Serving the tunneling experts - The Future of Manufacturing
Transcription
Serving the tunneling experts - The Future of Manufacturing
Number 2 | December 2015 | siemens.com/go GO! Automation with LOGO! and SIMATIC S7-1200 Serving the tunneling experts LOGO! in the construction of the Semmering base tunnel GO! 2/2015 | Contents Serving the tunneling experts 14 Holtermann Regeltechnik GmbH, Rietberg, Germany Editorial 03 Networking possibilities Instrumentation and control engineering 14 Electronic wheel truing 04 A well-rounded affair Unger Kabelkonfektionstechnik GmbH & Co. KG, Sehmatal, Germany, and Radsport Componenten Vertriebs GmbH, Erfurt, Germany Serving the tunneling experts Holtermann Regeltechnik GmbH, Rietberg, Germany Mobile building systems 16 Automation for mobile buildings Berger Raumsysteme GmbH, Großpostwitz, Germany Machine building Products 06 18 Using PLCs as data loggers Eurolaser GmbH, Lüneburg, Germany TIA Selection Tool Faster configuration Traffic control systems 08 Sending a signal Ibotech GmbH & Co. KG, Hockenheim, Germany Know-how 10 Using message texts efficiently Grill control 12 Cooked to perfection Pottfeuer GmbH, Wetter, Germany Cover photo: Holtermann 2 Simatic ET 200SP More I/Os in a compact design LOGO! web-based training Multilingual e-learning 19 LOGO! CMK 2000 An intermediary between two worlds Publisher’s notice Dialogue Editorial | GO! 2/2015 Networking possibilities An omnipresent symbol of global connectivity, the Internet is fundamentally changing our world. Cloud computing and Wi-Fi are now part of our everyday lives. Even – or especially – in automation technology, networking is making inroads into more and more areas, from engineering and operation to maintenance and service. Remote control, remote monitoring, and remote services are no longer the preserve of the high-end sector. Our LOGO! 8 logic modules, our smallest automation systems, feature an Industrial Ethernet interface. This opens up a world of new communication options based on TCP/IP and using the Simatic S7 protocol: for example, to Simatic S7 or Simatic HMI, from LOGO! or to LOGO!, in combination with communication modules, or for connecting to a company’s industrial network. All LOGO! basic units with an Industrial Ethernet interface can be addressed at access points via Wi-Fi, and the web server integrated into all LOGO! 8 basic units makes monitoring and controlling LOGO! via Wi-Fi and the Internet a simple matter. As examples, a grill chef can remotely control the fan of his barrel smoker, and traffic signs automated using Simatic S7-1200 can be monitored over the network. And with the new KNX module for LOGO!, which we present on page 19, the LOGO! modules can be used as smart controllers in integrated building technology. We hope the solutions presented here will be a source of inspiration for new applications! I hope that you enjoy reading about these new solutions. Heinz Eisenbeiss Head of Marketing and Promotion, Industrial Automation Systems 3 Fotolia / S. Schurr Unger Kabelkonfektionstechnik GmbH & Co. KG, Sehmatal, Germany, and Radsport Componenten Vertriebs GmbH, Erfurt, Germany A well-rounded affair Electronic tools for diagnostic tasks are part of the standard equipment of car repair shops. In bicycle repair shops, however, the electronics thus far mostly have been limited to office PCs. That is now changing with the use of Simatic S7-1200 for truing bicycle wheels. U nger Kabelkonfektionstechnik GmbH & Co. KG, based in Sehmatal, Saxony, specializes in making cables and wires using the latest production technologies. However, on behalf of the Erfurt bicycle wholesaler Ra-Co GmbH, which also sells its ownbrand Cyclus Tools, Mike Schubert, 4 head of research and development at “The bicycle technician places the Unger, is working on a very different wheel in the Radonaut to measure it matter with his team: “As is well known, electronically and then true it by hand,” it’s possible to deform your bicycle’s explains the automation specialist. “Our rim. The wheel ‘wobbles,’ the ride be- new, electronic method is much more comes less comfortable, and the rim precise, theoretically down to the 5/100brakes don’t work as well.” That is when mm range, and the result can be accuthe wheel needs to be trued – the same rately checked and logged,” he adds. In process as is used during the wheel’s August, Ra-Co and Unger presented a manufacture when the hub and rim are preproduction sample at Eurobike, the connected to the spokes. Truing means world’s leading trade fair for the bicycle that the length and/or tension of the industry in Friedrichshafen, Germany. spokes is modified by rotating the spoke nipple to ensure that the wheel Trusted equipment partner turns smoothly. Schubert can look back on many years Faster and more precise truing of working closely with Siemens in Chemnitz; as the owner of an engineerThis work is complex and time-consum- ing firm, he previously equipped proing for bicycle technicians. The radial duction systems with Simatic S7-300 and lateral runout of the wheel are read and Simatic S7-400 controllers. “In our in and measured, for example, using case, the use of these controllers would dial gauges. Schubert has developed a not have been appropriate: they can do special aid for this procedure – the Ra- far more than we need and would be too expensive for a mass product.” donaut. Electronic wheel truing | GO! 2/2015 “Using TIA Portal, we can easily implement menu navigation that the mechanic can quickly master, and at the same time store operating notes there.” Mike Schubert, Head of Research and Development, Unger Kabelkonfektionstechnik GmbH & Co. KG The electronics originally produced in-house could have performed the measurements but would quickly have come up against their limits if customers changed their requirements or the system was expanded. “That’s why, together with my Siemens contacts in Chemnitz and Leipzig, I sought out an alternative situated between a handmade solution and an industrial solution. Here, I counted on the equipment supplier’s seamless system consistency and the potential integration of a wide range of applications, from drive technology to sensor systems.” an electronic linear displacement sensor. The resulting analog value, in a range between 0 and 10 V, is interpreted as a path by the Simatic S7-1200 PLC. The bicycle technician can read the rim’s runout at the right, left, top, High tech for the bicycle repair shop RA-CO GmbH Exact analog value processing Schubert