Jun 1, 2007 By:
Lorens Todsen, Danfoss Industrial Controls, Max Robinson, Danfoss Industrial Controls
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Choosing the right pressure transmitter for your application involves more than specifying the pressure range. Don't forget to consider the technologies available, the environmental stresses and strains that will be involved, and the lifetime cost.

Jun 1, 2007 By:
Lorens Todsen, Danfoss Industrial Controls, Max Robinson, Danfoss Industrial Controls
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Choosing the right pressure transmitter for your application involves more than specifying the pressure range. Don't forget to consider the technologies available, the environmental stresses and strains that will be involved, and the lifetime cost.

May 1, 2007 By:
Frank Schneider, Raytek Corp.
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The latest developments in IR sensors not only help you optimize your manufacturing processes and business operations but also enable you to meet industry standards for final product quality and reliability.

Dec 20, 2006 By:
Melanie Martella
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App Snaps

Dec 1, 2006 By:
Barbara G. Goode
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UGS Corp. says its Tecnomatix Production Management portfolio, a family of manufacturing shop-floor applications, is the first software to integrate production management with overall product lifecycle management (PLM) process.

If the sensor manufacturers' products already have the software "hooks" that allow the sensor data to be accessed by the SOA, the implementation has a quicker ROI.

Dec 1, 2006 By:
Edwin Diaz

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Perhaps Camera Link's biggest advantage is blazing speed—up to 3.6 Gbps. Another is deterministic communication back to the camera electronics that allows on-the-fly control of camera functions such as frame rate, zoom, etc.

Dec 1, 2006 By:
Bill Silver

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During an automated manufacturing process, the product typically moves along a production line at either constant or variable speeds. The first task of optoelectronic inspection is to discard that motion. For example, machine vision systems use triggers and shutters and photoelectric sensors use gates to freeze the object at a particular point in time so that it can be analyzed.

Nov 1, 2006 By:
Josef Janisch
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Linear Hall sensors generate a DC output voltage proportional to the strength of an applied magnetic field and can be used for high-resolution angle sensors when placed near a diametrically magnetized magnet. The rotating magnet generates a sinusoidal waveform, one full wave per revolution. This type of setup can be used only for a limited angular range because the output voltage (in relation to the rotation angle) is ambiguous at angles >90? in both directions from the zero crossing point.
