Debating the future of packaging machine control

PC vs PLC -- Six packaging machinery builders debate the pros and cons of controlling packaging machinery with either computers or programmable logic controllers.

PLCs (top) have been the mainstay of packaging machine control for years, but use of PC controllers (above) has been rising. Bot
PLCs (top) have been the mainstay of packaging machine control for years, but use of PC controllers (above) has been rising. Bot

Packaging machines are undergoing two technological shifts. First, the machines are becoming information appliances, plugging into plant or corporate networks to automatically upload packaging line data and automatically download changeover settings. Second, they are being built with a new level of sophisticated motion controls that help achieve the high speed, accuracy and flexibility demanded by today's manufacturers. Less certain is which type of controller is best equipped to carry the technology into the coming century. Will it be the personal computer (PC) or the programmable logic controller (PLC)?

To answer this question, Packaging World singled out a handful of engineering managers representing six packaging machinery builders. Normally, PW restricts its coverage of packaging technology to end-users of such technology. But for machine control, many end-users have no preference, meaning it often is the machinery builders that drive the technology.

"The vast majority of our customers don't care what we're using to control our machine," says Pat Baird, technology manager with Spee-Dee Packaging Machinery (Sturtevant, WI), a manufacturer of auger fillers. "The guy on the line wants to turn on the machine and get it to run. He doesn't care how it runs, or why it runs, he just needs it to run."

Other OEMs confirm Baird's experience. "About 40 percent of our customers specify a controller," says Ed Young, project manager at Ilapak (Newton, PA), which manufactures horizontal overwrappers and vertical form/fill/seal equipment that are typically PC-controlled.

Large companies tend to specify a controller, typically standardizing on a particular manufacturer of PLCs. The response from Rick Stachel, electrical engineering manager at R.A. Jones (Cincinnati, OH), summarizes such customers' thinking: "We have customers who have an interest in PCs, but nobody's really committed," he says.

It's clear that packaging machinery builders will play a major role in determining how pervasive PC controllers become in packaging. The choices they make will have a far-ranging impact on packaging machinery that's used by the smallest companies to the largest.

Framing the debate

Proponents of PC controllers say the devices offer many benefits:

* the ability to combine logic, human-machine interface (HMI) and motion control into one box, simplifying set-up and programming

* lower hardware/software costs

* more processing power

* the ability to easily handle functions such as graphics, network and data acquisition.

Proponents of PLCs often dispute the above assertions. Further, they argue that PLCs offer:

* proven reliability

* industrial-hardened packaging that resists shock, vibration, etc.

* a much larger base of people trained to troubleshoot ladder logic, whether at the end-user, machinery builder or controls supplier level.

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