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Refurbish extruder controls faster, easier, less expensively.


* "Easy. That was the key word to describe the difference. It meant time savings and greater convenience." The difference Matt Burt is talking about is the dramatically simplified task of refurbishing a laboratory twin-screw compounding extruder with 15 zones of temperature control and data acquisition. Major savings in time and labor were afforded by a new type of integrated control architecture that cuts down on wiring and discrete electronic components.

"We refurbish our own extruder controls a lot, but not with this kind of sophisticated capabilities," says Burt, electrical operations manager See datacenter manager.  for RTP (1) (Rapid Transport Protocol) The protocol used in IBM's High Performance Routing (HPR) system.

(2) (Realtime Transport Protocol) An IP protocol that supports real time transmission of voice and video.
 Co., a specialty thermoplastics compounder. Last year, RTP expanded its R&D center and needed to add a new control panel to a 40-mm extruder that had no data-acquisition capabilities. Under a tight deadline to complete this project, RTP became one of the first users of a new style of temperature controls brought out last spring by Watlow under the name EZ-Zone ST (see Learn More box).

Snap-together controls

Unlike conventional temperature controls, for which every process loop requires six separate components that must be specified and purchased separately, EZ-Zone ST is a modular package of PID (1) (Process IDentifier) A temporary number assigned by the operating system to a process or service.

(2) (Proportional-Integral-Derivative) The most common control methodology in process control.
 temperature controller (with continuous adaptive self-tuning standard) already connected to a 40-amp solid-state relay (SSR (Scalable Sampling Rate) See AAC.

SSR - Scalable Sampling Rate
) power switch, plus a heat sink A material that absorbs heat. Typically made of aluminum, heat sinks are widely used in amplifiers and other electronic devices that build up heat. Small heat sinks are the most economical method for cooling microprocessors and other chips. , current-measuring device, limit control for over-temperature protection, and mechanical contactor con·tac·tor  
n.
An electrical relay used to control the flow of power in a circuit.
 for safety shutdown. All these components snap together, making the package very compact and eliminating about half the usual wiring terminations. And all the components communicate with each other, making diagnostics much easier.

"We had several hundred fewer wiring connections to make," says Burt. "Just one digital communications Transmitting text, voice and video in binary form. See communications.  wire per zone, instead of 15, to the PLC touchscreen display and one to the emergency stop. It usually takes one of my technicians almost a week to wire the door for an extruder control cabinet. With these controls, we don't have to wire a door, so we've saved that week. And we saved money on hardware, too, since there are fewer components to buy."

Unlike many temperature controls, EZ-Zone systems can be purchased without the optional display. Since RTP planned to use the PLC's display, it benefited from the EZ-Zone philosophy of "Buy only what you need."

NEED TO KNOW MORE?

For more information on this company and its products, visit www.ptonline.com/suppliers.

Watlow Electric Manufacturing Co., St. Louis (314) 878-4600 * www.watlow.com

LEARN MORE Online

Visit

www.ptonline.com/articles/200702rw1.html for a link to this related article:

* New Modular Design In the context of systems engineering, modular design — or "modularity in design" — is an approach aiming to subdivide a system into smaller parts (modules) that can be independently created and then used in different systems to drive multiple functionalities.  Simplifies Temperature Control & Cuts Cost Per Loop, May '06
COPYRIGHT 2007 Gardner Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Real World
Author:Naitove, Matthew H.
Publication:Plastics Technology
Date:Feb 1, 2007
Words:425
Previous Article:How efficient is your mold maintenance?(Mold Shop)
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