Updated: 8/5/09; 2:59:55 PM.
Gary Mintchell's Feed Forward
Manufacturing and Leadership.
        

Friday, June 19, 2009

Went to small-town America band concert on the Courthouse square tonight. Slapped an ant crawling on my leg. Glad there are no PETA people in Shelby County, Ohio (I think).

Leo Tolstoy was a noted pacifist in late 19th century Russia (you know, War and Peace, and so on). It was said that once on a summer evening when he was talking with a number of his "disciples," he absent-mindedly swatted a mosquito that landed on his arm. His disciples were aghast. He told them to get their priorities straight.

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What the recent Honeywell User Group conference held in Phoenix June 14-18 lacked in overall attendance, it made up for in energy and enthusiasm. With company travel restrictions abounding, many companies just sent key decision makers rather than an entire team. Discussions were intense and attendees seriously picked sessions most applicable to their work.

Although "Return on Imagination" was the conference theme, the themes most featured by company speakers included "One Honeywell," energy and "One Wireless." One Honeywell refers to efforts to bring various businesses of Honeywell into technology collaboration where it makes sense in the market. For example, in energy markets, Honeywell has several businesses and technologies that can be integrated for a new set of products. Similarly in safety and security.

I had a few minutes with new HPS President Norm Gilsdorf and was able to ask him what he was trying to get across to the business during his tenure. He reiterated the overall themes and then mentioned "prioritize, focus, execution and delivery." He wants everyone in the company on the same page focused on success.

Wireless as a "game changer" was brought up several times. I asked Vice President of Strategy and Marketing Harsh Chitale what was so game changing about it. He stressed three areas. Asset management (especially of instruments), energy management and worker productivity. With the first two, the ability to more easily and cheaply integrate more sensors into a system in order to provide more information to the system and to personnel will greatly enhance production. In addition, concurrent advances in software that can utilize the information are also crucial. Worker productivity refers to mobile computing devices that allow operators to break the chains of the control room visiting the plant when necessary but still taking the control room with them, so to speak.

Many new products were announced at HUG. Chief among them include:

Energy Management Solutions is a customizable portfolio of new and existing hardware, software and services to help improve energy efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

The portfolio features the new Honeywell Energy Dashboard, which gathers information from various instruments and systems and tracks their energy consumption against dynamic energy targets. Capturing and analyzing this data allows users to understand key energy indicators and how they affect overall energy consumption. The Energy Dashboard, expected to be commercially available in the fourth quarter 2009, enables users to establish specific goals for reducing energy consumption, costs and the associated GHG emissions, as well as to measure actual performance against those goals.

Once energy saving potential has been identified, the Energy Management Solutions portfolio provides customizable hardware, software and services to improve performance, including enhancements to measurement and monitoring, control and optimization, heat recovery, feedstock optimization, advanced process technology, utilities optimization and services to sustain and even improve results over time. For refining and petrochemical industries, HPS and UOP solutions can reduce energy consumption by up to 25 percent and the associated GHG emissions by up to 320 metric kilotons per year. For other process manufacturing industries like pulp and paper, Energy Management Solutions can help reduce energy consumption by up to 20 percent and associated GHG emissions by up to 44 metric kilotons per year.

Energy Management Solutions can be implemented in stages starting with smaller-scale, quick return-on-investment projects, and moving to more comprehensive, higher-value projects. Honeywell has expertise in process technology,  process control and energy efficiency along with methodologies, best practices and work processes to assure that the value from energy efficiency projects is achieved and maintained.

The latest addition to Honeywell's OneWireless industrial wireless portfolio is the XYR 6000 Valve Position Sensor. Based on the Honeywell Micro Switch CX series hazardous location analog sensor, the new XYR 6000 Valve Position Sensor monitors the position of the valve when used in OneWireless systems, sending the signal from remote or potentially dangerous areas of the plant. The sensor carries all the appropriate hazardous location certifications.

In addition to eliminating manual monitoring, the sensor's accuracy improves safety by identifying linear or rotary valve positions, minimizing the risk of unwanted fluid release or unplanned product contamination. When used for safety shower notification, the sensor can serve as an  emergency response trigger. The XYR 6000 Valve Position Sensor also simplifies maintenance by electronically tagging each valve in the system, identifying valves that have degraded or been damaged. This reduces the need for field technicians to manually inspect valves for maintenance.

Another wireless product, OneWireless R120, features a redundant wireless system gateway (WSG), a critical prerequisite for wireless process control. The new WSG manages data between wireless field instrumentation and the plantâo[dot accent]s process control network (PCN). It serves as a backup gateway to ensure that data is always delivered even if the main gateway malfunctions or fails. Paired with existing OneWireless redundancy features, this approach creates the first industrial wireless system with complete hardware and radio-frequency redundancy from the field instrument to the PCN connection. Additionally, unique failure recovery features help prevent data loss and the network can recover in less than two seconds from any field hardware failure.

OneWireless can accommodate multiple communication protocols and thousands of field devices on a single network to help improve overall plant safety, reliability and efficiency. Each gateway can support up to 100 transmitters, and a single OneWireless server can support up to 40 gateways.

New OneWireless products now ship with OneWireless R120 software or firmware.  Any existing OneWireless devices installed at user sites can be easily upgraded by an over the air software update to support the new functionality while supporting current investments.

Honeywell also released a touchscreen operator interface for theHC900 Control Systems. The Honeywell 900 Control Station is a panel-mounted interface available for all new HC900 installations. It also can be retrofitted for existing, compatible systems.

The new operator interface, featuring a 10.4-inch color display touchscreen, introduces enhanced graphic features designed to reduce set-up time and simplify operation while improving security and versatility in the field.  Preformatted displays, custom graphic tools, plus more than 4,000 pre-built process graphic objects make it easy for system designers to create color graphic touchscreen displays that schematically symbolize the layout and functions of the process, facilitating operator acceptance. The interface also helps simplify process changeovers by allowing operators to select from previously stored recipe variables, setpoint programs, setpoint schedules and sequences.

5:23:53 PM    comment []

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