Product category:
Engineering Education, Resources and Standards
News Release from: ODVA
Edited by the Engineeringtalk Editorial
Team on 19 May 2006
Auto industry adopts industrial Ethernet
standard
The United States Council for Automotive Research has agreed to support EtherNet/IP as the industrial Ethernet network standard for plant floor applications in vehicle assembly facilities.
The United States Council for Automotive Research (USCAR) has agreed to support EtherNet/IP as the industrial Ethernet network standard for plant floor applications in vehicle assembly facilities To further this agreement, USCAR is proceeding with specific initiatives to accelerate its adoption in the US vehicle assembly operations of its three member companies - DaimlerChrysler Corporation, Ford Motor Company and General Motors Corporation
This article was originally published on Engineeringtalk on 15 Nov 2005 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
Project aims for new CIP network standard
A new project seeks to develop a network targeted at simple sensors and actuators.
CAE technology conference attracts big guns
This year's Altair Technology Conference will take place on 2nd November at the Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon.
In the first of its initiatives directed at EtherNet/IP, USCAR is working with ODVA, the organisation that manages the EtherNet/IP specification, to identify aspects of network performance that have the most impact on real-time control applications that are typical in vehicle assembly operations and developing reporting criteria for specific network performance parameters.
One result will be that purchasers of EtherNet/IP devices will be able to make better purchase decisions by analysing published performance parameters for specific devices and choosing the device that best meets the performance requirements of each application.
Adjunct to the USCAR agreement, the United States National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and ODVA, the organisation that manages and publishes the EtherNet/IP Specification, have entered into a co-operative research and development agreement (CRADA) to research and develop industry standards and test methodologies for performance parameters of EtherNet/IP devices.
The CRADA will be conducted in two phases.
Phase One will consist of research and development activities at NIST's Manufacturing Engineering Laboratory in Gaithersburg, Maryland, to identify performance metrics and methodologies along with reporting standards.
Further reading
Jargon buster cuts through the ATEX jungle
ABB has published an "ATEX jargon buster" that helps motor users cut through the jungle of terms and definitions that make up the new ATEX Directives.
New general manager for drives, motors, machines
Steve Ruddell is the new general manager of ABB's drives, motors and machines division in the UK.
Government needs to support vocational training
The Government needs to be more supportive of firms willing to participate in vocational qualifications and training schemes, a West Midlands' engineering company has warned
Phase Two of the CRADA will consist of activities at ODVA's Technology and Training Center in Ann Arbor, Michigan, to establish commercial test capability at the facility to conduct and certify the results of performance tests.
"USCAR's work with EtherNet/IP in support of its nationwide application in US automotive assembly facilities is a prime example of USCAR's ability to collaborate on research and apply its results in a way that advances the US automotive industry as a whole", said Don Walkowicz, executive director of USCAR.
"The decision to support EtherNet/IP by our members - DaimlerChrysler, Ford and General Motors - and their executive leadership, demonstrates their confidence in EtherNet/IP and its potential to be an important enhancement to US automotive manufacturing".
Introduced in 2001, EtherNet/IP is the most developed, proven and complete industrial Ethernet network solution available for manufacturing today and is supported by over 150 vendors around the world.
EtherNet/IP extends commercial off-the-shelf Ethernet and Internet technology to the factory floor and provides a comprehensive suite of network messages and services needed for manufacturing automation applications.
As such, EtherNet/IP has the potential to improve manufacturing efficiencies in automotive assembly operations and the ability of automotive companies to respond to changes in their manufacturing requirements.
"USCAR's agreement to support EtherNet/IP in plant floor applications indicates that the US manufacturing sector will likely see a significant expansion in the use of industrial Ethernet, and specifically EtherNet/IP, for real-time control applications", states Katherine Voss, Executive Director of ODVA.
"The collaboration between NIST and ODVA to make available user-relevant performance metrics for EtherNet/IP devices will provide manufacturers with a tool to increase their efficiencies and thus, maximise their return on investment from automation deployments using EtherNet/IP".
The USCAR member companies are expected to require certified performance test reports for EtherNet/IP devices starting in 2007.
ODVA anticipates that the US automotive industry will see an increase in the use of EtherNet/IP in PLC-to-PLC communications and robotics applications such as welding, gluing, nut running and clinching.
The NIST and ODVA CRADA is an outgrowth of the United States Alliance for Technology and Engineering for Automotive Manufacturing, which is bringing together scientists and engineers from NIST and USCAR to conduct collaborative research that has the potential to contribute to the future competitiveness of the US automotive industry.
• ODVA: contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Engineeringtalk email newsletter
• Engineeringtalk Home Page

