in unanticipated downtime. The lesson here is that automation may still fail even with one loose cog.
This can get fixed with a platform of low-power, long-range wireless sensors dispersed across a plant — a fundamental solution operating apart from but in conjunction with automation systems. In addition to many other sensors, this network of sensors may include accelerometers, vibration meters, voltage and current detection and measurement, tilt, passive infrared (PIR) movements, temperature, air quality, humidity, and many others.
More in News