was not disappointed. The Simatic S7-1200 Basic Controller with an analog SM 1231 signal module for connecting displacement sensors, combined with a Simatic KTP400 Basic Panel, proved ideal in terms of price and performance. “The 13-bit resolution of the SM 1231 enables exact processing of the 12-bit analog signals from the displacement sensors,” says Schubert. “The solution is reliable and extendible, and fast, competent service is ensured if a component should fail at some point.” How, though, does the measurement work? Moving linear guides are mounted on springs at the bottom of the device. Together with a cylinder, these guides enable mechanical determination of the wheel’s radial and lateral runout. The motion is recorded by costing rates for the services on the panel. “Once radial and lateral runouts have been measured, the controller calculates the service costs for the customer when the bicycle technician trues the wheel to a specific level of accuracy,” explains Schubert. “Not everyone needs a bike wheel aligned to a tenth of a millimeter.” The idea and its implementation were well received at Eurobike. Initial orders have already been received, and there are even plans to extend the system. “Customers asked if it would be possible to also measure spoke tension. Our extendible, modular solution can accommodate this with little effort,” says The Radonaut with the Simatic S7-1200 control Schubert. He therefore sees the Raand KTP400 Basic Panel brings new technology donaut as just the first use of modern into the bicycle repair shop control technology in a bicycle repair or bottom with an accuracy of 0.1 mm shop. “We could also control other tools on a bar cross shown on the Basic Panel. using the Simatic S7-1200 micro-PLC,” He or she then calibrates those points he says, thinking ahead. The system’s that deviate from the target value by expansion potential can be ensured via tightening or loosening the spokes at the remote maintenance option, and the spoke nipples. updates can be carried out with ease. Each step is documented on a report Electronic bicycle diagnostics has a for the customer. If the mounted wheel bright future. is turned a further full revolution by hand, radial and lateral runout are measured again, and the values are shown on the display, saved by the controller, INFO AND CONTACT and can be printed out as required. Idesiemens.com/s7-1200 ally, these values should now all be jan.koehler@siemens.com close to zero. The user can enter the 5 Eurolaser GO! 2/2015 | Machine building The recorded operating data are clearly presented and help optimize the cost-effectiveness of the laser systems Eurolaser GmbH, Lüneburg, Germany Using PLCs as data loggers The processing and presentation of operating data serves as the basis for efficient maintenance and for the process optimization of innovative laser cutting machines. A microcontroller is the perfect solution for what is an atypical task for it. T 6 he trend toward individualization in the consumer sector has long affected the production of low-cost items. The cost-effective manufacture of small quantities requires flexible, simpleto-operate tools that can also be easily maintained. Laser cutters can be adapted for use on almost any material. They operate without contact, are almost wear free, and do not require tool changes or changeover time. The company’s machines are used worldwide. Christian Ehlers of the research and development department describes the particular challenges: “Initially, the long distances were sometimes a problem for our service department. On some occasions, our service engineers would arrive on-site to discover that the only problem was that the emergency stop had been pressed, meaning that their long journey had actually been unnecessary.” Cutting, engraving, marking Remote diagnostics in real time Eurolaser of Lüneburg, Germany, specializes in the manufacture of CO2 laser systems for cutting, engraving, and marking. Combining various modules results in a large number of potential applications. Protective cell-phone covers in many different versions are just one typical product for the cutting machines; laser engraving is used on such diverse products as soccer boots and key chains. Searching for the most competitive remote diagnostics solution, Mücahit Acar, also of research and development, came across a solution with Simatic S7-1200. Here the controller is not used as a control system in the proper sense of the word. Instead, it collects and processes data before making it available for live monitoring on a specially designed website. Ehlers says, “Initially, only simple tables were Machine building | GO! 2/2015 Eurolaser Operating costs under control The versatile CO2 laser systems from eurolaser are used for cutting, engraving, and marking Malfunctions can be displayed both directly on the machine and on any company PC. E-mails signaling limit violations also can be configured and sent. According to Ehlers, another factor is that “the ratio of the machine operating hours to the service life of the laser can demonstrate optimization potential in the course of operations. This enables us to support our customers in the cost-effective operation of their machines. The customer is able to recognize when maintenance measures are required and has greater planning security. If the customer is operating several of our machines, the Watchdog delivers reliable comparative figures.” The live monitoring is connected with hourly recording, storage, and graphical presentation of the measured values. “Not only can our customers check whether the ambient conditions are appropriate during the runtime, but the parameters also can be represented based on curves over the last 4,000 hours. This enables settings and workflows to be analyzed and the cost-effectiveness of the laser cutting system to be further optimized,” continues Ehlers. Continuous further development provided for our service staff. But we soon realized that it would definitely be useful to also make oper- The Watchdog is programmed such that it can be used for all new eurolaser machines. The operator inating data accessible to our customers.” And the idea of the Watchdog was born. Every terface automatically adapts to the machine and dislaser cutter from eurolaser is now delivered with a plays the relevant data. Ehlers justifies this strategy: Simatic S7-1200 (CPU 1214) and the Watchdog func- “The development efforts are not to be underestion. Ehlers explains, “The machines can be used