A Better View of the Plant
A Better View of the Plant
New HMI tools are taking data from programmable logic controllers (PLCs) and displaying it throughout the enterprise via Web browsers. Likewise, HMI systems are sending intelligible information from the enterprise down to the shop floor. New systems from vendors such as Wonderware, Lake Forest, Calif., with its InTouch 10.0 HMI System Platform 3.0 software, and Milwaukee-based Rockwell Automation Inc., with its FactoryTalk View Tools, are taking obscure information and displaying it in a comprehensible form. Plant operators, maintenance personnel and executives can view plant operations on thin client monitors or personal digital assistants (PDAs). Tools such as .Net from Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft Corp. are often the conduit for the data flow. And the new Microsoft Vista operating system offers enhanced graphics as well as security.
Share data
Plants are implementing these new HMI tools in order to share real-time data effectively. The business office gets to know what the plant is producing. Plant operators get to see PLC data on the run, from mobile PDAs. Maintenance people get alerts from Web browsers that can access the data from anywhere. Manufacturers and process plants get to share information across multiple facilities. And all of these different parties get to see one version of the plant truth over thin clients that don’t need patches and updates.
Sending data across the Web in an HMI format that is easy to understand allows operators to view a number of machines from a single location. “In the past, maintenance engineers were dedicated to operating a single machine,” says Mark Hobbs, product manager for FactoryTalk, at Rockwell Automation. “Now those same operators are responsible for many machines. They’re using many devices and they’re not always in the same location.”
The move to emerging HMI technology also gets the HMI off the factory floor and gives it a new purpose—sharing information across the enterprise, instead of pointing it to the operator alone. “At one time, HMI was focused on the factory floor. It was temperature, pressure and level flows,” says Craig Resnick, research director, ARC Advisory Group Inc., in Dedham, Mass. “Now the information is moving up in the enterprise and tons of data is being displayed in a way that helps the organization.” This data can include metrics, scrap rates, production rates, even machine condition.
While data displayed on HMIs is moving from the factory floor to the enterprise, information is also going the other direction, from the enterprise down to the factory on HMI systems. “One of the things we’re seeing is that shop-floor applications are moving from the plant to the enterprise, and HMI has become the visualization tool for the entire production space,” says Phil Couling, program manager for supervisory HMI at Wonderware. As well as using HMI to display plant data to the enterprise, the shop-floor managers are also viewing enterprise information through the HMI. The data from the enterprise can bring plant operators into the enterprise decision process. “The operator is more ...
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