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conveyortype

Conveyortype is a term used in industrial automation and logistics to classify a physical or simulated conveyor system. It serves as a metadata value or enumerated type that distinguishes conveyors by their mechanism, surface, and intended use, enabling uniform control, routing decisions, and data analysis across a factory or warehouse information system.

Common conveyortype values include belt conveyors, roller conveyors, chain conveyors, screw conveyors, pneumatic tube conveyers, gravity

In data models, conveyortype is typically represented as an enumerated field with attributes such as maximum

In practice, the term appears in planning tools, digital twins, manufacturing execution systems (MES), warehouse management

Relation to standards: terminology and value sets for conveyortype vary by vendor or project, though many implementations

conveyors,
and
vertical
or
overhead
conveyors.
Some
systems
also
include
specialty
or
hybrid
types
for
nonstandard
transports.
Each
type
implies
different
motion
characteristics,
drive
methods,
and
safety
considerations.
load,
speed
range,
incline
limit,
and
the
drive
method.
This
abstraction
supports
generic
control
logic
and
data
aggregation
across
diverse
equipment
on
a
single
line
or
facility.
systems
(WMS),
and
SCADA,
where
it
informs
routing
logic,
energy
consumption
estimates,
and
maintenance
scheduling.
For
example,
a
line-balancing
algorithm
can
adjust
throughput
expectations
based
on
whether
a
workstation
feeds
a
belt
or
roller
section,
while
a
preventive
maintenance
module
uses
type
to
select
inspection
intervals.
align
with
common
automation
and
logistics
concepts
for
equipment
classification.
See
also
conveyor,
automation,
MES,
and
SCADA.