Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Came into work this morning fired up the Auto, power came on but nothing would happen. Called M&R to get them to trouble shoot it. Well possibly needs new Battery and Re-programed. Never heard of that but took the PLC out and put on UPS to get er done. We are busy as Hell and now I am down an Auto, that stinks. Any one else had this problem?
rich, we had an older gauntlet (1999) and the tech couldn't find the battery, we never replaced it, did some of the presses have plc's that didn't require batteries?
I've had the battery go out on both my MHM's but it doesn't lose the program, only the settings (flash times, which heads are turned on,etc.) when you turnit off. Do modern PLC's still lose their ladders when the battery goes?
I'm not sure, but I THINK MHM would use custom PCB's to control the press. I think Anatol does this as well because there isn't a PLC in my machine, but there is a proprietary PCB main board and I think it has a battery but doubt it would lose settings if the battery dies.
we must have had that one. any reason you didn't use that one in anything else? I prefer not having a battery to remember to change.
I'd wager that %99 of machines newer than the old Americans (and maybe the Tuf's?) use PLC's. My MHM's have Hitachi PLC'swhich have proven incredibly reliable. I can even back the program up just in case. Or to make modifications if I ever learnladder programming...
Quote from: ebscreen on July 11, 2014, 01:51:39 PMI'd wager that %99 of machines newer than the old Americans (and maybe the Tuf's?) use PLC's. My MHM's have Hitachi PLC'swhich have proven incredibly reliable. I can even back the program up just in case. Or to make modifications if I ever learnladder programming...Anatol is in the 1% then! Wonder if any other manufacturers are PLC-less. First guess would be RPM?