Phoenix provides assembly marking advice

A Phoenix Contact product story
Edited by the Engineeringtalk editorial team Dec 18, 2008

When assembling today's control cabinets and mechatronic systems, the marking of equipment, terminals and conductors is an increasingly complex process.

If each component and conductor can be identified quickly and without confusion, startup, operation and maintenance become easier.

The \'Project Clip advanced\' planning software directly converts design data into label data.

The \'Project Clip advanced\' planning software directly converts design data into label data.

High-quality, high-legibility labelling and a well-organised ID system are the hallmarks of system quality.

Electrical engineering labels are increasingly more elaborate, indicating information about the plant, location, source/target, etc.

A good marking system, for use in planning through to production, has three tiers: software, hardware, and label stock.

CAE systems provide the basis for all label data required for conductors, terminals, and equipment.

No matter whether the system is Eplan, Elcad, E3, Promise E, Ruplan, or AutoCAD electric, Phoenix Contact's 'Clip Project advanced' labelling and planning software can import the identification data of all standard electrical engineering systems.

When the data is imported, the most suitable label stock is suggested and sorted automatically.

If required, the user can also specify preferences, such as stock type.

Manual input is no longer necessary, and any human error introduced by redundant input is prevented.

Descriptive texts are available to help users assign the labelling items to plants and locations.

The software automatically determines the size and number of characters for each label.

With this system, the identification data that was entered during the planning/design stage applies all the way through to production.

Excel or ASCII-formatted label data can also be imported, again with a mouse-click.

The field data is positioned on the label stock via drag-and-drop, and a preview window displays the final format before the label is printed.

The software enables pixel-accurate printing on thermal transfer printers, plotters, and Phoenix Contact's Bluemark X1 printer.

In today's industries, projects are increasingly worked on in multiple locations, often even in multiple countries.

The software's Unicode capabilities address this, providing labelling in any required language.

Label texts can even be printed in Chinese or Japanese.

Even vector and pixel-based images can be positioned and printed without any problems.

The technology behind the 'Clip Project advanced' software is forward-compatible and designed to work with Microsoft's Vista operating system.

Software updates are automatically issued via the internet.

The specific demands placed on conductor, terminal and equipment labels often mean that different printers need to be used.

Thermal transfer printers and plotters are frequently used for labels destined for production environments.

Both the operating procedures and the stock vary for these, and the manual reloading of a plotter's cartridges can be time-consuming.

If solvent-based inks are used, this may make the labels susceptible to environmental influences such as humidity and temperature; plotter pens, on the other hand, quickly dry up if used irregularly and if the plotter is situated in a low-humidity environment.

Phoenix Contact's Bluemark X1 printer is a universal system for industrial labelling requirements.

Its main advantages are that it can print onto all types of labels, and that image files can be printed effortlessly at a mouse-click.

The process reliability of the Bluemark X1 is almost completely unaffected by environmental conditions and ensures a consistently high print quality.

The demands placed on label stock are multifaceted.

The stock should be fast and easy to process so that as little time as possible is spent on actual label production.

Halogen and silicone-free stocks that comply with flammability class V2 (UL 94 regulation) will satisfy most industrial labelling demands.

Phoenix Contact's Universal Card label strips are designed for marking conductors, terminals and equipment in a standardised format.

In combination with the Bluemark X1 printer, these label strips will always produce a pixel-accurate label printout.

Their standardised format further simplifies labelling with existing plotter systems.

Phoenix Contact's marking system - ranging from planning software to printer to label stock - integrates all the processes encountered in label creation into one smooth workflow.

The engineering systems provide the identification data, while the marking system provides an integrated system for the fast and uncomplicated production of terminal, conductor and equipment labels.

Not what you're looking for? Search the site.

Back to top Back to top

Google Ads

 

Contact Phoenix Contact

Related Stories

Contact Phoenix Contact

 

Newsletter sign up

Request your free weekly copy of the Engineeringtalk email newsletter ...

Articles by product category

All suppliers A - Z

A Pro-talk Publication

A Pro-talk publication