Monitoring system helps protect workers in the industrial workplace04 June 2021

People working in and around machinery in industrial, engineering and maintenance sectors can be protected and better managed using an innovative real-time location system, according to supplier Salunda.

The Crew Hawk integrates multiple technologies into a reliable, robust zone management system that improves the location of both people and mobile and autonomous machinery, providing position performance to avert incidents and cut the risk of workplace injuries and accidents.

Crew Hawk is suitable for industrial health and safety applications where people could be at risk from contamination (for example, toxic materials), intense heat, high pressure (for example, hydraulic oil), high voltage, heavy plant such as cranes and forklift trucks, blind lifts, high noise levels and crush injuries.

Crew Hawk connects wearable locators attached to PPE and compact magnetic-mounted equipment sensors to a reliable and secure network, to automatically trigger personalised warnings and pause equipment to prevent a collision if someone is too close.

The individual is alerted to the risk of danger by an alarm on the wearable device, with the system also preventing the equipment from moving until the individual has left the area and returned to a secure location.

An user interface allows a safety manager to create a portable safety system that can be deployed across different industrial zones and will warn people before they enter a restricted or ‘red zone’, reducing the occurrence of costly lost time incidents or production downtime. So-called ‘Flight recorder’ playback features permit incident investigation, while analytical tools pinpoint accident blackspots.

Crew Hawk can be deployed in an explosive atmosphere - and is ATEX and IECEx certified. This ‘Ex’ certification grants access to multiple industrial applications previously gated before the development of Crew Hawk.

Being modular, the system is upgradeable. The incorporation of digital ranging cameras (that is, time of flight or Lidar) provides additional levels of work area access, safety and security.It can also be integrated with machine vision to discriminate between ‘authorised’ and ‘unauthorised’ personnel and detects those workers that do not have wearable sensors, providing a fail-safe solution.

System versatility allows configuration for extended levels of access control to critical areas, assigning a serial number to an individual, or their role, to allow only authorised personnel to enter restricted or hazardous areas. Access control is also configurable more dynamically to manage different stages of an operation.

Operations Engineer magazine

Related Companies
Salunda

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