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STANDARDS FOR FIREWIRE WITH '1394 AUTOMATION'
06 December 2002 - Nyquist Industrial Control

A number of European companies and organisations have come together in the 1394 Automation Group, as the result of an initiative taken by Nyquist Industrial Control (The Netherlands) and Wago Kontakttechnik (Germany). This group will define a solution that will enable different controllers to communicate on the same FireWire bus. For the FireWire implementation it is important that there is agreement on a set of specifications. Through standards FireWire IEEE 1394 will gain a strong position in the market. 1394 Automation was proudly presented at the SPS/iPC Drives Exhibition and Conference in Nürnberg in November 2002.

A number of European companies and organisations have come together in the 1394 Automation Group, as the result of an initiative taken by Nyquist Industrial Control (The Netherlands) and Wago Kontakttechnik (Germany). This group will define a solution that will enable different controllers to communicate on the same FireWire bus. For the FireWire implementation it is important that there is agreement on a set of specifications. Through standards FireWire IEEE 1394 will gain a strong position in the market. 1394 Automation was proudly presented at the SPS/iPC Drives Exhibition and Conference in Nürnberg in November 2002.

To establish FireWire standards, you need knowledge of different technologies like motion, drives, vision and I/O. Therefore, Nyquist and Wago approached companies that could be interested in joining them. They managed to gather a group of inspired companies who believe in the power of FireWire and they are now working together under the name of '1394 Automation'. 'From the start, the technical questions were the focus of our work', says Dr. Thomas Albers, Technical Director Electronics of Wago. 'No 'political' discussions disturbed our progress. Right now, we are working on marketing aspects so that we are prepared for opening up the group to a large number of interested companies.'

Wago and Nyquist defined the implementation layout, which is as open as possible. All participating companies will be able to develop products on their own and in such a way that they can all bring in their own unique functionality without interfering with others who are on the same bus. You can compare it with a road along which trucks, cars, bicycles, and even pedestrians travel, without causing accidents, because they obey a minimum set of traffic rules.

'All the companies that take part in the 1394 Automation group already have experience with FireWire', says Twan Smetsers, Director Marketing & Services of Nyquist. 'Some implement FireWire in their systems like Basler and Nyquist do, other participants develop a FireWire-based product, like Wago and Stöber do.' In addition to this, the group wants an independent institute to implement the defined layout for the software. This will be the reference implementation for the standard', according to Smetsers. This standard implementation must then, together with the certification, lead to an accepted interoperable standard. That means that only the message mechanism will be determined, not the content of the messages.

Albers has high expectations of 1394 Automation. 'Finally, it is a user group where the users of FireWire will find a platform to define the next steps of FireWire in automation. It must ensure that the dramatic technical progress of this communication tool, driven by the consumer world, is guided in the right manner for the purposes of industry. The work that has been done up to now, must result in internationally accepted standards, based on the IEEE 1394 standard.'

Current participants in 1394 Automation are: Basler Vision Technologies, Control Techniques, Moteurs Leroy Somer France, Fraunhofer IPT/WZL Aachen, Kollmorgen Seidel group of Danaher Motion, Lust Antriebstechnik, maxon motor, Nyquist Industrial Control, Stöber Antriebstechnik and Wago Kontakttechnik.

http://www.nyquist.com

About: Nyquist Industrial Control
Nyquist has a long and rich history. A history that goes back to the beginning of the early seventies, when the company was still part of Philips. Since then, the organisation has played a pioneering role in the field of high-quality Motion Control systems, VME and PLC machine control platforms.

The foundations for the present-day company Nyquist Industrial Control were paved in the seventies. This happened when the first standardised servo system was developed, initially created for Philips' internal machine building. This led to a large international installed base, both within and outside of our own organisation. For instance, the doors of the Dutch Railways' trains are still fitted with VME-based control systems from Nyquist. And then just think of all the automatically opening bridges, traction systems, trams, machines for making glass moulds, embroidering machinery, pastry-making machines, ships' terminals, incinerators and water purification plants.


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