Packagers still seeking help on electronic components

Understanding electronics is critical to maintenance engineers, but it's also important to packaging engineers and more important than ever to machine operators, say our readers in PW's exclusive survey. Logic and software programming are also studied.

Chart 1A
Chart 1A

Conveyors and marking machines are the traditional mechanical components for packaging lines. But somewhat less understood is the burgeoning field of electronic controls. In Part Two of our exclusive survey on components, we focus on electronics components and on machine logic and software-and the plant people who need to be conversant with them.

Last month, our report on the survey (see Packaging World, Oct. '96, p. 76) covered the broad range of components and described which types of components packaging engineers specified and which types they knew most and least about.

In Part One engineers and other production executives from small to medium to large companies reported that mechanical components like conveyors and coding and marking machines were most familiar. Meanwhile, control language and PLSs (programmable limit switches) were least familiar. Machine vision systems, personal computers, programmable logic controllers, and sensors were also less familiar to many survey respondents.

In a few years, this ranking is likely undergo a major change. But in 1996, electronic controls are among the areas in packaging least familiar to many engineers and operations personnel. Thus, they rely heavily on vendors. The obvious conclusion is that many packaging people are in the midst of the shift from mechanical to electronic controls. While their experience makes them more comfortable with mechanicals and pneumatics, most recognize that they're beginning to climb the learning curve when it comes to electronics.

This Packaging World survey of readers was conducted with the help of Market Research Support Services (Itasca, IL), an independent research consultancy. It employed a comprehensive mail survey form and used the input of well over a hundred responses that closely matched the profile of our readers with about 50% in the food industry, 25% in the medical, pharmaceutical or chemical business and the balance from a wide variety of manufacturing businesses that includes industrial packaging.

Who needs to know?

Just how pervasive is electronically-controlled equipment in packaging? And which plant workers need to understand controls most? To find answers to these questions, the exclusive PW survey asked participants how important understanding electronic controls is to three types of packaging workers in the plant (Charts 1A, 1B, 1C).

For packaging mechanics, it's absolutely vital to understand electronic controls, our survey respondents declared emphatically. This knowledge is very important to the mechanic, said 92.3% of respondents. This validates the skills that were identified for the packaging mechanic in PW's Packaging 2000 series of job profiles (see PW, Oct. '96, p. 53). Another 6.2% of survey participants said this knowledge was relatively important, and only 1.5% felt these skills were unimportant.

Understanding electronic controls is very important to packaging engineers too, respondents say. Some 75% rate this knowledge as very important, while another 16.4% say it's relatively important for packaging engineers. Just 8.6% of the participants thought understanding electronics was unimportant for packaging engineers.

The survey also asked about electronic controls and the packaging machine operator. A big majority of survey respondents say that knowledge of electronic controls is relatively or very important to machine operators. Almost one-third of the respondents (32.6%) said this skill was very important, and another 43.2% rated it as relatively important.

One in four respondents (24.2%) claimed understanding of electronics was unimportant for machine operators. Although this ranking for machine operators surprised PW editors a bit, it reinforces the views of the "visionaries" who helped identify the skills of the packaging machine operator in the Packaging 2000 series of job profiles (see PW, Oct. '96, p. 53).

Heavy computer use

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