Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Peripheral Systems What is a Peripheral System? • A system or equipment that performs tasks related to or involving the robot, but that is not part of the robot. • Capable of functioning without the robot. • Anything that is not part of the core system, such as options or additions. • Core system consists of the robot, controller, teach pendant, built-in sensors, and power supply. • The robot could work without peripherals. Safety Systems • A common peripheral in the robotic world. • It falls to the company that is buying a robot to ensure that the proper safety protocols and equipment are in place. • The safety devices that are a part of the robot or built into the robot are considered a part of the core system. • The E-stop on the teach pendant or robot controller are not counted as part of the safety peripheral system, as they are built-in safety features of the core robotic system. Positioners • This device manipulates the position of the parts that the robot is working with and has nothing to do with the physical position of the robot. • Used to rotate parts, swap finished parts with raw parts, secure parts during processing operations, and complete other tasks that assist in the process of producing goods. • Commonly used for swapping of raw parts for finished parts – the system will have a rotary platform with all the appropriate fixturing and clamps installed on it – the operator will put the raw parts in one set of fixtures, lock them in place, and then press an indicator button that sends a signal to the system controller that the parts are ready – when the system is ready to process parts, the positioner will rotate the raw parts into the work zone and, at the same time, rotate out the other fixture for the operator to remove finished parts and refill with raw parts. • Mobile robot base – robot is attached to this positioner, and it moves the entire robot from point A to point B, with optional stops in between, to assist the robot in performance of tasks. • Mobile robot bases are used so that robots can keep up with moving parts on chains and conveyors, feed multiple machines in an area, move parts to and from warehouses, and carry out other tasks where the robot needs to cover an area larger than its work envelope. • Peripheral positioning systems add flexibility and create options that the robot would have otherwise. • Often referred to as external axes because they link to the robot controller, the system stores positional data for them, and we can program them as we would other axes. End-of-Arm Tooling Peripheral Systems • EOAT is an add-on to the robot requiring a power source and data input • Robot tool-changing peripheral systems – basic principle is to move the desired tooling into position for exchange with the tooling the robot is currently using – the robot puts the current tooling into an empty slot, that was presented by the positioner, and then releases the tooling via a coupling mechanism – once the robot is clear, the positioner will index the required tooling into position and wait for the robot to connect the quick release to the tooling – once it makes a positive connection, the robot carefully removes the tooling from the positioner, and it’s back to work for the robot. • Welding – systems to clean the welding gun tip of any slag or stray pieces of melted metal that might accumulate • Drilling – sensors to ensure that the drill bit has not broken or worn down beyond a set point • Spray nozzles – clean-up devices to ensure that they do not clog up between uses or to clean out one fluid before using a different fluid • Quality of parts – force sensors and measurement systems to help determine the quality of parts • The peripheral system that goes with the tooling may perform tasks such as drilling, reaming, polishing, or other finishing actions. • Robot using a peripheral motor with a drill attached to perform tasks – saves time in the production process and eliminates the need for extra equipment by having the robot perform part of the production process – when external motors are used in this way, the data that the system monitors is usually the amount of torque or amperage that the motor is using as well as the speed of rotation What is a Work Cell? • A logical grouping of machines that perform various operations on parts in a logical order during the production process. • These machines work independently of one another, but share information – located in close proximity to enhance the production process by creating a smooth, efficient workflow. • Work cells are part of lean manufacturing, which focuses on cutting production costs by minimizing wasted time and materials so that U.S. industry can compete with countries that make products more cheaply than we do. • Work cells are groupings of standalone systems, machines, and auxiliary equipment all working together and often they utilize robots for material handling and other operations. • The cells may be as simple as a welding robot, positioner, welding gun tip cleaner, and an operator or they may consist of a welding robot, a machine that removes materials from raw cast parts, a conveyor that connects this machine to the welder, and another conveyor that takes the welded parts to a robot that picks them up and uses a pedestal grinder to buff and shape parts after a camera does a visual inspection. • Often work cells are complex setups consisting of multiple machines all working to process parts. • The work cell demonstrates the difference between a standalone machine and a peripheral system. • Many companies have spent thousands of dollars creating, setting up, and tweaking their work cells to reduce the number of times that they handle the parts, how far parts travel between operations, and how long it takes to process the parts – all of these reductions represent a reduction in the overall cost of parts, saving both manufacturer and customer. Nonindustrial Peripherals • They augment the operation of the robot but are not part of the core system • Charging stations – some robots find these systems by tracking the location, others can follow a signal home when in need of refuel (Roomba and Lawnbot) • Many of these systems are designed so that various equipment can be added or removed to customize the robot in the same way tooling is swapped in industry • A robotic company can manufacture a large number of just a few types of robots (base models), which reduces production costs and gives the customers the options they need to get the robot they want. System Communications • Worst-case scenario is where some signals make it through while others are lost, creating intermittent operation and functionality that can become erratic and unpredictable. • Digital signals have exactly two states, on or off, which translate as 1 or 0 in the binary code. We base these signals on a set voltage or amperage level when they are based on real-world equipment and not just data in the system. • Analog signals are a range of voltage or amperage that correlate to a set scale used to express changing values in the sensors and output devices. • Digital signals indicate the presence or absence of things with sensors like prox switches and limit switches, or any other place where a yes or no answer will do. • Analog signals come in handy when we need to monitor ranges of data, such as the temperature of a room, the distance between the robot and an object, or how full a tank of liquid is. • Getting the signal from sensors, machines, and peripheral systems can be done by bringing the signal directly to the robot via wire. It can also be done by the RS232 standard. (direct communication) • The RS232 standard is a communication standard where certain wires are designated to transmit specific signals. • This set up a specific way for two controllers to share data, allowing for large amounts of data to pass quickly back and forth. The downside was the need for more controllers and the specific hardware to make this happen. • RS232 was a standard, not a set law or rule. It used the nine-pin serial port, which is no longer standard on computers. • USB communication cables have replaced the RS232 communication. • A second for system communication is via a network. • Networking is where two or more systems share information over some form of connection. • Hardwired systems require a communication cable or wires between the devices that need to talk, whereas wireless networks only need a device or card that works similar to a Bluetooth device to communicate.