beattsmjk
Mechanical
- Apr 15, 2009
- 40
Hi,
I work in the bakery industry (as a process engineer) and we have one of these Apollo flow batcher units for dispensing quantities of liquid (water, milk etc) into various mixes.
The system operates as follows.
1. A signal is sent from a mixing unit to dispense liquid
2. The Apollo unit dispenses the liquid (pre defined quantity - via a dosing valve)
3. A signal is sent back to the Apollo unit to say batch complete.
and so on, in general the batcher dispenses about six times an hour (depending on what is being mixed etc)
Lately though we have been getting double signals which results in two quantities of liquid being dispenses which invariably results in the mix being ruined.
I can't think why this is happening. I would say it does it about twice a week, but the implications can take us an hour or so to rectify.
Could noise or interference be causing these double dose signals. They generally happen within a few seconds of each other and I cant find any pattern.
There is quite a bit of other electrical equipment around the cabinet housing the Apollo such as a 3 phase motor, a cabinet housing numerous small invertors, a large cooling fan (bakeries get warm).
Is there any way I could shield the entire cabinet from erroneous signals perhaps?? All cable within the Apollo cabinet is shielded.
All ideas gratefully welcomed
thanks
I work in the bakery industry (as a process engineer) and we have one of these Apollo flow batcher units for dispensing quantities of liquid (water, milk etc) into various mixes.
The system operates as follows.
1. A signal is sent from a mixing unit to dispense liquid
2. The Apollo unit dispenses the liquid (pre defined quantity - via a dosing valve)
3. A signal is sent back to the Apollo unit to say batch complete.
and so on, in general the batcher dispenses about six times an hour (depending on what is being mixed etc)
Lately though we have been getting double signals which results in two quantities of liquid being dispenses which invariably results in the mix being ruined.
I can't think why this is happening. I would say it does it about twice a week, but the implications can take us an hour or so to rectify.
Could noise or interference be causing these double dose signals. They generally happen within a few seconds of each other and I cant find any pattern.
There is quite a bit of other electrical equipment around the cabinet housing the Apollo such as a 3 phase motor, a cabinet housing numerous small invertors, a large cooling fan (bakeries get warm).
Is there any way I could shield the entire cabinet from erroneous signals perhaps?? All cable within the Apollo cabinet is shielded.
All ideas gratefully welcomed
thanks