for timated. Ultimately, the controller must be proa very wide range of applications, in very different grammed in such a way that it can correctly interpret installation locations, and by people with a variety of the operating states of the laser. For example, an indifferent qualifications. The machines are very ro- tentional shutdown may not be signaled as a malbust and user friendly. Nevertheless, as the most ex- function. With a standardized Watchdog, future pensive element, the laser, does have certain humid- developments will generate costs only in one area, ity and ambient temperature requirements. It is not namely, for modifications. All our machines are just the actual service life that is relevant for the therefore able to offer the expanded functionality simaintenance intervals of the laser but also the length multaneously.” Future plans include the incorporaof time that the machine is turned on and during tion of status messages from the motion system into which the laser is kept ready for operation. We have the Watchdog via TCP/IP. Acar, who is responsible for therefore decided to take note of these parameters the programming, is enthusiastic: “The opportunities and make them available to the customer for live that Simatic S7-1200 and TIA Portal offer for the monitoring.” Watchdog application alone are enormous.” He and The Watchdog operator interface is clearly laid out. Ehlers are in complete agreement that they also will Fault signals are displayed in color and may be take advantage of the Simatic controllers’ core capae-mailed to the maintenance engineer. Regarding bilities for automation tasks in the future. the configuration, Ehlers explains, “In principle, the controller functions as a subsystem in the customer’s company network, and access to the web server is only possible from company PCs. Only when access is specifically activated for us are we also able to read data and take over or support the maintenance. Write access is then also possible via the web server. INFO AND CONTACT The emergency stop I mentioned can, of course, be siemens.com/controller cancelled only on-site. But the fact that the fault was siemens.com/s7-1200 detected by remote diagnostics made an expensive schroeder.stefan@siemens.com journey unnecessary in this case.” Note on industrial security: Suitable protective measures (including industrial security, e.g., network segmentation) must be taken to ensure safe operation of the system. Further information about industrial security can be found on the Internet at siemens.com/industrialsecurity. 7 GO! 2/2015 | Traffic control systems Ibotech GmbH & Co. KG, Hockenheim, Germany Sending a signal Highway construction sites see frequent accidents and are despised by drivers because of the delays they cause. Mobile LED congestion warning systems that automatically adapt to traffic volumes help ease temporary congestion and improve the traffic flow through construction sites. C onventional traffic management systems involve placing large numbers of static warning signs on the roadside. However, there are so many that drivers are sometimes confused and distracted. “That can be dangerous, especially on highspeed roads,” says Adem Bogocli, CEO of road safety engineering services provider Ibotech GmbH & Co. KG. So the company has developed a solution that reliably collects up-tothe-minute traffic information and presents real-time alerts on clearly visible LED displays. The roadside signs are composed of LED elements displayed on boards approximately 3 meters square and robustly mounted on 5-meter-high trimasts with concrete bases. The planning office of the local highway agency stipulates the locations in a signage plan for each construction site. As soon as the work is complete and the safety measures are no longer required, Ibotech removes the signs and stores them, ready for deployment at the next construction site. Reliable detection of free-flowing traffic Solar panels mounted on the tops of the trimasts charge the batteries powering the LED displays. To collect accurate traffic data, lbotech uses sensors featuring passive infrared (PIR) technology that detects changes in traffic flow very reliably even in bad weather con- ibotech Mobile LED congestion warning systems aid traffic flow through construction sites Traffic control systems | GO! 2/2015 “We very much appreciate the high performance and failsafe operation of the Simatic S7-1200 controllers. Despite the often harsh operating system failure to date.” Adem Bogocli, CEO, Ibotech GmbH ditions. The sensors are mounted on the sides of the trimasts and are designed to detect across multiple lanes. The contrast in radiation emitted by a vehicle traveling into or through the sensing ranges of the sensors delivers the information to control the alerts. The sensor records the exact position, speed, and length of each vehicle passing through its range and detects the presence of stationary vehicles when there is congestion. The PIR sensors are also powered by the solar panels. All the sensors and actuators in the LED traffic signage system are routed via the Simatic S7-1200 DC/DC/relay controllers, which ensure maximum flexibility and fault-free operation of the LED congestion warning systems. The controllers are housed in enclosures below the LED displays together with the communication components. Data exchange between the controllers and sensors is via the RS485 interface of the CM 1241 communication module. Ibotech programmers have developed an algorithm that calculates the average speeds of the vehicles and switches the relays of the LED displays based on the results. The switching functions of the PLC are configured in Simatic Step 7 Basic. The data buffer in the controller stores the vehicle data at the programmed polling intervals and visualizes the measurement results via Simatic WinCC Runtime Advanced. The visualization software displays the events and states occurring at the var- ious measuring points directly on a PC in the control room in Hockenheim. PLC activates congestion warning Siemens AG / J. Koch conditions, we have not had a single ample, a congestion warning is automatically activated. Once the average speed is back above 70 km/h, the warning disappears. To retrieve the sensor data, Ibotech CEO Web server for mobile monitoring Bogocli connects to the variable mes- of traffic data sage signs from the control room via a secure virtual private network. The In the three years since Ibotech brought traffic conditions recorded by