Brief: We show the practical steps and results so you can judge suitability quickly. This video provides a detailed walkthrough of the Emerson A6560 Transient Processor Card, demonstrating its role as the core of the AMS 6500 Machinery Health Monitor. You'll see how it enables real-time vibration monitoring and configurable machinery health analysis for industrial rotating equipment, including the enhanced A6560-T variant with transient monitoring capabilities for turbomachinery applications.
Related Product Features:
The A6560 provides real-time overall vibration measurements and configurable machinery health monitoring capabilities.
It features an optional onboard transient processor in the A6560-T variant for turbomachinery applications.
The processor performs comprehensive analysis on two channels simultaneously to diagnose deteriorating machine conditions.
Event-based adaptive monitoring adjusts in real-time to provide customized monitoring for specific machines.
It includes order tracking capability and optional PeakVue® technology for enhanced diagnostics.
The card supports optional Modbus TCP/Ethernet output and local system health checks with status LEDs.
Onboard memory stores machinery health data during network loss, ensuring data integrity.
It supports up to two A6510 modules and is conformal coated per IPC-A-610E standards.
FAQs:
What is the primary function of the Emerson A6560 Transient Processor Card?
The Emerson A6560 serves as the core component of the AMS 6500 Machinery Health Monitor, delivering field-based predictive intelligence for industrial rotating equipment. It enables real-time overall vibration monitoring and configurable machinery health analysis to maintain optimal equipment performance.
What is the key difference between the standard A6560 and the A6560-T variant?
The enhanced A6560-T variant includes all standard A6560 functionality plus an optional onboard transient processor specifically designed for turbomachinery applications. This offers deeper insights into machine behavior during transient operating conditions, including real-time monitoring and recording of continuous time waveforms on all 24 channels.
How does the transient processor handle data buffering and storage?
The transient processor buffers over 100 hours of continuous time waveforms across all channels. Users can demand waveform slices by selecting time periods or scan data for anomalies. Data can be extracted from the buffer or auto-archived based on events like high vibration or speed changes, permanently storing it to a network hard drive.
What visualization capabilities does the transient processor offer?
Using AMS Machinery Manager, the transient processor enables direct connection to view 11 plots in real-time: orbits, shaft centerline, cascade, waterfall, Bode, Nyquist, waveform, spectrum, overall vibration, DC position, and speed. Users can also replay events missed in live mode, simulating data replay from a monitoring system recorder.