ISO/TC 184/SC 1/WG 9 - Interfaces between manufacturing systems
Interfaces entre les systèmes de fabrication
General Information
Frequently Asked Questions
ISO/TC 184/SC 1/WG 9 is a Subcommittee within the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). It is named "Interfaces between manufacturing systems". This committee has published 2 standards.
ISO/TC 184/SC 1/WG 9 develops ISO standards in the area of Information technology. Currently, there are 2 published standards from this subcommittee.
The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) is an independent, non-governmental international organization that develops and publishes international standards. Founded in 1947 and headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, ISO brings together experts from 170+ member countries to share knowledge and develop voluntary, consensus-based standards that support innovation and provide solutions to global challenges.
A Subcommittee (SC) in ISO operates under a Technical Committee and focuses on a specific subset of the TC's scope. Subcommittees develop standards and technical specifications in their specialized area, reporting to their parent Technical Committee. They may also have working groups for detailed technical work.
This document deals with the safety interface and control interface. It allocates signals to a conformance class and/or conformance option. It describes the detailed functions of each signal, describes and displays the timing interactions between signals in flow charts and shows examples for safety matrices and safety-related functional relationships. This document defines three conformance classes and dedicated conformance options. Classes and options consist of a number of signals to: - allow a flexible adaptation of the interface(s) to a project-specific scope of functions and simultaneously; - tie sets of signals tight enough to avoid unnecessary coordination efforts between suppliers of the machine tending systems and machines.
- Standard44 pagesEnglish languagesale 15% off
ISO 21919 describes interfaces for automated machine tending of at least one computer numerically controlled (CNC) machine by using a machine tending device. These interfaces are the link between automated machine tending devices and machines used for production. The automated machine tending is initiated by either the machine tending system or by the machine. This document gives an overview and defines the fundamental principles on how the interfaces are set up. It defines the necessary vocabulary and sets the syntax for the structure of signals. It distinguishes between the safety interface, the control interface and project specific extensions. This document defines three conformance classes and dedicated conformance options. Classes and options consist of a number of signals to simultaneously: - allow a flexible adaptation of the interface(s) to a project-specific scope of functions; - tie sets of signals tight enough to avoid unnecessary coordination efforts between suppliers of the machine tending devices and machines. ISO 21919 concentrates on the control-related and safety-related connections. It does not describe the mechanical connections, it does not determine the transfer physics, a pin assignment, the hardware of the interfaces or measure of communication, e.g. protocol, and it is not intended to be used for communication to a MES (Manufacturing Execution System). NOTE ISO 21919‑2 deals with the safety interface and control interface, allocating signals to a conformance class and/or conformance option, describing the detailed functions of each signal, describing and displaying the timing interactions between signals in flow charts and showing examples for safety matrices and safety-related functional relationships.
- Standard18 pagesEnglish languagesale 15% off





