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CVRD Inco Mines Turns to Ekahau to
Track Assets, Productivity May 10, 2007 Two of the company's
mining sites are currently installing Ekahau's real-time location systems. May
10, 2007—CVRD Inco, a mining and metals company based in Toronto, and a wholly owned subsidiary of Brazilian mining company CVRD, is rolling
out a Wi-Fi-based RFID asset-tracking solution made by Finnish firm Ekahau. The company is deploying the solution at its Stobie and North mines, located in Sudbury, Ontario. Derek Buchanan, senior
maintenance manager of communication and automation for CVRD Inco, says the RFID tracking system is part of a wider initiative
to equip its underground mines with Wi-Fi access points for communication, asset tracking and automation applications. In
parts of its underground mines, for example, the company is now using a voice-over-Internet protocol (VOIP) communication
system.
The Stobie Mine recently tested Ekahau tags to track the movement of trucks entering the mine and later
returning to an ore-deposition site. The pilot was conducted to test whether the mining company could rely on the Ekahau
tags and software to track a truck driver's cycle times (how long it takes a driver to retrieve ore and transport it
to its deposition site—a metric currently tracked with pen and paper. Buchanan says the test results were positive,
and that CVRD Inco plans to use the Ekahau platform to track cycle times on a permanent basis. Ekahau's platform consists
of 2.45 GHz RFID tags transmitting unique IDs using the IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi) standard to access points linked to a wireless
LAN, along with tracking software that maps tag location in real time.
| | Inco will attach Ekahau T201 tags (shown here) to 180 vehicles
at its Stobie Mine. | Initially, Stobie will begin its rollout by installing
Wi-Fi access points throughout the parking areas within its nearly 20-kilometer-long mining site. These access points will
be used to track the IDs of Ekahau T201 tags attached to 180 transportation vehicles, such as underground loaders, forklifts
and jeeps used to transport miners. Miners running the Ekahau software on laptop computers linked to the mine's WLAN
will then be able to quickly locate the transporters they need at the beginning of each shift. Buchanan says this should
save workers a significant amount of time each day. "Sometimes," he explains, "miners spend more than an
hour at the beginning of a shift trying to locate all the transportation vehicles they need."
Once the deployment
in parking lot is complete, Stobie will begin installing more access points so it can begin tracking cycle times as truck
drivers remove ore from the mine. The North Mine also plans to being installing access points, attaching Ekahau tags and
using the Ekahau software for similar applications.
Source: RFID Journal
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