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Engineering Education, Resources and Standards
News Release from: CC-Link Partner Association
Edited by the Engineeringtalk Editorial
Team on 26 November 2007
Polish universities receive fieldbus
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Donated equipment will be used by both undergraduates on general engineering and production courses and postgraduates studying robotics and automation in greater detail.
Three of Poland's most prestigious universities have installed over Eur 25,000 worth of CC-Link open fieldbus automation as part of their drive to ensure that the next generation of engineers are fully conversant with state of the art manufacturing technology Much of the equipment was donated by members of the CLPA (CC-Link Partners Association)
This article was originally published on Engineeringtalk on 24 Jul 2008 at 8.00am (UK)
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It will be used by both undergraduates on general engineering and production courses and postgraduates studying robotics and automation in greater detail.
The recipient universities were Warsaw, Gliwice and Krakow.
In Krakow alone there are about 150 students undertaking full-time general automation studies and another 30 extramural students of automation and robotics who will all use this equipment.
Typical classes are groups of 15, with each student averaging around 30 hours of hands-on fieldbus network training per semester.
Polish universities have only been teaching automation for about 15 years.
Prior to the 1990s few PLCs were used in the country's industrial base, so educationalists concentrated on more traditional disciplines.
However since then change has been rapid and there is now a thirst to ensure that Poland and its engineers are well versed in all modern technologies.
Steve Jones, UK General Manager of CLPA Europe, explains: "Some of the first PLCs into Poland were Mitsubishi".
"I don't know if this was by chance or design, but it meant the country learned on Japanese equipment, which became a de facto favourite".
"Over the years more and more equipment was installed as the manufacturing base automated, much of this resulting from foreign direct investment from Japan and Asia".
So it was natural that when Poland started adopting open communications technologies that they would look to Japan for a lead.
CC-Link is the market leader in Japan, and also in China and throughout Asia.
Understanding that Poland needs to export and appreciating how much manufacturing and machine building is now undertaken in the Far East, professors at Polish universities had no hesitation in selecting CC-Link for their Open communications training programmes.
"People who use CC-Link have a natural advantage when it come to doing business in Asia", says Jones: "and that is increasingly tantamount to saying they have an advantage across the whole world". Request free introductory details about products from CC-Link Partner Association ...
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