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In a lights-out factory scenario, what single point of failure would keep you up at night more: network connectivity loss or mechanical wear detection failure?

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That's a great question that really gets to the heart of what makes lights-out factories both amazing and nerve-wracking! Honestly, both of these would keep me up at night, but if I had to choose one, I'd say network connectivity loss is the bigger nightmare. Here's why: In a lights-out factory, everything depends on that network connection. It's like the central nervous system of your entire operation. If the network goes down, you lose visibility into everything - you can't monitor machines, can't receive alerts, can't send commands, and you're essentially flying blind. The factory might keep running for a bit, but you have no idea what's happening or if something is about to catastrophically fail. Mechanical wear detection failure is definitely scary too - a single jammed feeder or failed sensor can halt the whole line. But at least with mechanical issues, you might have some redundancy or the system might shut down safely. With network failure, you lose your ability to detect ANY problems, including mechanical wear, which means you could have multiple failures happening simultaneously without any warning. The real answer though? You need robust solutions for both. Network redundancy, failover systems, and local backup monitoring for connectivity, plus advanced sensors, predictive maintenance, and automated shutdown protocols for mechanical issues. In a truly lights-out setup, there's no room for single points of failure - every critical system needs backup plans!

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