the sen- its first variable message sign to market, sors are evaluated as hydrographs and the signs have demonstrated their perdisplayed on-screen together with the formance capabilities in many applicalatest data for the day. Each vehicle is tions. The now upgraded version enclearly identified as a car or a truck, and ables authorized users to communicate the distances between the passing with the installations over the Internet vehicles are also recorded exactly. via the web server built in to the Simatic The LED display has its own controller S7-1200 controller. Bogocli explains, that controls the individual elements. “We have enhanced the applications, for The controller, which is operated via example, to enable monitoring and the digital outputs of the micro-PLC, control of PLC functions via Wireless switches the display as required. The LAN and over the Internet using the images are projected via XML using a built-in web server. Traffic data reports special software program and are can be viewed instantly on a PC, smartstored in the LED controller. phone, or tablet through the web As a vehicle approaches the construc- browser.” tion site, advance warning flashers first LEDs have proved to be an outstandalert the driver that there is an obstruc- ing solution for construction site applition ahead. At the start of the construc- cations, and the highway agencies view tion site, LED-lit variable message signs them positively. Ibotech is currently the with brightly illuminated wording then only vendor of variable message signs indicate a risk of congestion or a traffic with switchable LED displays to be cerjam. Depending on the traffic condi- tified by the German Federal Highway tions, other signs indicate information Research Institute. such as the maximum speed for traffic passing through the construction site. The messages are displayed automatiINFO AND CONTACT cally, controlled according to the prosiemens.com/s7-1200 gramming. If the average speed falls burkhard.kolland@siemens.com below 50 km/h for two minutes, for ex- Note on industrial security: Suitable protective measures (including industrial security measures, e.g., network segmentation) must be taken to ensure safe operation of the system. Further information about industrial security can be found on the Internet at siemens.com/industrialsecurity. 9 KNOW-HOW GO! 2/2015 | Know-how Using message texts efficiently Logic modules are often used when modernizing conventional control systems. In addition to easy configuration and flexibility, they offer visualization and operator guidance by text display. Other, less familiar, solutions are possible in addition to the display of actual-value text in messages. T he display built in to the LOGO! 8 offers space for six lines of 16 characters each, while the external TDE has a capacity of up to 20 characters per line (Figure 1). Using the ticker function, the user can expand the content of a message to 32 or 40 characters per line, respectively (Figure 2). There is a choice of three colors for the backlighting. This enables messages to be structured as • standard, with white background; • warning, with orange background; or • alarm, with red background. Programs migrated from earlier LOGO! versions can be upgraded to a more user-friendly operator control solution with just a few minutes’ programming. Figure 1: Configuring a message for the base unit with no ticker text (6 lines / 16 characters) Figure 2: If a message is configured only for the TDE, 6 lines of 20 characters each are available. The ticker function doubles the number of characters per line Keeping an eye on alarm messages Have you ever taken a closer look at the message text function block? It offers a number of features providing low-cost monitoring and control functionality. Sporadic alarms occurring just briefly are often not identified because no one is viewing the display at the time. If they are not noticed, more serious malfunctions can result. This is where the reset function helps. It ensures that the message remains on view until the message system is reset by pressing the OK button on the base unit or external display – even if the cause of the alarm, such as a high temperature value, has returned to the normal range and the alarm is no longer pending. Displayed dates and times indicate when the alarm was triggered for the first and last times. A counter indicates how often the alarm has occurred in the meantime. All pictures: Siemens AG Message merging Figure 3: A second character set has been activated. Flag 27 is used to toggle between them 10 The character set function enables two messages to be merged in the chart. This allows the message to be presented in two languages, depending on the operator. The two messages can be toggled by activating flag Know-how | GO! 2/2015 27 (Figure 3). However, the message in the second character set may contain additional information for servicing that is not relevant for the operator. Actual values (analog values or counter values) can be displayed as a vertical or horizontal bar graph as well as numerical values. That makes the message easier to read in most cases. Whereas previously two separate message texts were needed to display the “Motor ON” and “Motor OFF” messages, each having to be actuated based on the output signal, up to four status messages can now be merged in a single message text (Figure 4). It is possible to “toggle” based on the input or output states, saving resources and making the program clearer. Outputs of individual function blocks can even be used to actuate these status indicators. In LOGO! 8, larger area symbols also can be configured (Figure 5). Web server permits plant monitoring by smartphone A highlight of LOGO! 8 is the integrated web server. After connecting LOGO! 8 to a low-cost Wireless LAN access point from a specialist reseller, the operator can monitor and control a plant from a smartphone or tablet without need of HTML programming. This is again enabled by the message text and by selecting the web server from the display (Figure 6). The message is then also displayed on a smartphone. If so programmed, the smartphone’s function keys can be used to control the system directly. After the program is downloaded, web server access must be enabled directly in LOGO! 8 and protected by a password. The function keys of a device such as a smartphone or tablet can then be used, regardless of whether a TDE is connected to the hardware. For example, shutters can be opened or closed as part