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Mesh sensor networking demand increasing
San Diego, CA - Demand
for wireless sensor networking in manufacturing is increasing largely
because of users anticipating increased reliability and scalability
of mesh networking, according to a recent study by ON
World Inc. With thousands of nodes per network likely to be
commonplace within five years, the research firm projects that 168
million nodes could be deployed in 2010, which it says would constitute
a $5.9-billion end-user market.
'High return on investment, low
replacement costs, and ever-increasing pressure to cut costs, make
wireless sensor networking suitable for industrial systems,' says
Charlie Chi, a senior analyst at ON World.
Besides potentially reducing
wiring costs 50-70%, ON World adds that wireless sensor networks
enable real-time data sharing throughout a facility, and increase
industrial efficiency and productivity. The company reports that
replacing wired systems, such as DeviceNet, Modbus and other fieldbuses,
with wireless sensor networking can deliver advantages, such as
larger-scale networking, real-time monitoring, and enabling new
applications.
ON states that wireless sensor
networking can give users and their application a competitive advantage
via cost savings, maximized equipment lifecycles, process optimization,
and prevention of unplanned downtimes. ON claims that many users
can save up to 10 times their initial wireless networking investment
per year.
Mesh’s advantages
By further increasing reliability, robustness and flexibility, while
reducing overall costs, mesh wireless sensor networking also promises
to revolutionize wireless networking in the fault-intolerant world
of industrial process automation. Mesh networking can ease adoption
of real-time process equipment monitoring and distributed networking.
The major benefits of wireless sensor networking are reduced wiring
costs and eliminating connectors. Mesh networking’s other advantages
often include:
- Improved installation and self-configuring/healing
networking capabilities;
- Easier maintenance for increased reliability;
Improved flexibility allowed by widespread remote monitoring and
improved control; and
- Large scale networks enabled by thousands
of potential nodes per network.
Control Engineering Daily News Desk
Jim Montague, news editor
jmontague@reedbusiness.com
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