You Don't Want To See How It's Made
You Don't Want To See How It's Made
Perhaps the greatest value to industry of the International Society of Automation (ISA) is its standards-setting activity. Its procedures are so rigorous that its standards are recognized by governmental agencies such as the American National Standards Institute (ANSI)—which is why you see the nomenclature “ANSI/ISA standard XXX.” So, ISA authorized the development of a committee to develop standards governing these wireless technologies for the process industries. Unfortunately, as sometimes (usually?) happens in standards committees, competing technologies championed by different industry-leading suppliers were proposed and battle lines were drawn.
A second standard
In the meantime, another group—the Hart Communication Foundation, owner of the ubiquitous Hart protocol used to transmit digital information of process instruments that also still use analog signals—went to work on a wireless standard. HCF also has a rigorous process that can result in recognition of its standards by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC).
The WirelessHart standard was issued first, and it was immediately embraced by some process systems suppliers as well as a large number of instrument suppliers. Then the ISA 100.11 subcommittee developed a recommended standard that has just passed through the remaining channels of the ISA process to be adopted by ISA and forwarded to ANSI for adoption (and probably IEC after that). This standard is different from the WirelessHart standard and each is championed by a different set of major systems suppliers.
It’s strange in that the final announcement of ISA100.11a was so terse that it seemed like an anti-climax. The net result for users is that there now exist standards to which suppliers can build products. The products should have the usual degree of interoperability, not to mention technical stability. This should give engineers the confidence to adopt wireless sensor networks and start reaping benefits of increased information at reduced cost of installation. So, even though there are now two standards, that’s probably not a bad thing for users. One would have been better, but now the battle can move to the market—where it counts.
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