Seagate Technology is recognized as the largest global manufacturers of disc drives, magnetic discs and read-write heads. Stratus Automation Corp. is a California based manufacturer of conveyor systems used in hard disk and semiconductor industries. Stratus incorporates Escort Memory Systems RFID technology into the conveyor systems they design and manufacturer to improve their customer’s production quality and efficiency.

Seagate requires that every process step for each disc is totally under control and each process step a disc goes through is permanently recorded. Further, tracking each step in a real-time can greatly reduce product scrap. Prior methods for controlling WIP (work in progress) included paper travelers and manual input to terminals located throughout the process line. With manual input terminals traceability accuracy was often lost due to operator (human) input errors. Engineers later experimented with barcode technology but found the labels could not reliably survive the processing steps and barcodes are read-only media; not meeting the read/write requirement. These methods did not meet the requirements and additionally generated scrap because of delays in obtaining information required for decision making (not real time).

In Seagate’s totally automated line, a complex material
handling system moves product cassettes between processing stations including
cleaning steps that are repeated periodically during processing. Each cassette
carries with it a unique RFID tag containing a lot identifier. The plant
automation system maintains the process flow for each lot of discs and maintains
real-time information about which process steps have been completed and which
steps are next for any given lot. Key to this system is the ability to read and
write data to the unique RFID tag as it passes branching points on the conveyor;
locations where a choice of paths must be made in order to get to the correct
next step. Any deviation from this correct routing leads to mis-processing of
the cassette of discs and results in the discs being scrapped. In other words,
100% reliability is required for each cassette’s path along the conveyer system.
The path a cassette takes through the conveyer must be recorded in the plant
automation database for permanent record keeping.
A further requirement for the new automated handling line was that it must support high speed communications with its host computer.

Using Escort Memory System’s HF-0405 integrated RFID controllers and GWY TCP Ethernet interfaces to read and write to Escort Memory Systems HMS108 tags, Stratus Automation designed a conveyor system meeting all of Seagate’s requirements including:
This was accomplished by placing HF 0405’s at each
decision point along the conveyor system. At each decision point, Escort Memory
Systems HMS108 RFID tags imbedded in the cassettes are read and the information
sent back to the host computer. The host computer determines which path the
cassette should take based on the routing information for that lot. It a
cassette is determined to be in the wrong location for some reason, data is
written to the tag that identifies it as being out of sequence. This data is
recognized by each subsequent HF 0405 and the cassette is automatically routed
to a holding area to await dispositioning. Because this process occurs in
real-time, the cassette will be caught by the host system as being out of place
before it is actually processed. This allows it to be placed back into the
system at the correct location and moved to the correct next step; avoiding
scrapping out of the cassette full of discs.
Stratus’ results to date show more than 15,000 read/write
cycles without any failures for each HF 0405 connected to several GWY TCP
Ethernet interfaces.
Steve Ng, Project leader for Stratus Automation had
this to say, “We saw
over 15,000 reads without a single read failure with the HF-0405’s and GWY TCP’s. We’ve also seen the wiring reduced, and setup is fast”.