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:: Success Stories
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Rodenstock: Focus on Process
Efficiency with Omron |
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Our Client:
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Rodenstock Netherland
is a leading supplier of spectacle
lenses and frames. The Groningen based company is part of the
international Rodenstock Group, which, with a turnover in excess
of a thousand million guilders and 6,000 employees, is one of the
largest lens suppliers in the world. The Dutch division has a
leading-edge production unit for the manufacture of spectacle
lenses.
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Objective: |
Optimize the run-up to the coating
process of spectacle lenses with the aid of RFID tags and the
accompanying Omron readers. Fewer faults, less human input and
continuous information on the process status of the lenses. A
modest investment which has rapidly shown a huge return - a line
worth pursuing.
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Requirement:
All lenses look alike, so it is
important to make sure that the different pairs of lenses remain
recognisable to man and machine during the production process. "We were
looking for a way of increasing the reliability of product
identification by the logistical process," relates Harold Hollander, the
engineer responsible for the automation of Rodenstock production.
Omron Solutions:
"Up to that point we had been using bar-code stickers, but they were
not reliable in all stages of the coating preparation. The stickers
would come loose or get damaged and become unreadable, particularly
in the cleaning line. The idea of a solution based on RFID tags came up
incidentally, when an Omron representative showed them to us. We had
never thought of it ourselves, but on further reflection it looked
promising. The tags are resistant to high temperatures and to the
chemical solutions used in the cleaning process. To begin with we just
put tags on the racks for the specials as an experiment," said Harold
Hollander.
300 degrees Celsius The tags are the
size of a dress stud and consist of a high-quality plastic molding in
which the actual chip - the size of pinhead - is housed. "Initially we
had our doubts as to whether the tags would come through the cleaning
line unscathed," says Harold Hollander. "It works with widely divergent
temperatures, from 20 to 80 degrees Celsius, and some baths contain a
caustic solution, which could attack the plastic. As well as that, the
trays pass through a series of ultrasonic baths and we were afraid that
the frequencies (40 kHz upwards) could erase the data from the chip. For
these reasons we ran a number of tests and the tags came through without
any problems. "The tags have now passed through the experimental stages
and Rodenstock is preparing to furnish all 5000 trays with tags in the
near future. "The investment is relatively small and the rewards are
great both in functionality and in terms of costs," says Harold
Hollander.
"At the moment the tags are only
programmed once," explains Pier Nijenhuis, system designer at Rodenstock.
"Shortly we are going to write to the tags at each stage in the process,
so that we can have current status information throughout production.
The bar-code stickers will disappear completely. Also, we can still
continue to read the tags during production using a simple hand scanner,
and print out an order form at the end of the process." It is really
easy to integrate the system into the other IT systems that Rodenstock
uses, and even communication with the corresponding PLCs is simple,
according to Nijenhuis. "At the moment we use Visual Basic, but you can
also use other programming languages, thanks to the ASCII interface."

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Rodenstock chose
Omron because:
"Omron delivered a total package based
on open standards. Tags, PLCs,
readers and software integrate seamlessly so there have been no problems
with implementation. The risk of logistical errors during production
will soon be negligible. It is all much more efficient and simple," said
Nijenhuis.

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