of a building automation application (Figure 7). Figure 4: This enables status indicator messages to be defined based on various signals Figure 5: Under the °C symbol there are additional symbols for the cursor buttons and symbols to display large characters Figure 6: The web server can be selected in the message destination field under Properties INFO AND CONTACT siemens.com/logo josef.ploch@siemens.com Figure 7: Display on smartphone, tablet, or PC 11 GO! 2/2015 | Grill control Pottfeuer GmbH, Wetter, Germany Cooked to perfection fotolia_Jag_cz Alongside such perennial favorites as sausages and steaks, smoking in the style of American barbecues is growing in popularity in Germany. This process, however, demands careful preparation. Grill caterer Markus Mizgalski lets LOGO! do some of the work involved over the many hours needed to cook the meat. He is impressed by the logic module’s flexible expansion options. B efore the American classic of pulled pork can be prepared, necks and shoulders of pork must be slow cooked for up to 20 hours in a smoker. Only then can the tender meat be “pulled” and enjoyed, for example, with barbecue sauce and coleslaw, in a sandwich. Pulled pork, beef brisket, and spare ribs are considered by fans the “holy trinity” of barbecues. They are among the many specialties that grill specialist pottfeuer GmbH offers at family or company parties. As hired barbecue experts at larger events, the pottfeuer managing directors Axel Kähne and 12 Markus Mizgalski – supported by an administrative assistant and a pool of event assistants – travel all over Germany. They bring everything the customer needs with them, including the barbecues, tents, serving tables, cutlery, and ingredients. And then they grill live before the guests’ eyes. The company is based in Wetter in the Ruhr, where pottfeuer also organizes barbecue seminars and operates a store selling accessories and meat. The experienced IT journalist Mizgalski also writes articles and offers services that go beyond barbecue-related matters. Grill control | GO! 2/2015 Maintaining a constant temperature tem via the integrated web server and the Internet or WLAN using a PC, tablet, or smartphone: “We integrated LOGO! 8 into our company network via a network port and a WLAN bridge; it can be directly activated via an internal IP address from any browser. This means that, in principle, we can check up on things from anywhere. That simplifies our work and gives us much more time and flexibility in our daily routines.” The meat cooks for up to 20 hours in the barrel smoker. LOGO! makes for less work for the grill chef and ensures the correct temperature in the smoker Pottfeuer / M. Mizgalski “Of course, we can’t cook the meat for pulled pork or even spare ribs in a barbecue smoker on the customer’s premises; that just takes too long,” explains Mizgalski. “We do this in advance on our own terrace and then only prepare the meal with the cooked meat when we’re with the customer.” The traditional barrel smoker consists of a furnace for wood or coal and the cooking space. “The challenge is to maintain a constant temperature of between 100°C and 120°C Straightforward programming in the cooking space for up to 20 hours. And it’s good if you can check the temperature occasionally, ide- The self-taught Mizgalski also did the programming with LOGO! Soft Comfort himself: “Of course, I ally also from off-site.” In the past, he and his partner structured their rou- could have received assistance from Siemens. But tines so that one person would check the tempera- when I get down to tackling something on my own, ture in the smoker on the terrace every two hours or I’m very persistent and want to understand every so, opening or closing the ventilation flaps by hand as necessary. Although there are systems with temperature sensors and temperature-controlled fans for automated control of the heat in the cooking space, Mizgalski was first genuinely fired with enthusiasm on finding out about LOGO! 8 while enjoying an evening beer with an acquaintance he knows from his work as an IT journalist. “I’m not an expert,” he says, “but am good at technology and enjoy tinkering, and I immediately came upon the idea of a barbecue controller – one that also offers remote access options, is extremely flexible and expandable, and goes far beyond simple temperature control. LOGO! offers everything we need. Using the logic module, we can measure, control, and connect everything to our internal network.” Independence thanks to remote access No sooner said than done. Mizgalski got himself a 12-V LOGO! 8 basic unit with an integrated display, a LOGO!Power supply unit, and an AM2TD extension module for connecting the PT100 and PT1000 temperature sensors – hardware that he installed in a mounting rail box. One of the temperature sensors measures the temperature in the cooking space, and the other – an immersion thermometer – the temperature inside the piece of meat. The latter, after all, makes all the difference in the quality of cooked food such as pulled pork. The two temperatures are shown on the display. With this essential equipment, he undertook a proof of concept and created a basic solution with a simple smoker equipped with an electric fan. If the temperature in the cooking space falls below a set threshold, 90°C in the test, LOGO! switches the fan on. The fan blows air into the embers until the temperature returns to its target value of 110°C. LOGO! then switches the fan off again. What particularly impresses Mizgalski, however, is the convenient remote access to the control sys- aspect of it.” He found the simple method of dragging and dropping modules, the simulation of program routines, and the heating control and temperature measurement project examples on the Internet helpful and convenient when programming with the LOGO! Soft Comfort software. Mizgalski has many more ideas he would like to implement for various types of smokers using LOGO! For example, LOGO! could additionally control the demand-driven transport of wood pellets on a screw conveyor in the smoker. He also can imagine it controlling a servomotor for a three-step rotary knob. INFO AND CONTACT siemens.com/logo josef.ploch@siemens.com Note on industrial security: Appropriate security measures (e.g., network segmentation) must be taken to ensure secure operation of the system. More information about industrial security can be found on the Internet at siemens.com/industrialsecurity. 