OEM Sees Predictive Maintenance As Key to Equipment Utilization
Wittmann Battenfeld's new Condition Monitoring System debuted at K 2016.
Last month, at K 2016 in Dusseldorf, Wittmann Battenfeld of Austria (U.S. office in Torrington, Conn.) joined a slowly building wave of attention by equipment OEMs to the concept of predictive maintenance as an essential strategy for obtaining maximum machine efficiency and uptime (see our blog on the topic). Wittmann Battenfeld also sees its new Condition Monitoring System (CMS) as an element of the networked Smart Factory, or Industry 4.0.
CMS is implemented via the company’s new B8 control system, the new standard for all its machines. With the help of CMS, important machine data are measured by sensors, processed by special software, and subsequently analyzed by technical experts at the plant and/or at Wittmann Battenfeld, if the customer wishes. CMS thus combines technology with human diagnostic competence. The data to be analyzed are vibrations, torques, temperatures, air humidity, oil quality, water flow, screw function, and all data from the control cabinet. Wittmann compares it to Formula 1 racing, where the vehicle data are analyzed on every circuit of the track in order to keep the car operating at optimum performance and to call it in for maintenance before a breakdown is imminent. According to Wittmann, the key is to “know what to listen for, how to interpret it, and when to put this knowledge to use.”
Among the factors to be sensed and analyzed are oil quality (particle count), temperature, level, and moisture content; water quality, flow, and temperature; vibration in the clamp and injection unit; torque measurements (one way to detect a bad screw-tip assembly); injection stroke; water flow and temperature; compressed-air flow and pressure; electrical function of the B7 controller and power supply; smoke alarm in the control cabinet; and ambient humidity. Both alarm levels and “prewarning” levels can be set—and the system can automatically send alert emails to maintenance technicians.
Related Content
-
For This Molder, Less Paper + More Data = Higher Productivity
At Tessy Plastics, going paperless means more than idle printers and fewer orders for three-ring binders.
-
Portable, Handheld CMM Enables Simplified Dimensional Measurement, 3D Scanning of Large Parts
Eastec 2025: Keyence’s WM-6000 provides full CMM and CAD capabilities, enabling 3D/GD&T measurements, contour profile checks, CAD comparison and reverse-engineering.
-
Five Strategies for Cutting Reshoring/ Nearshoring Costs via Data Automation
Leveraging real-time data via tools like ERP and MES is one form of automation plastics processors can apply to capitalize on reshoring and nearshoring trends.