On 03/09/2019 10:43 PM, Gregg Eshelman via Emc-users wrote:
But such systems have existed for 30+ years. Many types of factories and plants 
use computer screens with graphical schematics and readouts of all the critical 
things. Operators can point and click to open and close valves, adjust 
temperatures, even emergency shutdown the entire system to bring it all to a 
halt.
But not at any of the old nuclear power plants. Their control rooms look like 
something from 40~50 years ago because they *are* from 40~50 years ago.
Well, no. I got an extreme, engineer-level tour of the Callaway County nuclear plant in central Missouri before it opened, in about 1982. While it was not as advanced then as it might be built now, it was NOT a wall of incandescent indicator bulbs and toggle switches. There was a horseshoe console with some of the most critical indicators and controls, but they had several screens showing "maps" of the plant systems.

Jon


_______________________________________________
Emc-users mailing list
Emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users

Reply via email to