The present invention relates generally to a safety mat monitoring system. In particular, the present invention relates to a safety mat monitoring system which has individual mat indicators on each mat.
In order to protect personnel from coming into contact with dangerous equipment, safety mat systems are installed in danger zones around pieces of equipment. Each safety mat system consists of a controller and one or more mat switches that are placed on the floor around the equipment to sense the presence of a person. The controller monitors the mat switch and is designed to send a stop signal to the dangerous equipment should a person step on a mat switch installed in the danger zone.
It is standard practice for safety mat systems to register a stop/fault condition on the controller box with a single signal device (typically an LED). If a fault condition is registered on the controller, the technical person responsible for the system is notified. The technician then manually troubleshoots the system to isolate the activated mat switch. This inspection is time consuming and costly.
Recent improvements now allow controllers to display the mat switch number corresponding to an active mat switch. Even with this information, the technician still has to locate the layout drawings and identify which mat switch is being identified by the indicator. The technician then troubleshoots and verifies that the mat switch shown on the drawing was truly the mat switch indicated on the controller display.
There is a need for a safety mat system that provides a more efficient method of locating and troubleshooting an active mat. It would also be beneficial to minimize the possibility of misidentifying an active mat.
The present invention is a safety mat switch monitoring system. The system includes a mat switch that has a first indicator associated with the mat switch and a controller which has a second indicator. Activation of or damage to the mat switch activates the first indicator which corresponds with activation of the second indicator. Indicator activation may be provided by pressure on the mat switch or by damage to the mat switch.
In operation, each indicator is an LED and mat switches 22, 24, and 26 are activated by pressure on, damage to, or malfunction of the mat switch. For example, as shown in
In another embodiment, multiple mat switches surround a single piece of machinery, because a large zone surrounding the machinery is dangerous while the machinery is running. Activation of any one of the mat switches triggers controller 12 to deactivate or render safe the piece of machinery.
With system 10, the technical personnel no longer have to locate layout drawings to identify which mat switch is being identified by controller 12. The technical personnel only need to identify which mat switch has been activated by literally looking at the indicator on the mat switch. This minimizes the possibility of misidentifying an active mat switch, and the technical personnel are reassured of proper system operation by having an indicator on each mat switch indicating that each mat switch is functioning properly.
With each of the embodiments discussed in the previous Figures, indicator 28 need not be located on mat switch 22 but may be located near mat switch 22. In addition, indicator 28 only needs to be some type of visual light such as an LED, incandescent, or vacuum flourescent light except in the embodiment showing LCD circuit 46. Further, an audible indicator may also be used with or without indicator 28.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040119596 A1 | Jun 2004 | US |