13 GO! 2/2015 | Instrumentation and control engineering Holtermann Regeltechnik GmbH, Rietberg, Germany Serving the tunneling experts LOGO! 8 logic modules affordably and reliably meet the requirements for monitoring and controlling heating technology for concrete mixing and hardening during tunnel construction. S Holtermann emmering, Austria, has always they cool down to the ambient tempera- have been excessive here, he says, addbeen a popular tourist destination ture in an open area and are stored there ing that the users have managed very in both the summer and the win- for use. well with the logic module. Customer ter. The town, located on a north-south service is also of central importance. transport corridor, is also of major eco- Ideal system for switching and “We prepare the applications such that customers can independently commisnomic importance. Growing rail freight control tasks transport has resulted in the planning sion the systems on-site following a of a new, 27.3-km railway tunnel pass- We-Ho Beton-Heiztechnik GmbH, based short briefing,” explains Holtermann. ing underneath the northern Alpine in Borgholzhausen, Germany, special- Martin Hartmann, who is responsible peaks between Golggnitz in Lower izes in systems for producing process for planning at Holtermann RegeltechAustria and Mürzzuschlag in Styria. The heat and heating energy. These sys- nik, adds, “Our systems are highly cusSemmering base tunnel has been under tems include container heating plants construction since 2012 and, on com- for tunneling projects in which large The TDE displays are clearly integrated pletion in 2026, will be the key link on quantities of concrete are used. The in the control cabinet door the Baltic-Adriatic axis for passenger systems are equipped with controllers and freight transport. for self-optimizing temperature control. Austrian Federal Railways and its con- Together with the pressure vessel of the tracted construction companies are mobile heat-generating station, these using prefabricated concrete sections are installed in a container. Holtermann to support the inside of the tunnel. The Regeltechnik, a company specializing in concrete parts, however, are not pro- building automation and control techduced at a plant for precast units be- nology for heating and ventilation syscause their size would make them im- tems, is responsible for the control cabpossible to transport by road. Instead, inet construction and all the instrumenthey are manufactured on-site in spe- tation and control (IC) engineering in cially erected halls. Once the concrete the heating plants for the tunnel conhas been poured, the sections, together struction project. with the formwork, are moved to a dryThe IC engineering is based on the ing hall preheated to 80°C, thereby ac- LOGO! 8 logic module, which, accordcelerating the drying process. Because ing to managing director Martin Holterthe concrete sections must not be mann, was “exactly the system we cooled too quickly, they are then trans- needed to affordably and ideally perported to a second drying hall with a form the switching and control tasks on temperature of 50°C. In a third step, this project.” A larger controller would 14 Instrumentation and control engineering | GO! 2/2015 tomized. During commissioning or in the event of a modification, for example, users may have to adjust the settings. That’s why, in addition to understanding the system, it’s helpful for them to bring along basic knowledge of control technology. LOGO! 8 can then be used to its best advantage.” Anyone who needs support, however, can contact the IC engineering specialist’s telephone support or receive on-site assistance from service technicians. Holtermann Prefabricated concrete sections for the tunnels are stored in open areas (top) The control cabinets, designed for a supply of up to 1,600 A, are installed together with the heating systems in the container heating plants. The logic modules are attached to a door mount, and the TDE displays are integrated in a control cabinet door. “The controller function of the LOGO! 8 is particularly useful to us because we frequently work with control circuits,” says Hartmann. “We fit several controllers on the analog outputs and can then easily perform a wide range of tasks. The logic module is extremely flexible when it comes to quickly modifying individual functions.” To ensure that the concrete sections comply with legal and safety-related requirements and the finished tunnel exactly meets structural requirements, LOGO! 8 continuously monitors the temperatures for the drying process. Hartmann prepares the control diagram for the steam boiler system, clearly indicating the processes and tasks of the controller. For example, it shows the steam boiler with safety devices, the control sensor, the steam control, and the steam valves for the concrete aggregates. At the same time, the flow diagram forms the template for programming. Using the LOGO! Soft Comfort Holtermann Full range of tasks covered View of a steam boiler software, programming the logic mod- controls the heating of the aggregates ules and simulating the function se- (gravel, cement) with superheated steam. quences is an easy affair. The software The various components flow into a allows Hartmann to draw contact and mixing funnel and are heated there to function plans by selecting preconfig- 170°C using hot steam. The heated maured function blocks and combining terial can be processed at outside temthem by dragging and dropping. peratures of even –40°C – when water In addition to steam boiler control, freezes and pouring concrete is imposlevel control, temperature control in the sible. steam boiler, and condensate feed-in, LOGO! 8 is responsible for controlling the heating registers. Sensors in the halls measure the temperature; LOGO! INFO AND CONTACT switches the heating on or off dependsiemens.com/logo ing on the required ambient temperajoerg.schlamilch@siemens.com ture. The logic module’s relay function Note on industrial security: Appropriate security measures (e.g., network segmentation) must be taken to ensure secure operation of the system. More information about industrial security can be found on the Internet at siemens.com/industrialsecurity. 