Industry 4.0 Moves Into Product Marking and Coding

Automatica 2018: Leibinger presents continuous inkjet printers with full integration versatility (Hall B5, Stand 212) Paul Leibinger GmbH & Co. KG enables manufacturing companies to enter the Industry 4.0 era with high-level cost-effectiveness. The manufacturer of advanced printers from Baden-Württemberg equips the CIJ printers from the JET series with a large number of interfaces. At the Automatica 2018 show in Munich, visitors will have an opportunity to see the machines that are used, among others, by the beyerdynamic headphone manufacturer. The fourth industrial revolution poses a challenge for companies to interlink industrial production with information and communication technology. The Automatica 2018 trade fair, which is taking place in Munich between June 19 and 22, 2018, will be showcasing how big players with large budgets are making great strides towards smart factories. However, Leibinger, the German manufacturer of industrial inkjet printers for product coding and marking, is convinced that even small and medium-sized companies should be able to economically enter the industry 4.0 era. The JET3up has enough interfaces to flexibly grow with industry 4.0 requirements “From the outset, we equip our industrial marking and coding systems with interfaces that customers would need to first buy from many competitors,” explains Managing Director Christina Leibinger. “The machines are easy to integrate into automated production environments and flexible enough to comply with Industry 4.0 requirements.” The JET3up model, which can be seen at the Automatica, features, for example, a product sensor input (PNP/NPN 24V), an incremental encoder input (TTL 5V, HTL 24V, RS422 5V), eight digital outputs, ten digital inputs as well as twelve additional inputs with defined special functions, serial interfaces (RS232 to 115,200 baud) and a USB and Ethernet connection. “The printers represent a strong link in smart factory automation chains thanks to this extensive variety of interfaces and their high level of reliability.” beyerdynamic is impressed with the variety of interfaces and price-performance ratio beyerdynamic, a manufacturer of microphones and headphones from Heilbronn, Germany, is among the users of the JET3up. Data communication in both directions was one of the main reasons the company opted for Leibinger. “We can not only transmit data from the transfer system to the printer, but we also get data back,” explains Ahmet Cakir, process engineer at beyerdynamic GmbH & Co. KG. “We could have also found this feature on competing products, but with an extra charge. This printer delivers the best value for money we found on the market.” "This printer has the best price-performance ratio we could find on the market," says Ahmet Cakir, process engineer at beyerdynamic GmbH & Co. KG JET Rapid prints as fast as a lion can run The so-called continuous inkjet (CIJ) technology is at the heart of the Leibinger printers. Up to 128,000 drops shoot per second through a tiny nozzle in the print head. While printing, a high-voltage field deflects charged drops. The flying drops of ink land as a pixel or image point on the product surface and dry within one second. With the JET3up and JET2neo models, it is possible to apply information to products without contact, such as batch numbers, 2D codes or graphics – at conveyor speeds of up to 600 m/min. The JET Rapid, also on display at the Automatica 2018, even allows speeds of up to 1,000 m/min, the equivalent of 60 km/h. With this in mind, the CIJ printer from Tuttlingen is as fast as a lion on the hunt.
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