Functional Safety of Machinery: How to Apply ISO 13849-1 and IEC 62061
£80.70£90.20 (-11%)
Enables readers to understand ISO 13849-1 and IEC 62061 standards and provides a practical approach to functional safety in machinery design
Functional Safety of Machinery: How to Apply ISO 13849-1 and IEC 62061 introduces functional safety of machinery as a single unified approach, despite the existence of two standards. Aligning with the latest updates of ISO 13849-1 and IEC 62061, the book explains the intent behind the standards and the mathematical basis on which they are written, details the differences between the two standards, and prescribes ways to put them into practice.
To aid in seamless reader comprehension, detailed examples are included throughout the book which walk readers through concepts like Random and Systematic Failures, High and Low demand mode of operation, Diagnostic Coverage, and Safe Failure Fraction. Other sample topics covered within the book include:
- Basics of reliability engineering and functional safety
- Roles of the standards in the design and evaluation of safety functions
- Description of the Main Parameters used in the two standards
- How to deal with Low Demand Safety Systems
- The Categories of ISO 13849-1 and the Basic Subsystem Architectures of IEC 62061
- How Categories and Architectures can be validated
Machinery design engineers, machinery manufacturers, and professionals in system and industrial safety fields can use this book as a one-stop resource to understand the specifics and applications of ISO 13849-1 and IEC 62061.
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Additional information
Publisher | 1st edition (23 Mar. 2023), Wiley |
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Language | English |
Hardcover | 352 pages |
ISBN-10 | 1119789044 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1119789048 |
Dimensions | 17.78 x 2.06 x 25.4 cm |
by Kindle Customer
OK. You’ve applied 13849/50. You’re not confident. You won’t be; it’s a bugger of a standard.
As for 62061… to be avoided! My view! Then customers ask for it!
This book is superb! It’s not a dummies book; you’re dealing with functional safety you’re not a dummy. I’ve done courses (HSE Buxton) and co workers have done the SICK course. Read this first.
I can’t recommend this enough. We trudged through all the functionality safety standards. Argued. Misunderstood. Applied a REALLY conservative version (killing customers is to avoided at all costs!).
You’re going to be an electrical or chemical engineer, in industry, with experience, before you even look at this. You’ll also be aware you want a ‘simple’ well written explanation of a very complex topic . Buy this!
Background… quarry, mining, recycling machinery. Conveyors. Screens, Pumps. PLc required with debatable PLd. Not the scary industries with assembly robots and production lines. CDE global.