Sometimes it's the little things. .You've got a 100,000-part job on press. You're halfway through the run and still on schedule. Suddenly the phone rings: The molding-room supervisor has bad news. You have just one more hour's worth of material in the silo. It will take days to get another bulk delivery from your regular supplier, meaning you will miss your delivery date. Or you could get an emergency shipment of bagged resin resin, any of a class of amorphous solids or semisolids. Resins are found in nature and are chiefly of vegetable origin. They are typically light yellow to dark brown in color; tasteless; odorless or faintly aromatic; translucent or transparent; brittle, fracturing from a local distributor, but the price will eat up your profits. If any of this sounds familiar, then our cover story this month is right up your alley. It gives you the lowdown low·down n. Slang The whole truth: gave us the lowdown on what happened at the party. lowdown low (inf) n he gave me the lowdown on it → on level sensors--small devices costing as little as a couple of hundred dollars, which can save you big headaches. Put one on top of a silo or bulk tank, and you'll never be caught short again. "But I have one of those," you may say. If you're like most processors, you may even have two--one at the top of the silo to signal when it's full, and one at the bottom to warn when it's empty. But there's nothing in between to tell you how close you are to running out. Senior Editor Lilli Sherman's feature explains how a continuous level sensor The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject matter. Please help [ improve the introduction] to meet Wikipedia's layout standards. You can discuss the issue on the talk page. can make up for that shortcoming short·com·ing n. A deficiency; a flaw. shortcoming Noun a fault or weakness Noun 1. of common point level sensors. She also reports on recent improvements that overcome limitations of earlier sensors
This story has been a long time coming. I cannot remember another comprehensive article on the subject appearing in a plastics magazine in the last 30 years. Almost a decade ago, we looked into this topic and were waved off by suppliers of material-handling systems. They said level sensors were a minor detail that didn't much interest plastics customers and were hardly worth the ink. Nowadays, however, inventory management is recognized as a key element of cost control and customer satisfaction. And level sensors are looming looming: see mirage. large. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion