Wednesday, March 6, 2013


Demo Shows PLC, RFID, Profinet, and Variable Frequency Drive Technology
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Demo Shows PLC, RFID, Profinet, and Variable Frequency Drive Technology


Conveyor picking and delivery, conveyor replenishment and new product spotlight: Simogear geared motor delivers 96% mechanical efficiency, NEMA class, for conveyor applications.

Universal Robots from Denmark, new to U.S. Market
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Universal Robots from Denmark, new to U.S. Market


6-axis articulated collaborative robots can work along side employees with no safety guarding, automatically stops when it comes into contact with human. Fast, accurate and flexible.

 Tolomatic ERD product family
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Tolomatic ERD product family


Stainless-steel ERD electric cylinders are ideal for food and beverage and other wash down environments, where corrosion resistance, compact size and flexible motor sizing are important.

 Staubli Robotics Fast Picker
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Staubli Robotics Fast Picker


New robotic technology for food processing and packaging applications, competes with Delta robots. 200 per minute, full repeatability to .05 mm throughout range of motion.

PLR Camera for Robotic De-racking Applications From Sick
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PLR Camera for Robotic De-racking Applications From Sick


Racks get bent and parts don’t always sit in the same place. This robot uses 2-D and 3-D camera to update its position for accurate picking of parts–-self-contained unit, no PC required, web-based interface can be set up and monitored from an HMI on the factory floor.

Helukabel—Flexible Wires and Cables
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Helukabel—Flexible Wires and Cables


Cables & wires (control and data cables, continuous flex cables, hook-up wires, VFD cables), data, network & bus technology (fiber optics, bus cables, industrial Ethernet cables), custom & specialty cables (special requirements, extreme environments, wind & solar power), robotic serv

IQ Motion System with MRJ4 Servos from Mitsubishi Electric
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IQ Motion System with MRJ4 Servos from Mitsubishi Electric


Feature vibration suppression and auto tuning—fiber optic motion bus makes it easy to program high-speed synchronous applications with a graphical user interface.

Robotics smoothes tote loading
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Robotics smoothes tote loading


Pack Flow Concepts showed a robotic system that takes individual packs from a tote or case and places them efficiently in a delivery tote.

Robotic picking at 300/min
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Robotic picking at 300/min


Schneider's Robotic cartoning and case-loading system uses a delta-style robot and a machine vision system to locate and pick items at speeds to 300/min.

A robot for $22,000?
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A robot for $22,000?


Baxter is a $22,000 robot from Rethink Robotics that performs repetitive tasks at modest speeds. Force-sensing technologies make it extremely safe for operation around human beings.

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Collaborative robot


Lightweight, collaborative robot designed by Universal Robots is meant to be used in close proximity with humans and can be moved around from position to position in the plant.

Dual-head robotic picking
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Dual-head robotic picking


The Motoman Robotics Div. of Yaskawa Americas featured a dual-head robotic picking system that handles up to 185 picks/min.

Robot picks 180/min
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Robot picks 180/min


High-speed packaging robot from Fanuc that is especially suitable for food and beverage applications does up to 180 picks/min.

Robotic picking in high speed
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Robotic picking in high speed


The TP80 fast picker from Stäubli Robotics is ideal for high speeds and low payloads with high accuracy.

Robotic programming simplified
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Robotic programming simplified


Labview library for a Yaskawa robot was on display at the National Instruments' Automate 2013 booth, and the demo included the use of a Sick Ranger laser 3D camera.
The Industrial communication network in my plant "Typical industrial network"

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Another Great breakthrough in pneumatic cylinders that will help decreasing system equipment and make things easier

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

My colleges in my graduation project are



Adel Elwakeel
His LinkedIn page http://www.linkedin.com/pub/adel-elwakeel/51/4a6/523   please visit his page and recommend him




Kareem El HaronyHis LinkedIn Page http://eg.linkedin.com/pub/kareem-el-harony/22/1b9/744 Please Visit his page and recommend him


Abdallah Rashed

Thursday, January 17, 2013





professional LabView programmer and developer is not an easy job it took a lot of time experience and a lot of effort and above all a lot of love and passion for programming and developing

Tuesday, January 15, 2013


Leadership in Automation 2012: First Team Honorees

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FILED IN:  Innovation
Automation World reports on how readers implement automation projects in order to improve their companies’ bottom lines. This annual survey helps you know which companies your peers have chosen as their “first team” suppliers.
It's human nature to go with whom you know, but if your project suddenly requires something new, or your vendor's service has changed for the worse and you're ready to consider an alternative, you need a short list. Automation World has shied away from the various “choice” awards programs since its founding in 2003. However, curiosity grew during 2010 from both the reader and supplier communities about which companies readers would choose to be on their “First Team” when choosing partners for automaton projects.
We cover both factory automation and process automation. Within those broad categories, we cover products ranging from control components to complete control and automation systems to manufacturing management software. Automation World  readers come from the ranks of engineering, management, operations and information technology. Given this comprehensive coverage, the list of potential categories is quite large. The results are a compilation of companies whom readers chose to be on their “First Team—Automation.”
Unaided recall
The Web-based survey was constructed that contained only categories so as to test something the market researchers call unaided recall—readers were not prompted with any pre-selected companies—and a request to vote was sent to our entire reader database several times. The downside of this totally open survey is that we had a number of people who still think there are companies named Allen-Bradley, Bailey and Modicon, for example. We linked those brands to the companies that own them now.
The other challenging thing—something I discovered when I made the transition from industry to publishing—centers on product category names. What we in publishing call certain technologies does not always coincide with names common in the field. With several hundred responses and nearly 50 categories, it was an interesting intellectual exercise to sort the responses. But my years in manufacturing made me a fanatic for accuracy. One other interesting item is that no suppliers tried to pad the voting—fewer than 0.5 percent of the total voters, to the best I could figure out, were from vendor companies.
Leadership in Automation
Vendors were allowed to participate in Automation World’s 
Leadership in Automation special advertising section, which is a compilation of formatted company profiles that can help you know more about companies you’re not familiar with. Those profiles appear in this issue and will remain online throughout 2012 to aid and inform you for next year’s survey. A company listed here as a 2011 First Team member may have a profile in that section, so you can learn more about them immediately.
Many listed on the First Team will not surprise you. They are major suppliers, and there is a reason that they are major. They have been around for some years and have built a loyal clientele. On the other hand, you will find some upstarts among the winners. There are companies that have changed their focus from components to solutions and have begun to promote themselves as full automation suppliers. See if any of these companies newer to the lists are ones you are doing business with today.
We had a satisfyingly large response to the request for input. Since there are so many categories, it did require a time commitment from those who responded. But watch for my emails coming later in 2013 so that you, too, can participate in next year’s survey. It will be interesting to see what companies rise to First Team status next year. And if there is a category or company you think was missed, let me know.
Automation World’s FIRST TEAM Leaders in Automation 2012