|
Security Camera |
Surveillance Equipment | CCTV Camera | Security Camera |
Surveillance Cameras | Dome Camera
Articles | Information
| News
|
|
|
|
Source &
Copyright:
http://www.pixim.com/newsletter/2010_Issue_1/feature_story.html |
2950
Fahrenheit—No Match for Pixim-Powered Cameras
Speco and
Pixim solve steel mill’s ultimate lighting challenge
Rob Irwin
had the ultimate challenge for a video camera—recording and
monitoring a room that goes from dark to as bright as the sun
in a matter of seconds. As melt shop electrical supervisor for
Severstal, the fourth largest steelmaker in the United States,
he needed to find a camera that could continuously monitor the
mill's huge electric arc furnace (EAF).
Safety
A
steel mill is a hazardous environment and risk to employees
needs to be minimized as much as possible. The EAF poses a
variety of potential dangers. An electrode is lowered into the
furnace and an electric arc creates an intense heat which
melts scrap metal into new molten steel. The furnace is lined
with refractory material called fire brick. This special
refractory brick lines a big, steel ladle that is used to
place the scrap metal inside the EAF. The ladle's fire brick
jacket has water pumping through it continuously. Workers
monitor the refractory material 24 hours a day looking for
cracks and other defects. Since steel melts at 2950 degrees F,
any water that gets into the metal will superheat, and the
whole furnace could explode like a bomb.
An explosion
would result in critical downtime for the steel mill. Though
Severstal has a backup EAF, it would take a week for the
damaged furnace to cool down enough to be moved. Thousands of
dollars a day would be lost. More critically, lives could be
lost. This disastrous scenario happened in January 2010 at a
steel mill in Indiana. The water in the EAF reached the molten
steel, and the furnace exploded killing one worker and
injuring four others.
In addition
to observing the refractory material, the workers monitor the
entire melt process. Is the electrode working correctly? Is
the lid closing properly? Is the material melting as it
should? To mitigate human error during monitoring, Rob needed
a camera that could watch with an unblinking eye and
accurately record events.
Solution
The numerous cameras Rob tried in the past could not handle
the extreme lighting conditions. The images would bloom
whenever the lid of the furnace would open, rendering the
cameras useless. In desperation, he turned to his security
distributor, Grainger, for help.
The
representative from Grainger knew who to ask. He contacted
Glenn Good, national sales manager for Speco Technologies.
"Grainger arranged for Glenn to come on site, look at our set
up, and determine if they had a camera that would work,"
explains Rob. "Glenn immediately recommended Speco's line of
Pixim-powered cameras, and gave us a camera to test."
"We had to
leave a demo camera with them," Glenn says. "The environment
is dangerous so only employees are allowed in the area. They
set up the camera right out of the box with good results. They
placed the IP camera on their network which enabled it to be
remotely controlled through the DVR. We then conducted a
remote demonstration."
Impressed
with the results of the demo camera, Rob elected to buy
several Speco IP wide dynamic range cameras. Wide dynamic
range is the ability to capture shadow and highlight detail
simultaneously in the same video frame. "The cameras powered
by Pixim bloom briefly, but then immediately correct
themselves." Rob continues. "The correction is brief and
doesn't hurt what we are trying to do. We went from getting
completely unusable pictures to having monitors that show us
more than what we can see with our own eyes."
Why do the
Pixim-powered Speco cameras work when other cameras failed? In
traditional, analog CCD cameras, all the pixels in the image
sensor have the exact same shutter speed. As a result, every
pixel receives the same exposure creating overexposed images
in bright areas and underexposed images in dark areas. Pixim-powered
cameras employ the only all-digital technology in the industry
– its Digital Pixel System® technology. Pixim's technology
employs hundreds of thousands of self-adjusting pixels to act
like individual cameras, eliminating image compromising visual
noise and delivering the highest resolution, natural color and
clarity, even in challenging lighting conditions. This
all-digital system efficiently captures the whole picture,
down to the crucial details.
Since many
of the cameras are hooked to DVRs, recorded incidences are
also used for employee training. "We can discuss what happened
with our staff," says Rob, "and show them how to avoid the
situation in the future. It helps us eliminate any safety
issues."
Expansion
Rob
is continuing to expand his use of the cameras throughout his
department. "The Speco IP cameras are a very affordable
solution compared to other camera suppliers for the same
application," he explains. He recently placed an order for 15
more cameras.
Glenn Good
hopes the results of the cameras will convince Severstal to
use Digital Pixel System technology throughout its facility.
"Right now, we are only selling to the melt shop," he
explains, "but we could be selling them throughout the
facility. We recently did an installation for another steel
company. The mill uses the cameras to watch as melted steel
goes through the coolers. They can tell by the color of the
steel if it is the proper temperature. The accurate color
provided by our Pixim-powered cameras is essential."
Speco's
Pixim cameras successfully met Rob's challenge. From dark
rooms to super-bright light and everything in between, Pixim-powered
cameras are the answer to any lighting issue.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|