Fuse sensors contain an emitter and receiver housed together that detects objects when a percentage of emitted light is diffusely reflected back and activates the receiver. The switching distance depends on the object's reflectivity, and factors like the object's size, surface, shape, density, and color as well as the angle of impact determine the intensity of diffused light, allowing fuse sensors to typically scan small distances within a range of a few decimeters.
Fuse sensors contain an emitter and receiver housed together that detects objects when a percentage of emitted light is diffusely reflected back and activates the receiver. The switching distance depends on the object's reflectivity, and factors like the object's size, surface, shape, density, and color as well as the angle of impact determine the intensity of diffused light, allowing fuse sensors to typically scan small distances within a range of a few decimeters.
Fuse sensors contain an emitter and receiver housed together that detects objects when a percentage of emitted light is diffusely reflected back and activates the receiver. The switching distance depends on the object's reflectivity, and factors like the object's size, surface, shape, density, and color as well as the angle of impact determine the intensity of diffused light, allowing fuse sensors to typically scan small distances within a range of a few decimeters.
ousing. he object diffusely reflects a percentage of the mitted light thereby activating the receiver. Depending on the design of the receiver, the output is hen switched through (NO) or switched off (NC). The switching distance largely depends on the eflectivity of the object. The size, surface, shape, density, and colour of the bject as well as the angle of impact determine the ntensity of the diffused light so that as a rule only mall distances within a range of a few decimeters can e scanned.