Factory Field Notes
Industrial automation Q&A: a consultant answers six of the most consequential career and modernization questions facing engineers and managers in manufacturing today. Real questions, no vendor pitch, no oversimplified answers. From legacy PLC migration to the polymath trap, this episode walks through the operating decisions quietly shaping plant floors across the country right now. Subscribe for weekly conversations on industrial automation, manufacturing modernization, and the operational decisions that separate plants that scale from plants that stall. Learn more at Joltek: - Rockwell PLC Lifecycle and Migration Guide: https://www.joltek.com/blog/rockwell-plc-lifecycle-migration-guide [https://www.joltek.com/blog/rockwell-plc-lifecycle-migration-guide] - Control System Modernization Strategy: https://www.joltek.com/blog/control-system-modernization-strategy [https://www.joltek.com/blog/control-system-modernization-strategy] - Systems Modernization and Risk Management: https://www.joltek.com/services/service-details-systems-modernization-risk-management [https://www.joltek.com/services/service-details-systems-modernization-risk-management] - Recruiting Robotics and Automation Talent for Small Manufacturers: https://www.joltek.com/blog/recruiting-robotics-automation-small-manufacturers [https://www.joltek.com/blog/recruiting-robotics-automation-small-manufacturers] This episode opens with a project that has been getting a lot of attention from controls engineers building interview portfolios. A candidate built a virtualized material handling system in Factory IO, controlled it almost entirely in structured text on CODESYS, used Inductive Automation Ignition for the SCADA layer with role based perspective sessions, and ran the architecture across a PC, an EtherNet/IP network, and a tablet client. From a hiring manager perspective, the project is impressive. The harder question is whether it converts in an interview. If the plant runs Allen-Bradley Studio 5000 or Siemens TIA Portal, the hiring engineer often does not give a CODESYS portfolio full credit even when the architecture is more advanced than what the role requires. The practical move is to bring the demo on a tablet, prepare to defend the design choices in plain operational terms, and ideally re implement a slice of the project on whatever platform the target company actually runs. That last step is what turns an interesting candidate into a hireable one. The second question is the one every plant manager with aging infrastructure should be asking. A maintenance team spent a weekend cleaning up the wireway and reseating cards in an Allen-Bradley PLC 5 panel on a lumber sorter at a sawmill. The panel now looks excellent. The underlying business risk did not change. The Rockwell Automation PLC 5 line has been discontinued for years. Replacement I/O cards, specialty modules, Data Highway Plus interfaces, and ControlNet remnants now move through eBay, part auctions, and a shrinking pool of distributors at prices that increasingly exceed new CompactLogix or ControlLogix hardware. Spending engineering and skilled trades hours to revamp an obsolete asset without addressing the migration path is a capital allocation problem disguised as a maintenance project. For most plants running PLC 5 on a production critical line, the right next step is a migration plan to CompactLogix or ControlLogix, scoped honestly around the specialty modules and protocols still in use. The third question is the kind every operations leader recognizes. A family business inherited a three axis die casting robotic arm from 1991. The robot was acquired secondhand, never used, and someone stripped every wire from the cabinet for copper value before they took possession. The owner is asking whether to wire it back to the original terminal numbers or use the project as an excuse to modernize the PLC, the HMI, and the VFD. The honest answer from anyone who has lived through this kind of project: start by collecting part numbers from the largest components, retrieve the program backups if any exist, call the OEMs for the SEW Eurodrive, the legacy Siemens controller, and the robotic system, and price the migration before touching a wire. If the migration path is brutal and the business cannot afford the timeline, the better capital decision is often to retire the asset and source a functional secondhand unit rather than spend two years of part time effort getting a 35 year old machine back to a marginal state of operation. Connect with Joltek: Website: https://www.joltek.com [https://www.joltek.com] Book a Modernization Consultation: https://www.joltek.com/book-a-modernization-consultation [https://www.joltek.com/book-a-modernization-consultation] All Services: https://www.joltek.com/services Timestamps 0:00 Intro 0:30 Home lab project in CODESYS and Ignition, interview worthiness 5:40 About Vladimir and Joltek 6:18 Allen-Bradley PLC 5 cleanup versus full migration on a lumber sorter 10:18 Rewiring a 1991 three axis robotic arm with no documentation 18:30 Polymath or specialist, the honest career conversation 29:00 PLC programming versus troubleshooting in real organizations 35:30 Essential skills to break in as a PLC technician
4 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Factory Field Notes!