exida's Todd Stauffer will be talking about Human Factors for Alarm Management & High Performance HMI Design on Thursday January 27th, 2022 for the Portland chapter of ISA. This presentation will highlight human factors principles that shape operator performance in how they process information and make decisions. Attendees will learn…
Serious injuries continue to pose a major challenge to manufacturing and related industries, and in 2018 6,200 non-fatal amputations occurred in the US, with 58% of these involving machinery2. To reduce the occurrence of these events, organizations must start with an accurate understanding of the hazards present. International standards such as ISO 12100 Safety of machinery — General principles for design — Risk assessment and risk reduction provide best practices and guidelines for conducting machinery risk assessments consistently. Two common approaches have been taken to complete these assessments: task-based and equipment-based. This webinar will evaluate both machinery risk assessment approaches in detail and provide information about the strengths and weaknesses for each approach, as well as recommendations for when to use each type of risk assessment, and how to align the risk assessment results with other machine safety activities.
IEC 62443, ISASecure in the Security Automation Equipment List
Yokogawa Electric Corporation (TOKYO: 6841) announces that it has obtained ISASecure CSA Level 1 certification from the ISA Security Compliance Institute* (ISCI) for its CENTUM™ VP integrated production control system, a product in the OpreX™ Control and Safety System family. Yokogawa received the certificate from exida Certification , an ISASecure…
IEC 61508 in the Safety Automation Equipment List
ISASecure in the Security Automation Equipment List
Machinery related hazards continue to result in hundreds of deaths and thousands of serious injuries each year. In 2019, 2,963 deaths occurred in the construction, transportation and warehousing, agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting, and manufacturing industries in the United States 1 . Additionally, serious injuries continue to pose a major…
IEC 61508 in the Safety Automation Equipment List
IEC 61508 in the Safety Automation Equipment List
Leading global companies rely on exida for functional safety and cybersecurity expertise. Founded in 2000, exida has proudly become a trusted partner, known for its cutting-edge technology, extensive cross-industry expertise, and market leadership. Headquartered in Sellersville, PA, exida has local roots with a global reach, operating across 16 countries in…
IEC 61508 in the Safety Automation Equipment List
Many think about an equipment’s failure rate as a fixed parameter. In fact, the same equipment will exhibit various failure rates depending on the operations and maintenance practices at a given site. We have found through analysis of field failure data that identical equipment can exhibit quite different failure rates at different sites even within the same company. This webinar explains this phenomenon, demonstrates how these differences can be measured and predicted, and illustrates how predictive methods can be used effectively to perform cost/benefit analysis of proposed changes in operating and maintenance practices before the changes are implemented.
Similar to the thought experiment “If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?”, we ask - If an alarm is generated, and the operator fails to acknowledge it, was it really an alarm? A prevalence of unacknowledged alarms…
The ISASecure Program announced that Johnson Controls, the global leader for smart, healthy and sustainable buildings, has earned the world's first ISASecure CSA certification for its smart buildings products with YORK YK and YZ centrifugal chillers. “Johnson Controls continues to demonstrate leadership in cybersecurity for smart buildings,” said Mike Medoff,…
OPC is an essential standard for industrial communications that enables universal connectivity and interoperability. It started in 1996 and has been part of numerous industrial systems and architecture for years.
While many use the OPC or OPC derived software and system architecture in the operation, not many would actively relate OPC with safety. This webinar hopes to discuss a few of the concepts within OPC and map those to functional safety, alarm management and cybersecurity for industrial systems.
Part of the changes to the IEC61511 standard in 2016, some five (5) years ago now, was to emphasize the need to do a better job with regards to the Operations and Maintenance phase of the safety lifecycle . One of the key aspects of the Operation and Maintenance phase…
For decades achieving safety certification was an opaque process. Now software tools can help you do it yourself. It is said that necessity is the mother of invention. Just over 20 years ago, two men who met on opposite sides of a product safety certification process ended up proving this…
Study after study finds that something like 80% of industrial incidents (give or take) are caused by Human Error. Incidents involving human error often include a failure of the operator to respond to an alarm, which is often directly or indirectly caused by nuisance alarms. Poor alarm management has multiple…
How They Are Calculated, What They Tell Us & When They Can Be Used
It is not uncommon to find published failure rates with significantly different values for very similar equipment. These differences stem from the ways in which the failure rates were produced based on different approaches and different underlying assumptions. To used published failure rates effectively in assessing equipment safety performance, it is imperative to understand how failure rates are calculated, how to interpret the numbers, and recognize when those values can and cannot be used. This webinar covers these areas assuming basic knowledge of functional safety concepts.
During a recent exida webinar we received the following question: We tend to see more failures with actuated valves, than what manufacturers published failure rates would indicate! Any reason? There are several reasons. Some manufacturers publish data based on field return data where they classify failures caused by customers as…