These inductive and capacitive proximity sensors are made for severe industrial environments. They have nickel-plated, stainless steel, and non-metallic cylindrical and rectangular housings rated Type 1, 2, 3, 3R, 4/4X, 6, 6P, 12 and 13, and IP67. The cylindrical housings are available shielded and unshielded, and come in 4-30 mm diameters. They are easy to install, with 2, 3 and 4-wire, 90-250-V ac, 10-30-V dc, and 24-240-V ac/dc sensors with normally open, normally closed, complementary normally open and normally closed, and PNP or NPN outputs. The sensors are also available with a 2m cable or quick connect. They are efficient with high-speed targets, with a switching frequency up to 3000 Hz. They come with short-circuit, reverse-polarity, false-pulse, and transient noise protection, and LED sensors allow monitoring and troubleshooting. c3controlshttp://rbi.ims.ca/4928-586
A next-generation guided ammunition system for intercepting enemy fire that Lockheed Martin is developing for the Army has hit its targets in an initial series of tests by the company.
Against a backdrop of mounting product complexity and a need to keep a lid on development costs, companies are recognizing a need to make simulation a more integral part of the design process. In response, vendors in the CAD world are building out CAE functionality as part of their CAD suites while simulation vendors are building tighter integrations to leading CAD tools. Keith Meintjes, Ph.D., Practice Manager, Simulation and Analysis at CIMdata, Inc., joins Design News CAD Editor Beth Stackpole in this radio program to explore the new face of integrated CAD and CAE, how companies are benefitting from this tighter partnership between platforms, and how integrating CAE earlier in the development cycle pays off in optimized product designs.
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