Drives & Controls Magazine July/Aug 2024

0333 090 7822 27 www.drivesncontrols.com July/August 2024 TECHNOLOGY n ABB ROBOTICS has announced an intelligent robotics automation platform that, it says, is faster, more precise and more sustainable. The OmniCore platform – the result of more than $170m of investment in next-generation robotics – is a step change to a modular, futureproof control architecture that will integrate AI, sensors, cloud and edge computing systems to create advanced and autonomous robotic applications. The platform will allow robots to operate up to 25% faster and to consume up to 20% less energy than the previous-generation IRC5 controller, which will be phased out in June 2026. The platform promises “class-leading” motion performance, delivering robot path accuracies better than 0.6mm, with multiple robots running at speeds of up to 1,600mm per second. This will open up new automation opportunities in precision areas such as arc welding, gluing and laser cutting, according to ABB. “The OmniCore diˆerence is its ability to manage motion, sensors and application equipment in a single holistic uniŠed system,” explains ABB Robotics’president, Marc Segura. “OmniCore opens the door to the entire ABB Robotics portfolio of hardware and software, in any combination under a single control platform, oˆering endless possibilities and more avenues for value creation. “For example, OmniCore enables automotive manufacturers to increase production speed, oˆering tremendous competitive advantage, increasing presstending production from 12 to 15 strokes per minute, to produce 900 parts per hour. We believe that OmniCore oˆers the potential for many more industry breakthroughs, empowering our customers across all sectors to meet the challenges that lie ahead.” OmniCore is built on a scalable, modular architecture that oˆers a wide array of functions to create almost any application, making it suitable for businesses using automation in existing and new segments, such as biotechnology and construction. With more than 1,000 hardware and software features, it allows users to design, operate, maintain and optimise operations easily. This is enabled by software functions such as ABB's Absolute Accuracy and PickMaster Twin, as well as hardware options from external axes and vision systems, to Šeldbuses. “For our customers, automation is a strategic requirement as they seek greater –exibility, simplicity and e—ciency in response to the global megatrends of labour shortages, uncertainty and the need to operate more sustainably,”says Sami Atiya, president of ABB’s Robotics & Discrete Automation business. “Through our development of advanced mechatronics, AI and vision systems, our robots are more accessible, more capable, more –exible and more mobile than ever. But increasingly they must also work seamlessly together, with us and each other, to take on more tasks in more places. This is why we are launching OmniCore – a new milestone in our 50-year history in robotics. He describes the platform as “a unique, single control architecture – one platform, and one language that integrates our complete range of leading hardware and software.” https://new.abb.com/products/robotics $170m investment delivers next-gen robot platform SIEMENS AND BASF have announced the Šrst electrical safety product to contain plastic components derived from recycled sources, such as agricultural waste, instead of relying on fossil-based raw materials. Siemens’Sirius 3RV2 motor starter circuit breakers are now being produced using materials developed by BASF in which traditional fossil feedstocks have been replaced by renewables-derived biomethane. Siemens estimates that the change will cut its carbon dioxide equivalent emissions by around 270 tonnes a year. As well as most of the housing and functional parts of the breaker being made from biomass-based plastics, the device also uses less power than its predecessor. The new materials are said to oˆer the same quality and performance as traditional plastics. First biowaste-based breaker will cut emissions by 270t ABB says that its new OmniCore robot control platform will result in faster, more precise and more autonomous automation

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