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September 9, 2008 -- GE Fanuc Intelligent Platforms announced its support of MTConnect, a new communication protocol to link machine tools from varying suppliers around the world. MTConnect will be officially launched by the Association for Manufacturing Technology (AMT) at IMTS 2008, September 8-13, 2008 in Chicago, and on display at the AMT Emerging Technology Center and at the GE Fanuc booth.
“MTConnect will enable a host of third party solution providers to develop software and hardware to make the entire manufacturing enterprise more productive,” said John Turner, Engineering and Solutions Manager for GE Fanuc Intelligent Platforms’ CNC business. “MTConnect is designing an open communication standard for interconnectability that mirrors the success occurring in the information technology world. That is, allowing devices, equipment, and systems to output data in an understandable format that can be read by any other device using the same standard format to read the data.”
Turner has been instrumental in championing the creation of MTConnect from its early stages and in the development of the protocol itself. He has worked closely with other industry influencers as part of AMT’s Technical Issues Committee, and later as a member of the MTConnect Technical Advisory Group. In this role, Turner has contributed to the definition of the protocol, communicated its value to the machine tool builder and end user communities, and worked to ensure an open and available architecture that would aid in its wide scale adoption.
MTConnect is based on XML (Extensible Markup Language) which offers widely recognized and accepted flexible representation for exchanging semi structured machine-readable data. The standard will be open and royalty free to insure the widest possible acceptance and utility. MTConnect will use commercially available technologies as its basis and will provide royalty-free reference implementations of sample software which can be used as-is, modified to suit special needs, reverse-engineered, or for inclusion in your own software system. This approach allows connectivity from the lowest end of the process chain, nearest the workpiece or shop floor, to the highest design or process planning tools.
The protocol will be rolled out in three phases: