Wednesday, May 23, 2012 :: An Applied Technology Publication
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Successful CMMS Implementation For A Major Healthcare Facility Could the same prescription that this Wisconsin-based operation used to optimize work flow, compliance and productivity help improve the well-being of your maintenance organization’s activities? Read the Full Story
Taming Those Misbehaving Motors It takes a lot to stump most maintenance pros. The points in this article, though, may help you become an even better troubleshooter. Read the Full Story
The Reliability Files This month's edition of The Reliability Files includes information from Grainger. Read the Full Story
Specify Backup Power That Fits Ensuring that your selected backup-power system can meet both current and future needs depends on a number of factors. Read the Full Story
Understanding Hidden Failures in RCM Analyses This month's 25th Anniversary Article was originally written for MT in 2003. Read the Full Story

Automation Insider: Maintenance & Reliability Meet Automation

0112-automationWelcome to this new bi-monthly column focusing on how automation impacts maintenance and reliability. I’ve been Editor-in-Chief of Automation World magazine since it started in 2003. Prior to that, I had a career in manufacturing. I’ve known the team at Maintenance Technology for many years and have spoken twice at MARTS. This is a welcome opportunity to share my knowledge and passion for automation with another set of readers. 

Digital networks have had an almost accidental benefit for maintenance. Initially touting reduced wiring as the advantage, almost immediately the benefits of built-in diagnostics proved to be far greater than any wiring reduction.

Foundation Fieldbus, with its ability to interface with most asset-management applications, is slowly gaining traction in the process industries. Over the past year, several enormous new plants in Asia have specified this network. Many of us have had two questions regarding the direction of the Foundation Fieldbus specification. The first is how the network organization will use its High Speed Ethernet (HSE) protocol. The second concerns how the various wireless technologies will play in the network.

Those questions found answers on December 1, 2011, in Baytown, TX, at a Fieldbus Foundation Media Day. The overall technology announced has been dubbed “Remote Operations Management” (ROM). The essential components of the platform will, among other things, provide a more powerful SCADA experience as well as further empower the mobile worker. They will have the ability to handle greater point-count Remote I/O and be able to incorporate various wireless standards, including ISA 100.11a of the International Society of Automation and WirelessHart of the Hart Communication Foundation.

ROM topology includes a ROM device that is essentially a gateway for  communicating to existing Foundation Fieldbus H1 networks, as well as wired Hart and the two existing wireless sensor networks from ISA and Hart Communication Foundation. HSE will enable both the new Remote I/O and the backhaul to the DCS or asset-management application.

Gary Mintchell, co-founder and Editor-in-Chief of Automation World magazine, can be reached at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

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