ISCOT AT MICHELIN'S INNOVATION DAY

Iscot Italia participated in Michelin’s Innovation Day, a unique meeting of 22 companies and 200 employees based on sharing ideas in the name of innovation.

ISCOT AT MICHELIN'S INNOVATION DAY

Iscot Italia participated in Michelin’s Innovation Day, a unique meeting of 22 companies and 200 employees based on sharing ideas in the name of innovation.

The pressing need to offer a ‘tailor-made’ service in the field of service provision has enabled Iscot to develop a system based on objective conditions and to foster an increasingly direct interaction with the object. The project was the result of collaboration between ISCOT Engineering and Turck-Banner, with technical and production support from ISMAN. The aim of the prototype presented at Innovation Day was to demonstrate the effectiveness of an active monitoring system for an air treatment unit and thus create an engineered system to control system conditions.

The pressing need to offer a ‘tailor-made’ service in the field of service provision has enabled Iscot to develop a system based on objective conditions and to foster an increasingly direct interaction with the object. The project was the result of collaboration between ISCOT Engineering and Turck-Banner, with technical and production support from ISMAN. The aim of the prototype presented at Innovation Day was to demonstrate the effectiveness of an active monitoring system for an air treatment unit and thus create an engineered system to control system conditions.

The prototype actively monitors certain characteristic physical sizes of the system, provides different types of feedback based on the system’s operating status, and also enables the required adjustments.

The design criteria and product characteristics used to realise standard architecture supporting the delivery of various condition-based services can be established from the time the prototype is made. Iscot highlighted the real possibility of creating a new type of service management system based on objective data, by adopting a robust and effective monitoring system.

The resulting system, called Dynamic filter control, has been successfully tested and can be replicated on a pilot system, with its basic logic defined in the test phase.

The prototype actively monitors certain characteristic physical sizes of the system, provides different types of feedback based on the system’s operating status, and also enables the required adjustments.

The design criteria and product characteristics used to realise standard architecture supporting the delivery of various condition-based services can be established from the time the prototype is made. Iscot highlighted the real possibility of creating a new type of service management system based on objective data, by adopting a robust and effective monitoring system.

The resulting system, called Dynamic filter control, has been successfully tested and can be replicated on a pilot system, with its basic logic defined in the test phase.