Free Advanced Mechatronics Seminar for Motion Control
September 30, 2008 by admin · Leave a Comment
Danaher Motion Performance Controls (MEI), in partnership with The MathWorks and sponsored by Design World magazine, is hosting a free half-day seminar on Advanced Mechatronics for High Performance Motion Control on Wednesday, October 22, 2008, at the Boston Marriott® Newton hotel. Persons interested in attending can learn more and register online at http://www.motioneng.com/mechatronicseminarOct. Read more
Danaher Motion Introduces MechaWare 3.0
July 16, 2008 by admin · Leave a Comment
SANTA BARBARA, CALIF — Danaher Motion introduces MechaWare 3.0 — the industry’s only mechatronic toolkit that seamlessly integrates mechanical systems and control software design resulting in faster design cycles, superior motion system performance, and faster time to market.
Networks and Control
May 27, 2008 by Steve Meyer · Leave a Comment
Network technology has changed dramatically. Speeds that would have seemed unimaginable ten years ago are off-the-shelf these days. And with the speed a lot of bottlenecks have disappeared. With the possible exception of motion control applications.
Networks for motion are still a in category by themselves. Sercos has gone through major evolution to its current level, Sercos III, to continue to hold its position as the top performing motion network. Other implementations of Ethernet, EtherCat, Powerlink and others bring the high bandwidth available in Ethernet and add features to the network to insure its performance for motion control applications.
But the network technology momentum continues. There is a specification from IEEE, 1588 Protocol, which adds hard real time to Ethernet by clocking to make sure that messages get where they are supposed to be WHEN they are supposed to be there. This feature creates a level of determinism that has long been a stumbling block to more broad acceptance of Ethernet in the industrial community, possibly eliminating any serious impediment to using Ethernet for motion.
The controversy is usually around the question of “What is Real Time?” How fast is fast? Well, its usually whatever is fast enough for your specific application. But that doesn’t really help control system manufacturers when developing solutions for a broad audience. So its nice to find that the technology migration is starting to resolve some of the basic issues with respect to motion control, with something more broad than a vendor specific solution.
Even the Open DeviceNet Vendors Association seems to be exploring the potential of IEEE 1588 as their Common Industrial Protocol as a platform for bringing the legacy networks of manufacturers together as an overall solution. This is a very significant effort, one that has been difficult to achieve, that many users need help with. Operating a manufacturing or process plant is hard enough without having 3 or 4 different networks to maintain, and worse still, exchange information across different platforms.
My guess is the cost pressure of inexpensive Ethernet components will continue to push manufacturers toward finding similar solutions. But is sure would bring everyone along more quickly if the competition among control system providers were balanced with an option that everyone can find acceptable. IEEE 1588 is certainly a possibility worth considering.



