Machine Safety

Safety light curtains for hand and finger protection on press brakes, stamping presses, and robotic cells.

Safety relays for E-stop, light-curtain, and guard-interlock monitoring — current and obsolete models.

Machine Safety

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Choosing Machine Safety components

Machine safety is a process before it is a parts list: the risk assessment identifies hazards, the safety circuit is designed to mitigate them to a target Performance Level, and the hardware is selected to meet that PL. Buying safety devices without that context — or replacing them without understanding why the original was chosen — can defeat the safety function it was meant to implement.

What to verify before ordering machine safety hardware:

  • The risk assessment document and the resulting safety functions (each function has a target PL or SIL)
  • The current safety circuit drawing — exact device part numbers, contact counts, and reset logic
  • The PL/SIL rating of the device being replaced (downgrading by accident is a common failure mode)
  • Configurable-device backups (configuration file for PNOZmulti, Flexi Soft, MSR210P)
  • Whether the safety function is hardwired (relays + contactors) or networked (Safety-over-EtherCAT, CIP Safety, PROFIsafe)
  • Coordination with safety-rated drives (STO, SS1, SS2, SLS)
  • Periodic functional test requirements per the OEM and the standard

Common gotchas: replacing a single-channel input with dual-channel cross-monitored input changes the diagnostic coverage and the PL rating — sometimes for the better, but the safety drawing and validation documents need to be updated. Adding "more contacts" by paralleling safety contacts is rarely correct; safety outputs are designed for a specific load and switching behavior. Networked safety systems (Safety-over-EtherCAT, CIP Safety) require matched safety addresses and signature checks — a unit with a different address than the network expects will not pass safety handshake.

Typical machine safety applications: emergency stop on machine tools and assembly lines, perimeter guarding with interlocked gates, light-curtain protection on press operations, area scanning around collaborative or industrial robotic cells, and safe-stop coordination with servo drives. On legacy machines, exact-OEM replacement is usually the path that keeps the existing risk assessment valid without re-engineering.

For obsolete machine safety hardware, send the OEM part number for a sourcing quote.

What does machine safety mean in practice?
It is the combination of risk assessment, safety circuit design, and validated hardware that reduces machine hazards to acceptable risk per ISO 12100, ISO 13849, and IEC 62061. Hardware is one part — the engineering process is the other.
Do you stock obsolete safety hardware?
Yes. Discontinued Pilz PNOZ X-series, retired Sick C4000 and S3000, end-of-life Schmersal interlocks, and earlier 440R safety relays are sourced through our supplier network.
Will substituting a device require re-validation?
If the substitute device has the same OEM part number, no — it preserves the original validation. If you cross to a different model or brand, the safety function should be re-validated under ISO 13849.
Are these devices certified?
Devices retain their original OEM certification (TÜV, UL, CSA, etc.) when manufactured. Surplus units carry that certification forward. We do not re-certify or modify devices.
Can you source full safety kits for a known machine?
Yes — send the safety circuit drawing or bill of materials and we will quote the components together. This is common for spare-bank stocking and for restoring older machines after a control-cabinet rebuild.
What is the warranty?
12-month functional warranty on each device. Safety-function performance in the installed application is the integrator's responsibility, independent of the device warranty.
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