Remote monitoring technology has evolved from simple alert systems to sophisticated analytics platforms, with future capabilities promising real-time quality assurance that could revolutionize packaging operations.
Current remote monitoring systems enable packaging operators and managers to react immediately to changes on the plant floor. But connectivity's potential extends far beyond reactive responses—it's creating entirely new possibilities for packaging engineers and operations teams.
While consumer fascination with Internet of Things devices and wearable technology captures headlines, packaging companies have been building machine-connected networks for years. This "Industrial Internet" has enabled machinery manufacturers to increasingly integrate connectivity across their equipment, creating foundations for transformative operational improvements.
Over the last decade and a half, tremendous progress has been made, with astounding possibilities on the horizon. General Electric's 2013 report "The Industrial Internet @ Work" estimated that accelerated productivity growth will boost global GDP by $10 to $15 trillion over the next two decades.
In packaging specifically, operators can anticipate potential issues and prevent stoppages across material handling, filling, and labeling applications. Since stoppages create costly downtime and waste that erode bottom lines, this preventive capability delivers significant value.
Software designers work hand-in-hand with original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) to embed machine-to-machine communication solutions that identify productivity lags and place actionable data at manufacturers' fingertips. This information adds tremendous value to equipment by highlighting efficiency-boosting modifications while building long-term customer loyalty.
The Industrial Internet grew from one fundamental requirement: monitoring machinery from anywhere without direct physical contact. Early applications included Remote Terminal Units (RTU) in public utilities like electric grids and wastewater purification plants.
These early systems operated on land-based communications through LAN lines or telephone wires, primarily functioning as simple alert systems that sounded alarms when machines went down or overheated near failure points.
The 1990s technology boom enhanced networking sophistication, advancing remote monitoring capabilities for packaging industries. Systems became more complex, gathering expanded data sets and incorporating Internet-based technologies to reach offsite personnel outside traditional networks.
Networks developed capabilities to collect actionable data, enabling relationships between specific parts and processes to be determined. Monitoring evolved beyond simple up/down status to include:
While past systems offered some predictive benefits, most collected data related to historical performance. The next decade brought increasing sophistication and entirely new capabilities.
Modern technology enables both remote monitoring and service functionality. Machine operators can connect from anywhere to check status and make actual updates and modifications. Predictive failure analysis allows technicians to replace worn parts before complete failure, reducing surprise outages and minimizing downtime.
Large companies save hundreds of thousands of dollars on travel costs alone since technicians don't necessarily need to visit facilities in person to resolve issues.
According to Cisco's 2013 white paper "Embracing the Internet of Everything," greater data accumulation provides clearer operational pictures. Efficiency encompasses entire operations working together across all production stages, not just individual machine uptime.
Improved data mining enables executives to gain deeper business understanding through millions of information bits from thousands of data points. This virtually limitless economy of scale paves the way for greater profitability.
Data collection methods have evolved to allow greater freedom and accessibility:
Current remote monitoring systems allow packaging operators to react immediately to plant floor changes by connecting managers to equipment through mobile apps with comprehensive information access. Results include greater efficiency, better facility understanding, and higher productivity and profits.
Growing data depth enables personnel to understand specific machine performance at precise moments, with technology quickly expanding into Quality Assurance applications.
Operators will immediately detect anomalies on packaging or filling lines, tracking issues to particular batches or specific products. This capability enables more accurate identification and handling of faulty products compared to random testing methods.
Enhanced reactivity to critical inline issues will transform operations. In printed packaging, presses will be closely monitored for:
Quality assurance becomes paramount in filling facilities, especially food packaging where health and safety are critical. Systems will immediately detect anomalous changes in:
Data from these instances will inform plant supervisors about recurrence likelihood, enabling operations tailoring to limit or eliminate improper filling or contamination instances.
The Industrial Internet and remote monitoring services continue evolving with tremendous potential across all packaging applications. From earliest RTU-based systems to today's analytics-driven capabilities, modern remote monitoring paves the road for fundamental operational shifts in how companies streamline and maintain operations.
This technology's history remains part of its present. Early approaches that established equipment scoreboards and enabled production assessment still provide machine data to business systems for accurate reporting. Current systems enable immediate plant floor reactions while connecting managers to equipment through security-backed mobile channels with expanded data access.
Future benefits approach rapidly, including comprehensive quality assurance capabilities that will change packaging forever through Industrial Internet power.