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Learn about the development of a new non-contact laser gauge that accurately measures the length and speed of moving products. Discover its advantages over traditional measurement methods and explore three application examples. Presented by Les Jensen, Chief Engineer at Beta LaserMike.
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ICE USA 2011 Technical Program The Development of a New Non-Contact Laser Gauge That Can Measure the Length and Speed of Moving Product with High Accuracy Les Jensen, Beta LaserMike Presented by: Les Jenson Chief Engineer Beta LaserMike BETA LaserMike
Introduction • Technology of a Non-Contact Length and Speed gauge • Describe how it works • Three applications examples: • Corrugated Box application • Roofing Products application • Sanitary Products application
Traditional Length & Speed Measurements • Accomplished by using a roller that contacts the material being measured • The material turns the roller as the material moves • An encoder or tachometer is attached to the roller • Generates pulses as the wheel or roller rotates • Relies on friction between the material and roller
Disadvantages Tachometers/Encoders • Error caused by slippage • Dependent on tension • Product surface • Lubricant on surface • Recalibration • Diameter change because of wear • Diameter change because of build-up • Maintenance • Bearings and other mechanical parts wear out
LaserSpeed History • LaserSpeed technology was developed in 1984 • Aluminum/Steel Mills • Small integrated gauge developed in 2001 • Smaller • Cheaper • Easy to Install • High Accuracy – 0.05%
Non-Contact Laser Gauge • Compete System in one small rugged package • Sensor • Processor • I/O • Power Supply • 24 VDC operation • IP67 protection • Built-in water cooling ports 26.25 X 20.67 X 10.5 cm 2.54 Kilograms
System Concept FPGA- Signal processing PCB Laser diode assembly with temperature control Proprietary beams steering optics and receiving optics Measuring region
Non-Contact Gauge Technology Two laser beams cross at an angle 2K. K bisects the two laser beams Constructive and Destructive Interference cause a Fringe Pattern The Fringe Pattern consists of light and dark stripes.
Fringe Pattern Expanded • Constructive Interference occurs when two laser beams are in phase and add together to equal the original laser density - light stripe • Destructive Interference occurs when two laser beams are out of phase and the two laser beams cancel each other out - dark stripe
Fringe Pattern Generation • Fringe Pattern looks like an elongated football • Measuring region (Depth of Field) is where the fringe pattern exist • Project this fringe pattern on the surface of the product to be measured
Laser Doppler Velocimetry (LDV) Theory Fringe direction
Non-Contact Gauge Block Diagram -Dual-Beam Laser Interferometer DiodeLaser Acusto-Optical Modulator Product Optical Beam Splitter Photo -Detector Received Light Receiving Lens (15mm) Fringe Direction Measurement Region
No Calibration Required • Wave length of the laser is fixed and constant • Laser diode based system • Laser diode is temperature controlled • Crossing angle is created optically • All optics are glued in place • Crossing angle is permanently fixed • Fringe Spacing ‘d’ is fixed and cannot change
No Calibration Required • Frequency measurement uses an all Digital Signal Processor • Autocorrelation algorithm • High measurement rate • High measurement accuracy • High measurement repeatability • Signal processor is all digital and has no drift or measurement error
No Calibration Required • Length is achieved by numerically integrating the speed • Permanently calibrated with very high accuracy
Corugated Box Application • Drawing Paperboard through a gear-like cylinder • Makes the web into waves • Glue applied to tips • Pressed against a liner • Continuous process • Needs to be cut into precise lengths
Problem • There are frequent product change-overs • Requires the corrugated board to be sheered 90 feet before the cutter • Knives are used to cut the corrugated board into the target lengths • Cut signal was controlled from and encoder attached to a roller • Roller had slippage especially when during the change-over
Problem cont. • Slippage error during change-over caused the cut length to be out of specification • Roller had excessive slippage because of high speed changes during change-over • 90 feet of corrugated board had to be scraped each time a change-over occurred
Scrap Cost Calculation • Scrap 90 foot for each change-over • Average 25 change-over/day • Cost of corrugated board/foot = $0.25 • Scrap cost 90 X 25 X 0.25 X 30 = $16.875/month or $202,500/year
Solution • Installed non-contact laser gauge just upstream of the cutting knives • Non-contact gauge has no slippage errors • Were able to cut the corrugated board to target length even during a change-over • Potential saving of $202,500/Year • Reduced maintenance costs • No recalibration • No moving parts to wear out
Roofing Product Application • Premium Quality Organic Mat • Saturated with high-grade asphalt • Dried • Slit to width • Cut to length
Problem • Tension problems cause slippage errors • Slippage error - 1% to 2% • Wheel wear caused calibration errors • Calibration is directly proportional to the circumference of the wheel • The circumference wears because of the abrasive property of the roofing material • Down time for recalibration • Wear of the bearings caused maintenance problems
Scrap Cost Calculation • Average slippage error – 1.5% • Average line speed 210 Ft/min • Operation 22 hours/day, 355 days/year • Product cost – $0.06/ft • Scrap cost 0.015 X 210 X 60 X 22 X 355 X $0.06 = $88,500/year
Solution • Non-contact laser gauge was installed just Upstream of the cutter • Non-contact gauge has no slippage errors • Potential saving of $88,500/Year • Reduced maintenance costs • No recalibration • No moving parts to wear out
Sanitary Products Application • Manufactures adult diapers, pads, liners and pull-on style disposable underwear • Slitting and cut-to-length requirements
Problem • Lubricants caused slippage errors – 2.5% • Slippage errors always make the product length long • 2.5% slippage error on a 1000 foot makes the actual length 1025 foot • Give away 25 foot for every 1000 foot produced
Scrap Cost Calculation • Manufacture produces between $2 to $4M of product on this line per year • Over length error of 2.0% cost between $40,000 and $80,000/year/machine
Solution • Non-contact laser gauge was installed on in-feed side of parent roll • Non-contact gauge has no slippage errors • Potential saving of $40,000 to 80,000/Year • Reduced maintenance costs • No recalibration • No moving parts to wear out
Summary Non-Contact Laser Gauge Advantages • No slippage error - optical system and does not contact the product • Permanently calibrated – Laser Interferometer Optical system • No moving parts to wear out • Accuracy: +/-0.05% • Repeatability: +/-0.02%