Safety that sees the light February 1st 2008 Handling and controlling the passage of large
bulk items that need to pass through a safety
light barrier into another area without causing
total disruption of the work flow can be a challenge,
explains Barry Goodwin of Leuze electronic
There are occasions when the momentary inhibition (or
muting) of safety light curtains or multi-beam systems,
in a controlled manner, allows for improved operational
efficiency but at the same time affords staff maximum
protection from the hazards of machinery
This requirement can be applied to industrial production
lines as well as warehousing environments, both pose the
same problem, handling and controlling the passage of
large bulk items that need to pass through a safety light
barrier into another area without causing total disruption
of the work flow.
It is not difficult to imagine a long vehicle production
line with highly automated precision welding robots
ready to fuse the next body component as it progresses
through a number of stages until a complete body shell
emerges. Providing protection the entire length of the
production track is relatively easy – perhaps fixed
guarding areas with emergency access doors using
interlock switches and safety relays. The main areas for
concern are the entry and exit points, a position where
the floor pan must enter or the car body emerge from
within the 'wire cage'. There has to be a gap sufficiently
large for the car body. At the instance of exit the car
body blocks the opening, at other times the opening
enables free access to people.
To meet safety requirements, swing doors equipped
with safety hinge switches or limit switches could be
positioned across the exit point, opening automatically
as the car body approaches; this would add a
considerable time delay and cost to the operation as well
as possibly creating a momentary loss of safety during
the opening sequence. Placing standard safety multibeam
systems or curtains across the exit point is a
possible solution but without some form of inhibition
control, every time a car body was to exit, it would break
the beam and stop the line.
The most practical solution is the application of safety
light curtains or multi-beam systems with MUTING
CONTROL, here sensors are used to provide a controlled
'mute' of the operation of the safety light guard when
the car body approaches the exit point, and re-initiates
its safety functions immediately it has moved clear of the
light guard. [fig 1]
Under conditions when the exit point is clear, the
safety light guard provides an invisible barrier which, if
broken will signal an alert and close down all hazardous
movement. As a car body moves towards the exit zone
point it activates sensors. The electrical output from the
sensors is used to send an inhibit signal to the light
guard outputs thus preventing a stop condition. Once the
car body is clear of the sensors, the safety light guard
returns to its normal protection field duties.
A safe working environment is maintained throughout
this muting operation since the car body physically
blocks a person's access to the robot cell.
In mechanical handling applications, fork lift trucks
are often used to remove or place palletised loads onto
conveying systems or other in-feeds to high-speed
automated machines. As in the previous example, fixed
guards may be in place either side of the conveyor-run,
the problem area is the load/unload point where clear
access is needed.
The natural choice for protection at the man-machine
interface are safety light guards, in this instance the
operation of the light guard is inhibited by initiation of
inductive loops in the floor, linked to a muting control
[fig 2]. As the fork truck arrives at the drop-off or pickup
points its mass is detected by the inductive loops,
these mute the operation of the safety light guard
allowing the infeed/discharge of pallets. During removal
or placement of the palletised load, the access point
onto the conveyor is blocked thus preventing human
access. Any person within the inductive field will not be
detected by the inductive loops and will thus not initiate
a mute condition but by breaking the safety beam they
trip the system to safe mode.
The application of muting controls ensures the highest
level of safety without hindering productivity. It is this
ability to distinguish between products and persons that
not only satisfys the safety requirements as laid down in
the relevant European Standards, but helps the
production manager optimise
throughput. More articles from Leuze Mayser Electronic Limited: |