Oriented to Industry 4.0
As valve design evolves with the onboarding of electronics, so does the understanding of how machines perform. Industries want to get smarter, more efficient and cut costs, and they want to be able to do more predictive maintenance, pointed out Eichler.
The synergistic integration of digital and mechatronic technologies means that industrial valves are better equipped to monitor and perform online diagnostics and to provide more efficient control. This applies to off-highway/on-highway types of equipment, too.
Consider the efficiency of an automated side-load garbage disposal truck, where a driver controls a mechanical arm from the side of the truck. Older trucks depend on lever-operated directional control valve actuation. Newer machines, by contrast, use sequence valves or may have onboard electronics and advanced sensing integrated in the hydraulic system that complete the action with one push of a button or lever. “You’re getting away from lots of hoses and mechanical linkages, and you’re running wires, and you’re pushing a button,” Eichler said.
Along with new compact design and productivity gains come health and safety benefits, too. Automation diminishes the physical strain in manual labor routines, as well as moves operators out of harm’s way, Eichler said.
If “smart” is the end goal, technologies that support hydraulic functions are anything but lagging. “If manufacturers try to do everything and make every valve capable of sensing anything we can imagine, then it’s probably never going to be a cost-competitive solution for the end user,” he said.
Instead, the preference is to work with OEMs and their end users on a case-by-case basis and to understand what their process of collecting data is. Eichler suggests asking troubleshooting questions: “What will they use it for? How will they use it? And at what level is it valuable? Is this something they need to be checking minute-by-minute, hour-by-hour, day-by-day?” Depending on the application, all of these types of changes can be built into different valves.
“We want to make sure we’re not just putting together toys for engineers,” quipped Eichler. “The more whistles and bells that a valve has can be great. Sometimes you need that built into the valve because it alerts you to track something that you didn’t think was important and teaches you something about your machine. But it comes down to size and cost and that total value proposition.”