15 GO! 2/2015 | Mobile building systems Berger Raumsysteme GmbH, Großpostwitz, Germany Automation for mobile buildings A vendor of mobile building systems utilizes the great flexibility and versatility of the LOGO! microcontroller for its disabled toilet facilities. The logic module controls all the access and emergency call systems of an installation at the botanical gardens in Rostock, Germany. F or Berger Raumsysteme GmbH, the customer really is king. For the past 16 years, the 14-employee company based in Großpostwitz in the German state of Saxony has been building tailormade portable building solutions. Its products include sanitary facilities as well as mobile saunas, carports, sales stands, and office and residential units. Among its key products are high-quality mobile toilets for local authorities, transport companies, golf courses, and campsites. There are currently more than 40 mobile toilet units, in a variety of models, lined up in the company’s yard – as sales samples and as units for rent. The specialist builder’s units are now much in demand all over Europe. A variety of control and automation systems can be installed, based on customers’ wishes or in line with local regulations for public sanitary facilities, from coin slot machines and door openers, to vacant/ occupied indicators and occupancy time meters, to emergency call systems for disabled toilets as stipulated by the DIN 18040-1 standard. “For a long time, we purchased relay controllers and circuit boards, which we then had to painstakingly assemble,” recounts company manager and qualified electrician Steffen Seifert. “For the past three years we have been independently running LOGO!, and we have enhanced our solutions from unit to unit.” Seifert is thoroughly pleased with the possibilities the logic module offers: “LOGO! is small and low cost and will meet all our needs into the future too.” That is demonstrated in a highly practical way by a recent installation for the botanical gardens in Rostock, featuring a combined women’s and disabled-access cabin and a men’s cabin. A LOGO! 8 12/24RCE logic module with a DM16-24R digital expansion module and a LOGO!Power power supply unit combine to control multiple processes in a highly reliable setup. The system also can be reprogrammed, such as to adapt the opening times to those of the botanical 16 gardens or – with an added LOGO! CMR module – to upgrade the emergency call control with remote alarm transmission. Advanced access control LOGO! first controls access to the cabin. If it is vacant, the light above the door is lit green, and the electric door control keeps the door closed. When a user inserts a 50-cent coin into the slot or a disabled person uses the special access key, LOGO! activates the door opener, unlocking the door for 8 seconds. An externally mounted mechanical door closer closes the door, and the light turns red, indicating “occupied.” The controller also blocks the coin machine once a coin has been inserted in the slot, so no more can be inserted. When the user wishes to exit the cabin, he or she presses a large-format door-opener button. The door opens again for 8 seconds, then closes automatically and is kept closed by the door control. The light turns green again. LOGO! also features a timer to monitor occupancy of the cabins, with the maximum time currently limited to 30 minutes. If a user does not exit the cabin after 30 minutes, the door is automatically released and the coin machine re-enabled. A visual and acoustic signal inside the cabin warns the occupant one minute before this happens. LOGO! also permits opening and closing times to be set flexibly in line with the opening hours of the botanical gardens. When the gardens are closed overnight, between 6 p.m. and 7 a.m., and on Mondays all day, the toilets are out of service, though it is possible to exit from them at any time. Standards-compliant emergency call system In the disabled-access cabin, a pull-and-press emergency call button triggers a two-minute acoustic alarm, time limited in accordance with noise control The toilet units from Berger Raumsysteme GmbH are mobile and usable anywhere regulations, as well as a continuing visual alert. A red light and alarm signaler are located above the door on the left. An acoustic signal and a visual indicator (reassurance lamp) inside the cabin tell the person in need that help is being called. LOGO! additionally disables the door control so that the door is merely ajar and can be opened at any time. A reset button on the inside of the door cancels the emergency call and reactivates the system. Because there is always someone on-site at the botanical gardens, it is not necessary for the alarm to be relayed. “Nevertheless, that would be quite easy thanks to the LOGO! CMR communication module,” Seifert stresses. “We have in fact implemented such a system at another location – a public toilet facility in Ratzeburg. Emergency calls are sent by SMS text message to a security company and immediately relayed to the emergency services.” Berger Raumsysteme GmbH Berger Raumsysteme GmbH Mobile building systems | GO! 2/2015 LOGO! reliably controls access (right) units, for example. Seifert adds, “In one installation, at the customer’s request, we configured different opening times, which the customer is able to program simply by pressing a button on the LOGO! TDE external text display.” Not least, Seifert appreciates the “pleasingly simple” drag-and-drop programming using LOGO! Soft Comfort. And if he has any questions, the hotline is there to help. “It works great!” he says. If there is no local electrical contractor available to carry out necessary reprogramming, Seifert simply downloads the upgrade to a standard SD card and sends it to the customer. “All the customer then has to do is insert the SD card into the slot on the LOGO! unit to upload the program.” However, he is also looking to make use, sooner or later, of the remote service and remote programming options. Easy programming and reprogramming The coin mechanism could additionally be monitored by a contact to guard against theft. Also, if the customer so wished, LOGO! could initiate the flush as a self-cleaning process when the user enters the cabin or activate the heating. The display can indicate the opening times and the open/closed status of the INFO AND CONTACT siemens.com/logo britta.ballhause@siemens.com 17 GO! 2/2015 | Products Simatic ET 200SP More I/Os in a compact design ing and disconnecting of cables. In addition, two- or three-conductor sensors can be connected directly to the terminal strips with no additional hardware. Components such as the Simatic ET 200SP Energy Meter open up new possibilities, including energy consumption metering. The expanded functions with Simatic ET 200SP also offer the optimal value for money to which