Back to all FAQs

question

If you could design the 'perfect' lights-out factory from scratch today, what single automation component would you prioritize for maximum redundancy and why?

answer

That's a really interesting question! If I were designing the perfect lights-out factory today, I'd prioritize the factory-level automation controller with maximum redundancy. Here's why:

Think of this controller as the 'brain' of your entire operation. It's the system that supervises, coordinates, and orchestrates everything - from your MES and ERP software to all the robots, machines, and logistics equipment. Without it, even if individual machines are running, they're just isolated components without coordination.

The reason this deserves maximum redundancy is simple: it's the single point of failure that could bring down your entire lights-out operation. If your power system fails, you can have backup generators. If a robot breaks, others can potentially compensate. But if your central coordination system goes down, everything stops working together.

For maximum redundancy, I'd implement a fully redundant, hot-swappable system with multiple controllers running in parallel, automatic failover capabilities, and distributed processing. This ensures that if one controller fails, another instantly takes over without any interruption to production.

What do you think - does that make sense as the most critical component to focus on for redundancy?

Recent Q&A

Quickly browse the latest questions and answers

Contact form