How a
Photoelectric Sensor Saved My Job
By Larry Bush

In 1996 I was employed as maintenance supervisor at an olive cannery in the
heart of California's fertile San Joaquin valley. We were restarting the cannery
after an extended shutdown while the cannery changed owners. This was my first
opportunity to work in the food industry and a cannery. There were issues
for me to learn and learn fast. The new harvest season's olives were due to
start arriving just four weeks after I was hired.
Only four of the previous maintenance personnel were available to be rehired,
so things were looking a little bleak at times. None of the new mechanics or
electricians had food industry experience, either. In addition, there were
almost no blueprints or wiring diagrams for the entire cannery or processing
plant.
However, on the scheduled startup day, everything ran. Our two main lines
used Angelus 60L Seamers with a maximum output capability of 600 cans per
minute. That figures out to ten cans per second. That's faster than I can count.
The Seamers seal the end cap onto the cans. Due to space limitations, new,
spiral elevators had been designed and added by the previous owners. The
elevators and controls had been wired up but they never ran prior to shutdown.
We started up slow, but problems immediately surfaced. The discharge line
from the spiral elevator to the cooker was a plastic cable line. Cans could tip
over and jam. When the can jam-up backed cans into the discharge from the spiral
elevator and then round and round the elevator. It took a considerable effort
and time to remove the jammed cans from the elevator.
A photoelectric sensor with a reflective lens was installed on the
discharge cable line about six inches from the can entry to the discharge cable
line. This sensor was designed and connected to stop the seamer and elevator
when a jam-up occurred. The sensor had to see an opening between the cans,
operate on/off, or it would shut down the elevator.
It turned out that the photoelectric sensor could only be adjusted to stay on
all the time or off all the time when the cans were going by at any higher rate
than Jog speed on the Seamer. We adjusted and adjusted the sensors. The sensors
were replaced with new sensors. It did no good. The lines were stopped while we
traced all the control and power wiring so we could try to determine if there
was a problem in the wiring.
When I looked around, the Plant Manager, accompanied by the company
President, Vice President and the Financial Controller were standing to the side
watching me. All four of them had their arms crossed and unreadable expressions
on their faces. I knew I was in trouble and had to get on top of this problem in
a hurry.
Finally, I determined that the previous engineer had ordered an incorrect
application for the original photoelectric sensors. I looked up the
specifications for the installed sensors and found that their response time was
not fast enough to "see" the cans as they went by. I looked in an
Allen-Bradley sensor book for a photoelectric sensor with a fast response time,
able to withstand the harsh environment of a cannery (steam and water),
and would continue operation even when subjected to lots of vibration.
The photoelectric sensor I decided on was the Allen-Bradley
Series 4000B Bulletin 42RL. This sensor has a response time of 5
milliseconds. That time was faster than our requirements. The case of the sensor
is designed for harsh environments and kept the steam and wash-down water from
entering the delicate, control circuitry area of the sensor. The vibrations from
the elevator and the cable line had no effect on the solid state wiring of the
sensor.
After installation, the sensor was connected and pre-adjusted for the can
stream. The sensor kept the cable line and elevator running and was
"seeing" the individual cans. We physically simulated a jam-up of cans
on the cable line. When the cans backed up to the sensor, the sensor operated
and shut down the spiral elevator and opened the clutch on the seamer,
stopping line production.
There remained only some fine tuning of the sensor as we ramped up to top
speed of between 550 and 570 cans per minute. Again, we had a
"command" audience of the top company officers for our startup. When
the lines started and continued running or stopped on a can backup with no
corresponding elevator jam, there were smiles all around. My job was safe.
Most of the can jams on the cable line were reduced to acceptable levels by
the work of the Cookroom Manager and his Seamer Operators/Mechanics. They
reworked the can drops and built-in several can cutouts. The can cutouts are
places where a can lying on its side will be ejected from the cable line,
thereby eliminating an almost certain jam in a can drop or at the Cooker
entrance. By reworking the can drops, can jams in the drops were almost totally
eliminated.
Besides the fact that I kept my job, I learned that anyone can make a mistake
and, when in doubt, check the factory specifications of the equipment you are
working with.
Larry Bush
Also watch for more articles by Larry Bush at ...
http://www.bin95.com/news/news.htm
About the Author: Larry Bush has
been an electrician for 47 years, and in maintenance management for 22 years. Download
his new e-Book "Maintenance
Policy and Procedures Manual" !!
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