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Got Control? Part 2

May 8, 2008 by Steve Meyer · 2 Comments 

So when is a PC (personal computer) a PAC (programmable automation controller) or a PLC (programmable logic controller)? They are all the same. They all have microprocessors. They are all programmable. They are all available with hardware that is rated for industrial environments, shock, vibration, temperature extremes and various other requirements. They are all connected to real world devices such as sensors, switches, etc. They all execute control based on a programmed binary model of a real world manufacturing process.

They have differing abilities in terms of data storage and throughput. In previous generations of PLC and CNC, the memory for those systems was very expensive and early memories were hand wound wire and discrete magnet memory. With the advent of mass manufactured memory for the PC, the industrial platforms have had to engineer hardware with different components to take advantage of competitive costs. A hard disk drive module was available for some PLC systems where extensive process information was needed.

In today’s market one vendor offers an industrial computer platform that replaces the PLC, the HMI (human to machine interface) and uses a touch screen interface, using the PC platform to reduce control system costs in many applications by doing several functions with the same hardware. Sounds like a Tablet PC engineered for the plant floor. Nothing unreasonable about that. Read more


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