horsefeather
Aerospace
- Dec 26, 2007
- 50
Well, I suppose I might as well step in it and display my ignorance.
I've been involved in flight simulators, spacecraft and automatic test equipment for 20+ years. The relevance here is real time control and monitoring of 1000+ sensors and effectors.
My recent endeavor is telemetering a hydraulic system with approx 20 sensor/effectors. The vendors keep trying to sell me PLCs and data loggers that appear to have been designed in 1980. Operator displays and I/O apparently require an additional laptop.
It seems to me that there should be a system that combines the Signal Conditioning Equipment (SCE) and the HMI (Human-Machine Interface) much like we do in simulators. I'm looking at the National Instruments product line because it provides graphical programming, simulation capabilities and an architecture that I am comfortable with.
The Allen Bradley and GE Fanuc lines I've seen seem to be bound by equipment designed when memory and processors were expensive.
What am I missing here?
I've been involved in flight simulators, spacecraft and automatic test equipment for 20+ years. The relevance here is real time control and monitoring of 1000+ sensors and effectors.
My recent endeavor is telemetering a hydraulic system with approx 20 sensor/effectors. The vendors keep trying to sell me PLCs and data loggers that appear to have been designed in 1980. Operator displays and I/O apparently require an additional laptop.
It seems to me that there should be a system that combines the Signal Conditioning Equipment (SCE) and the HMI (Human-Machine Interface) much like we do in simulators. I'm looking at the National Instruments product line because it provides graphical programming, simulation capabilities and an architecture that I am comfortable with.
The Allen Bradley and GE Fanuc lines I've seen seem to be bound by equipment designed when memory and processors were expensive.
What am I missing here?