The product, which is installed in the crane panel, is a plug-and-play concept that allows users to automate material handling processes, monitor hook status, conduct remote service, create reports, and oversee lifecycle management.
The system comes with four relay outputs, eight inputs, WiFi, Bluetooth and Ethernet, while 4G and CANbus are optional. It includes its own software and, with over-the-air updates, can work offline (as a hotspot) or as a cloud-based solution. It communicates with up to eight Elebia products simultaneously via radio. ?When set up to work online, eLink retains a copy of the database locally, and the user can keep on working in case of loss of connectivity.
Other features include user and password login, different profiles/access levels, central data acquisition and control systems, and communication with the user through a web application interface.
Oscar Fillol, founder and CEO at Elebia, said that eLink “takes an already state-of-the-art lifting portfolio one step further, facilitating hook control, automation, adjustment of working parameters, integration with cranes and other devices. In short, Elebia products are now Industry 4.0 ready.”
Fillol continued: “There are multiple scenarios where controlling hooks via a web-based system is advantageous. For example, you can control all hooks with the same remote control of the crane. Or blocking the lifting action with the ‘safe lift’ function, which does not allow the load to be lifted if the hooks are not all closed. ?Another common situation where eLink is very useful is in the case of alarm settings: either when a load is unbalanced or when there is an overload.”
Previously, Elebia products have been operated using the company’s remote controls – eMini, eMax, eInst – but eLink complements these systems so a customer could be using the eMini to send the open/close instructions, while the eLink is used to log the data, avoiding unsafe lifts, and trigger alarms etc.
“However, the aim of the eLink is not to eliminate the user; it is to assist them and make everything easier and safer,” Fillol added. “The user must see the lifting operation. [It] allows automation and safer lifts, but the user is still needed. The next step is adding cameras and expanding [beyond eight] the number of products that can be connected at the same time.”
Launched in 2006 to improve safety and productivity, the Elebia range features numerous hooks, lifting clamps, grabs, and shackles, all of which are compatible with eLink. The range includes seven evo automatic hooks (evo2, evo2L, evo5, evo10c, evo10, evo20, evo25); five neo automatic hooks (neo20, neo20s, neo50, neo60, neo100); two automatic lifting clamps for steel plates (c5, c6); an automatic grab for rails (eTrack2); and an automatic shackle (s40).
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