by Variohm EuroSensor, UK
As part of the many sensor technologies now widely employed in smart farming,
where sophisticated monitoring and control is now universally applied to
optimise crop production, mobile agricultural machinery manufacturers are
increasingly utilising precision sensors as part of the equipment and systems
they produce to till, seed, and harvest crops to further maximise productivity.
Variohm EuroSensor, a leading sensor manufacturer and a sensor component
distributor, has successfully undertaken a number of applications with UK and
European farm machinery manufacturers for position, load, pressure and
temperature sensors with almost all of them installed in harsh outdoor
environments where large temperature extremes as well as severe shock and
vibration conditions exist, and upmost reliability is essential.
These various types of sensors serve numerous measurement tasks. Some are configured open loop with the position or load information simply fed to a visual display to allow manual operation of a process. Other automated and autonomous machine tasks involve the sensing component as part of closed loop systems where often multiple functions are synchronised, for instance with vision systems and linear motion positioners or rotary actuators for tasks such as in-row weeding or selective crop harvesting.
The high precision angle and linear position sensing technologies offered by Variohm include potentiometric based sensors where there is a physical contact between a conductive plastic track and wiper contact in a housed assembly. As the sensor is extended or rotated, the position information is provided as a linearly proportional voltage measurement.
For rotary angle sensing, Variohm offers two Hall Effect technologies where there is no contact between a fixed sensing element and a rotating magnet. Whilst these sensor types do not differ in the actual way the sensing takes place, they can be differentiated by the first ‘non-contacting’ type having an enclosed and housed assembly complete with bearings (so there is a degree of contact involved), and a second type of ‘touchless’ sensor where the sensor and magnet are supplied as separate components and mounted by the customer between the fixed and rotating components.
Read more HERE.
The Global Miller
This blog is maintained by The Global Miller staff and is supported by the magazine Milling and Grain
which is published by Perendale Publishers Limited.
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