CONTROL SYSTEMS INDUSTRIAL FURNACES

Brand Owner (click to sort) Address Description
ECHO TENOVA GOODFELLOW INC. Suite 601 10 Kingsbridge Garden Circle Mississauga, Ontario L5R3K6 Canada Control systems for industrial furnaces; optical sensors; gas sensors; sensors and probes; computer software for controlling industrial equipment and furnaces; gas analyzers; Environmental consulting services; consulting services in the field of industrial furnace efficiency; planning of industrial furnace thermal processes; planning and design of sensors and probes for industrial furnaces and furnace gas sensors and probes; Installation, maintenance and repair of machinery and control systems for industrial systems; adaptation of industrial thermal processes; adaptation of sensors and probes for industrial furnaces;
NEXTGEN TENOVA GOODFELLOW INC. Suite 601 10 Kingsbridge Garden Circle Mississauga, Ontario L5R3K6 Canada control systems for industrial furnaces comprising electric control panels, electrical controllers for regulating furnace operating conditions and computer software for use in regulating and controlling industrial furnace operation; furnace sensors and probes; optical sensors; gas sensors and probes; gas analyzers; computer software for controlling industrial equipment and furnaces;NEXT GEN;
 

Where the owner name is not linked, that owner no longer owns the brand

   
Technical Examples
  1. Multiple Views of an Industrial Plant are graphically displayed and viewed. A graphical user interface displays the views in corresponding panes or windows of the graphical user interface. The views, being graphical representations of systems of the Industrial Plant, are coupled by a coupler according to a predetermined relationship between the underlying systems of the Industrial Plant represented by the coupled views. The coupler automatically refocuses the panes to display different views of the Industrial Plant based on a selection of an object in any of the panes or on a manual refocus of one view and on the predetermined relationship for coupling the views. The Coupled views represent different domains of the Industrial Plant or Industrial Network e.g. real-time monitoring and operation, configuration, debugging, maintenance, scheduling, asset management, documentation, training, simulation, physical construction, material flow monitoring, programming, interconnecting function blocks, performance analysis. The analysis may be provided at different points in time (now, past, predicted future) and with a different spatial focus (parts, whole). Coupling different views greatly reduces handling effort for building and operating Industrial Plants.