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Introduction
In
the past, control equipment for dosing systems
employing belt weighers was usually carried out with
microprocessor circuits developed by each manufacturer
for
the exclusive control and adjustment of their
own
dosing systems.
Although application processes always demand a
high
level of reliability and precision, this system did
not
change because the market did not offer open systems
or
components for general use, which could be
programmed to be able to control weighing systems
with
the correct level of reliability.
This
meant that customers found themselves with
equipment that was difficult to access and handle and
which
required the permanent presence of highly
qualified technical personnel to operate and maintain
it.
If not, it was necessary to depend on the services of
the
supplier, with all the attendant costs and waiting
times.
Through direct contact with its customers,
Vidmar
learnt what its customers wanted, which was not black
boxes
to control equipment that they could not access
directly to resolve any problem and the need to keep
large
quantities of spares for each item of equipment. |
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Greater possibilities
However, once PLCs appeared on the market, the possibilities
available for controlling any process offered
the
company a wide range of applications.
Vidmar understood this and focused its efforts on
developing all its weighing and dosing control systems,
both
continuous and static, with standard PLCs.
However, it did not concentrate on a specific make.
Instead it concentrated on developing powerful soft-ware
that
could offer all the basic services of any commercial
control equipment and was also sufficiently
flexible to adapt to the particular needs of each customer.
It
also needed to be easily adapted to the programming
languages of each PLC manufacturer.
Today, the company claims to offer even more functions
than
any commercial equipment available on the
market. This is because the PLC is an open system
therefore any expansion and/or customisation with
specific functions for each installation can be made
while
at the same time remaining an open system that
is
easy to handle and maintain by the technical personnel.
With
specific reference to the cement plant and
depending on the make of PLC normally used by the
customer, the company chooses the CPU model best
suited to the plant’s needs and capacity.
Normally, a
PLC
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for
each
section
is
used, i.e. cement mill, crude mill
and
supply of crude to the kiln. The capacity of the PLC
is
chosen according to the number of machines and/or
dosing weighers to be controlled.
The
company consider it very important to choose a
PLC
that has a communications port in a standardised
network for the entire plant, so that it becomes a
remote terminal of the general control PLC for the section
or
for the central monitoring and control system
of
the plant. This means that the entire cable interconnection
between the two systems is no longer needed
and
has the additional benefit that large volumes of
information can be easily interchanged.
This
is very
useful for analysing problems and processing statistics
as
well as achieving easy and extensive monitoring of
the
equipment from the control room.
As
with any size of PLC, the basic needs to be taken
into
account are as follows.
Weight reading
High
resolution analogue inputs. At the moment, the
majority of PLCs have analogue inputs of between 14
and
16 bits (internal resolution of 16 368 to 65 472).
This
ensures a highly precise weight reading, although
the
precision normally guaranteed for continuous
weighing systems can be achieved with 12 bit inputs
(resolution 4092). The 4 to 20 mA signal is obtained by
means
of a standard amplifier that supplies the weighing
cell
with +10 Vdc, reads the signal of this cell in mV
and
converts it into a universal 4 to 20 mA signal.
Although Vidmar has is own weight amplifier (MPA-50),
any
amplifier available on the market can also be
used
for this function.
Speed
reading
The speed information is
transmitted by an encoder
(digital) which, in the case of the company’s weighers,
is
mounted directly on the rear section of the motor.
For
speed reading, a rapid reading module is used and
is
specifically designed for this purpose. Each PLC manufacturer
has
this equipment as standard. Although
the
majority of the rapid reading modules available on
the
market can read signals at frequencies up to 100
Khz,
in the company’s case it manages inputs for frequencies
of
between 5 and 10 Khz.
Control signal
Analogue outputs:
normally, the resolution of the
majority of analogue output modules on the market is
12
bits, which is quite sufficient for the precise control
of a
dosing weigher. Although speed controllers can be
used
in some cases, which can communicate with the
control PLC via field buses or communication net-works
a 4
to 20 mA analogue signal is normally
employed. This means that any speed controller on the
market can also be used. The analogue output is con-trolled
logically via a PID inside the PLC.
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In
the last instance, the motor speed is determined
by a
controller, usually of a frequency reached by the 4
to 20
mA analogue signal controlled from the PLC. This
controller is commonly available on the market and is
chosen by the customer.
Confirmation signals
Digital inputs:
these are normally 24 Vdc, but can
be
changed according to the usual service voltages
at
each plant and the number of inputs per module
required. The most common input signals of a simple
dosing weigher
are movement of the belt,
speed
control, confirmation of operation, control
faults and external interlocks.
Command signals:
like confirmation signals, these
are
normally 24 Vdc, but can be changed according
to
the usual service voltages at each plant and the
number of inputs per module required. Normally,
the
digital outputs are used for the operating commands
for
each item of electrical equipment included
in
the system. Intermediate relays are
responsible for the connection of the digital output
to
the power components.
Local control system:
although the majority of the
data
calculated on the PLC can be displayed on
Scada
monitors via the communications network
installed at the plant, it is very important to have a
local
display, setting and control system to make
adjustments, calibrations and corrections to programme
times
and to operate the weigher(s) in the
local
mode. To achieve this, touch panels are used
that
provide a man/machine exchange of information
to
make a simple adjustment to one or more
dosing systems that make up the section. This
screen normally communicates with the PLC
through the same programming port or via an
additional module, an RS-232/RS-422/RS-485 or
other
type of interface specific to each manufacturer.
Figure 1 shows a control circuit for various dosing
weighers.
Conclusion
Due to this philosophy of
offering open systems based
on
equipment and spares that are readily available on
the
market, and with a general standardisation of
parts
(because the same input/output, digital/analogue
modules used for adjusting and controlling the dosing
weighers can also be used for other equipment at the
plant), Vidmar has succeeded in establishing itself not
only
in Spain, but also in other countries such as
Mexico, Venezuela, Colombia, Morocco, Philippines,
Vietnam, Jordan, Indonesia and Honduras. Its main
national and international customers are the world's
leading cement groups, such as Lafarge, Cemex,
Italcementi, Cimpor and Holcim.
Vidmar is a Spanish company and was founded in
Barcelona in 1985. Its core competence is the design,
manufacturer, supply and servicing of continuous and
static industrial dosing and weight systems using its
own technology.
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