bmsg
Electrical
- Oct 27, 2003
- 45
We regularly have heated debates about whether to have a DCS or a PLC for the instrumentation portion of our projects.
Typically, I find that what a DCS can do, a PLC can also do. Only, a DCS is generally costlier than a PLC, for the same I/Os.
In the end, the choice boils down to the whims of someone ("We'll have a PLC, because I say so" or "For instrumentation, we'll have a DCS, because we say so"].
Will someone please let me know the following:
1. The technical difference between an DCS and a PLC TODAY (i.e., not historically).
2. Niche applications for a DCS and a PLC TODAY.
3. In the end, is the DCS on its way out, having been vanquished by the PLC?
[I am an instrumentation engineer and work for steel plant projects. In any 'shop' in a steel plant, there is an Electrical Department and an Instrumentation Department in the plant - with more or less water-tight responsibilities. I have a enough of a grounding in PLC & DCS and their evolution path - so don't write about the history of these things - only about where either of them stand today.
Typically, I find that what a DCS can do, a PLC can also do. Only, a DCS is generally costlier than a PLC, for the same I/Os.
In the end, the choice boils down to the whims of someone ("We'll have a PLC, because I say so" or "For instrumentation, we'll have a DCS, because we say so"].
Will someone please let me know the following:
1. The technical difference between an DCS and a PLC TODAY (i.e., not historically).
2. Niche applications for a DCS and a PLC TODAY.
3. In the end, is the DCS on its way out, having been vanquished by the PLC?
[I am an instrumentation engineer and work for steel plant projects. In any 'shop' in a steel plant, there is an Electrical Department and an Instrumentation Department in the plant - with more or less water-tight responsibilities. I have a enough of a grounding in PLC & DCS and their evolution path - so don't write about the history of these things - only about where either of them stand today.