marks1080
Electrical
- Oct 10, 2006
- 613
Hello All. I work for an offshore oil and gas company, and we have a FPSO (floating production storage and offloading) currently in service. We have contracted a company to provide us with a simulation environment for the I&C onboard the ship. Basically we have an exact mock-up of our control system in a training room.
The system consists of HMI servers, OPs stations, and an Engineering Station (along with an instructor’s station). That we use as a training environment for our technicians. Also, we have connected with this a HYSIS simulation computer and several Emulation PC's. The HYSIS engine is simulating plant conditions, while the emulation PC's are simulating logic solvers (PLCs)... ie: this is a "soft" PLC, which we use as a test bed.
The purpose of the training simulator was stated - to train technicians. The purpose of the Test Bed is to be able to test new software updates/downloads and see how they interact with the system. It is very important that any software changes are tested extensively before being implemented in the plant.
We currently have another test facility under contract that is an exact mock up of what we have off-shore on the plant - true "Hard" PLC's. This is currently where all of our software changes are tested before being implemented.
I would like to know if anyone has any insight on how a soft PLC system compares with the actual thing (hard PLC). I've been hearing different opinions from different people regarding this. Some say there is no way to truly test the impact of a software download using soft PLC's, I have documentation from a company, that has since left the project, saying that the soft PLC's should be able to do the job just as well.
As any downtime in this kind of industry can cost millions of dollars, my recommendations on whether our soft PLC test bed will suffice or if we should purchase our own hard PLC test bed will be scrutinized to death.
Any help or insight would be appreciated on this. I've left out some specific information here... If it would help, I can post more detail about our systems.
marks
The system consists of HMI servers, OPs stations, and an Engineering Station (along with an instructor’s station). That we use as a training environment for our technicians. Also, we have connected with this a HYSIS simulation computer and several Emulation PC's. The HYSIS engine is simulating plant conditions, while the emulation PC's are simulating logic solvers (PLCs)... ie: this is a "soft" PLC, which we use as a test bed.
The purpose of the training simulator was stated - to train technicians. The purpose of the Test Bed is to be able to test new software updates/downloads and see how they interact with the system. It is very important that any software changes are tested extensively before being implemented in the plant.
We currently have another test facility under contract that is an exact mock up of what we have off-shore on the plant - true "Hard" PLC's. This is currently where all of our software changes are tested before being implemented.
I would like to know if anyone has any insight on how a soft PLC system compares with the actual thing (hard PLC). I've been hearing different opinions from different people regarding this. Some say there is no way to truly test the impact of a software download using soft PLC's, I have documentation from a company, that has since left the project, saying that the soft PLC's should be able to do the job just as well.
As any downtime in this kind of industry can cost millions of dollars, my recommendations on whether our soft PLC test bed will suffice or if we should purchase our own hard PLC test bed will be scrutinized to death.
Any help or insight would be appreciated on this. I've left out some specific information here... If it would help, I can post more detail about our systems.
marks