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ENDÜSTRİYEL
ENDÜSTRİYEL ROBOTLAR
Lazer Cnc
Yazılım
HMI
Port Automation
Embedded systems
Factory automation
Chain store automation
OTOMOTİV
ECU
Diagnose systems
Angular Accelaration Safety Sensors
MEDİKAL
Hemogram (Blood Analyzers)
Air Ventilators
Blood Pressure Transducers
Beauty and Cosmetics
Hair removal devices
Lipo Laser
TENS, EMS Devices
Instant Heater/Cooler
EKG, Holter
Thesaurus
George Devol applied for the first robotics patents in 1954 (granted in 1961). The first company to produce a robot was Unimation, founded by Devol and Joseph F. Engelberger in 1956, and was based on Devol’s original patents. Unimation robots were also called programmable transfer machines since their main use at first was to transfer objects from one point to another, less than a dozen feet or so apart. They used hydraulic actuators and were programmed in joint coordinates, i.e. the angles of the various joints were stored during a teaching phase and replayed in operation. They were accurate to within 1/10,000 of an inch[citation needed] (note: although accuracy is not an appropriate measure for robots, usually evaluated in terms of repeatability – see later).
Medical Air Ventilator
Medical ventilator (or simply ventilator in context) is a machine designed to mechanically move breatheable air into and out of the lungs, to provide the mechanism of breathing for a patient who is physically unable to breathe, or breathing insufficiently.
While modern ventilators are computerized machines, patients can be ventilated with a bag valve mask, a simple hand-operated machine. After Hurricane Katrina, dedicated staff “bagged” patients in New Orleans hospitals for days with simple bag valve units attached to endotracheal tubes, a “ventilator” system which can be used with no definite time limit.
ECU
An engine control unit (ECU), most commonly called the powertrain control module (PCM), is a type of electronic control unit that controls a series of actuators on an internal combustion engine to ensure the optimum running. It does this by reading values from a multitude of sensors within the engine bay, interpreting the data using multidimensional performance maps (called Look-up tables), and adjusting the engine actuators accordingly.
Before ECUs, air/fuel mixture, ignition timing, and idle speed were mechanically set and dynamically controlled by mechanical and pneumatic means.
HMI
In complex systems, the human-machine interface is typically computerized. The term Human-computer interface refers to this kind of systems.
The engineering of the human-machine interfaces is by considering ergonomics (Human Factors). The corresponding disciplines are Human Factors Engineering (HFE) and Usability Engineering (UE), which is part of Systems Engineering.
Tools used for incorporating the human factors in the interface design are developed based on knowledge of computer science, such as computer graphics, operating systems, programming languages.
Primary methods used in the interface design include prototyping and simulation.