Simatic S7-1200 users are accustomed. Siemens AG I f more I/Os are needed in a plant than are allowed by the maximum of eight signal modules connectible to a Simatic S7-1200 (CPU 1217C), or if the I/Os are spread over a large area, the new basic interface modules of the Simatic ET 200SP distributed I/O system offer a good solution. These compact connection modules feature two integrated RJ45 ports for setting up a line structure, for example. The full ET 200SP range can be connected to the modules and used by the Simatic S7-1200. The new design and push-in clamping technology facilitate the wir- siemens.com/et200sp LOGO! web-based training Multilingual e-learning TIA Selection Tool Faster configuration W ith its web-based LOGO! 8 training, Siemens supports users with clearly structured training courses ranging from basic knowledge to professional project planning. The existing range of seven language options has been extended to include Czech, Polish, Portuguese, and Dutch. W ith the plant configuration functionality of the TIA Selection Tool, automation stations featuring Simatic S7-1200 can now be assembled even faster. Just specify the quantity of I/Os, and the corresponding components are automatically set up. The appropriate Simatic HMI panel can be selected at the same time as well. The programming software is built in. 18 The identified devices are set up in the TIA Selection Tool, and the required components are entered in the order list. The list can be forwarded directly to the Siemens Industry Mall to order the components. This eliminates input errors and enables cost estimates to be drawn up faster. siemens.com/tia-selection-tool Siemens AG Siemens AG siemens.com/logo8-wbt siemens.com/sitrain Publisher’s notice LOGO! CMK 2000 An intermediary between two worlds W ith the new LOGO! CMK 2000 communication module, LOGO! 8 can now be operated as an intelligent controller within the KNX building automation system. The communication module is connected to LOGO! 8 via a simple Ethernet connection. This means that the entire LOGO! hardware configuration can be used for KNX: 24 digital inputs, 20 digital outputs, 8 analog inputs, and 8 analog outputs. Projects are made more flexible, as up to 50 communication objects can be configured via KNX independently of their input and output points. LOGO! user programs can run independently of KNX, though LOGO! is also able to process signals from KNX sensors and industrial sensors as well as control actuators on LOGO! and/or on KNX. LOGO! can be used in the KNX system for time and date synchronization as both master and slave. The examples published in our magazine are suggestions that professionals can use as solutions for their own automation tasks. Proper use of LOGO! to control electrical systems and equipment requires knowledge of, and compliance with, the relevant laws, official safety regulations, standards, and procedures. Compliance must also be ensured with national regulations relating to accident prevention, the construction of electrical and mechanical systems, and electromagnetic compatibility as well as with relevant standards and safety regulations specific to the application. LOGO! may be installed and wired only by qualified professional electricians. Qualified professionals are personnel who are authorized to commission, ground, and label equipment; systems; and circuits in accordance with the standards of safety technology, and who are aware of – and follow – generally accepted technical rules as well as the applicable standards and regulations. Failure to comply with these instructions may result in considerable risk to people and assets. The manufacturer accepts no liability for improper use contrary to these safety instructions. siemens.com/logo As a tool for getting to know the KNX system, the KNX Association’s website provides a free version of ETS5 with which five devices per project can be configured. knx.org/knx-en/software/ets GO! 2/2015 Publisher: Siemens AG Digital Factory Division Factory Automation Gleiwitzer Straße 555 90475 Nuremberg Germany siemens.com/go siemens.com/s7-1200 Responsible for technical content: Heinz Eisenbeiss Editorial chair: Jutta Pfister Publishing house: Publicis Pixelpark Publishing Postfach 32 40, 91050 Erlangen, Germany magazines-industry@publicis.de Siemens AG Editors: Dorit Gunia, Robert Engelhardt, Marion Schwab The following products are registered trademarks of Siemens AG: ET 200, S7-300, S7-400, S7-1200, Siemens LOGO!, SIMATIC, SITRAIN, STEP, TIA Portal, Totally Integrated Automation (TIA), WinCC If trademarks, trade names, technical solutions, or similar are not listed above, this does not imply that they are not registered. The information provided in this magazine contains merely general descriptions or characteristics of performance, which in the case of actual use do not always apply as described or which may change as a result of further development of the products. An obligation to provide the respective characteristics shall exist only if expressly agreed in the terms of contract. GO! is published twice a year Volume 19 © 2015 by Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Munich and Berlin. All rights reserved. 19 ANZEIGE FOLGT siemens.com/logo LOGO! 8 Simply ingenious. Simply more. The logic module A new design, new hardware, new software: The perfect intelligent logic module for switching and control tasks in small-scale automation projects has launched the next generation! With LOGO! 8, it is even faster, easier, and more convenient to implement automation solutions for simple machines or systems, in building automation, and for applications in the private sector. This new LOGO! generation accommodates virtually every demand of customers with simplified handling. Impressive features include: • Innovative LOGO! display: twice as many characters per message for clear formulation of message texts and with selectable backlighting, such as red, to optically emphasize the current alarm status • Integrated Ethernet interface for the entire LOGO! 8 product family: communication and networking are easier than ever before • Remote communication via cellular phone network: text message communications for easy alerts and remote control • New external text display: more than twice as many characters as before and more options thanks to two Ethernet interfaces • New backward-compatible software in a new design: ingeniously simple operation, configuration, and programming in single and network mode Answers for industry.