In a high-pressure system, the smallest flaw can become the biggest risk. For Schneider Electric’s Foxboro differential pressure transmitters, stainless steel plugs may appear to be simple hex-shaped parts with a vent option. However, they play a critical role in ensuring safety, accuracy, and reliability in tough operating environments like refineries, chemical plants, and power stations.
Schneider Electric provides an economical pressure transmitter designed for applications demanding an accuracy of ±0.075% of span and featuring SIL2 certification as standard. This robust design also boasts exceptional stability, with drift of less than ±0.05% URL/Yr for 5 years.
Inside these transmitters, every component has a job to do. For these precision plugs, this means:
- Safety in Assembly: Avoiding sharp edges that could injure operators or complicate installation.
- Integrity in Sealing: Ensuring that even the tiniest flaw doesn’t compromise the seal, which is vital for high-pressure measurements.
- Reliability in Operation: Eliminating machining burrs that could result in sliced sensor wires, preventing accurate function and causing unwanted downtime.
The Foxboro line also leverages FoxCal dynamic technology, which includes 11 calibration curves in a single transmitter. This allows the device to automatically switch to the most accurate curve based on input, enhancing performance. Furthermore, the combination of enhanced turndown and FoxCal technology can reduce inventory stock by two-thirds—a significant logistical and cost benefit. These transmitters are also designed for easy integration, compatible with both Field Device Tool (FDT) and Field Device Interface (FDI) technology.
The Challenge: Eliminating Risk
From the start, our quality and engineering teams knew that the machiningwould be demanding.
Working with 3/16-inch stainless steel hex stock on a Tsugami Swiss Lathe meant burr control would be a constant battle. And in this application, perfection wasn’t option – it was mandatory.
Two details required immediate attention:
- Vent hole burrs: The 1/8-inch side hole left a burr in the plug’s center. Though small, it was dangerous because the sharp edges could slice wires during assembly and affect performance.
- Thread-start burrs: The requisite cutoff left a sharp edge at the start of the outside diameter thread. This could lead to both operator safety issues and possible seal failures.
As our Matthew Perry, MES Quality and Engineering, put it: “These weren’t cosmetic issues. They were showstoppers.”
Conclusion
What started as a burr problem became proof of what happens when engineering know-how and customer collaboration align. By reworking machining processes, enhancing programming, and upgrading inspection, MES delivered parts that met Schneider’s highest standards for safety, consistency, and scale.
For Schneider, it means a reliable supply of a critical part. For MES, it reinforces our belief that persistence and ownership turn challenges into best practices.
Ready to raise the standard for critical components? Contact MES today.
Key Metrics
Parts involved: 8 unique part numbers across the plug family
Material: 3/16-inch stainless steel hex stock
Equipment: Tsugami Swiss Lathe with optimized programming and tool paths
Volumes: Doubled the scale
Inspection: Optical comparative vision system implemented for digital, real-time checks
Global reach: Process improvements shared across facilities in Mexico, India, and China