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Ultrasonic vs Photoelectric Web Guide

Sensor choice depends on material transparency, surface condition, edge contrast, and machine environment.

Industrial web guide sensor inspecting transparent and printed web material
Sensor selection

Material type decides the best sensor technology

Transparent film, printed webs, nonwoven material and reflective surfaces often require different sensing methods to maintain reliable edge detection.

When to use ultrasonic sensors

Ultrasonic sensors are useful for transparent films, plastic film, copper and aluminum foil, and materials where optical contrast is unreliable. They detect the material edge using sound rather than visible light.

When to use photoelectric sensors

Photoelectric sensors are common for paper, opaque film, labels, and printed materials with stable edge or line contrast. They are compact and widely used in standard edge guiding applications.

Related KRD products

FAQ

Which sensor works best for transparent film?

Ultrasonic sensing is usually preferred because it does not depend on optical contrast.

Can photoelectric sensors track printed lines?

Yes, when the printed line or mark provides stable contrast for the sensor.

Can one controller support both sensor types?

Many web guide controllers can support multiple sensor types, but compatibility should be confirmed by model.

Engineering considerations for production lines

Sensor choice is one of the most important decisions in a web guiding project. Photoelectric sensors work well when the material provides consistent optical contrast, while ultrasonic sensors detect the physical edge and are less affected by colour or transparency.

A practical rule is to test the actual material whenever possible. Clear film, glossy coatings, printed graphics, dust, vibration and web flutter can all change sensor behaviour. KRD typically evaluates material type, edge condition, sensing distance and machine environment before recommending a sensor family.

How KRD Automation supports selection

KRD Automation reviews the complete machine context before recommending components. Important details include web width, material type, line speed, control zone, available installation space, required correction accuracy and whether the project is a new OEM build or a retrofit. This approach helps avoid over-specifying one part while missing the practical limit in another part of the control loop.

For a customized recommendation, share drawings, photos or short videos of the machine section. KRD can help compare tension controllers, load cells, EPC controllers, ultrasonic or photoelectric sensors, linear actuators and integrated web guiding units for the application.

Practical data to collect before choosing equipment

For any roll-to-roll control project, the best recommendation starts with process data. Useful information includes web width, material thickness, substrate type, line speed, roll diameter, control zone, required accuracy and the machine section where the problem appears. Photos of the web path, sensor mounting area and actuator location are often more useful than a model number alone because they show the real mechanical constraints.

It is also important to describe the defect in production language. Examples include edge wander, wrinkles after acceleration, unstable unwind tension, poor rewind hardness, hunting guide movement, sensor loss on transparent film, inconsistent slitting edge or registration drift. These symptoms help identify whether the issue is mainly sensing, control logic, actuator sizing, mechanical alignment or tension stability.

Common specification mistakes

One common mistake is selecting a controller without confirming the feedback method. Another is choosing a sensor based only on catalogue type instead of testing the actual material. A third is undersizing the actuator or brake because the machine speed, roll inertia or guide load was not considered. In industrial environments, stable performance usually comes from matching the full loop: sensor, controller, actuator, mechanics and operator interface.

For North American OEM and converter projects, serviceability also matters. Wiring should be clear, calibration should be repeatable and operators should be able to understand alarm conditions quickly. A solution that is easy to install and maintain often creates more value than a more complex system that is difficult to support on the production floor.

When to contact KRD Automation

Contact KRD when a machine requires a new tension controller, web guide controller, sensor, actuator or integrated EPC unit, or when an existing line is producing waste that appears related to web tension or lateral alignment. KRD can review the application and suggest a practical product family for printing, packaging, film, foil, label, nonwoven or lithium battery material production.

Implementation checklist for engineers and maintenance teams

Before purchasing equipment, document the current machine condition and the expected improvement. Record where the web becomes unstable, whether the issue appears during startup or steady operation, and whether the problem changes with material, roll diameter or speed. This information helps separate a control issue from a mechanical alignment issue.

Next, confirm the installation constraints. Check the available panel space, sensor mounting distance, roller layout, actuator mounting position, cable routing and whether the machine already has PLC input or output requirements. Many successful retrofit projects depend on these mechanical and electrical details being reviewed before the product is ordered.

Finally, define how success will be measured. Examples include lower startup scrap, reduced edge trim, more consistent rewind quality, fewer web breaks, faster changeover or improved registration stability. When the success metric is clear, it is easier to choose the right level of control instead of overbuilding or underbuilding the system.

Contact KRD Automation for a customized solution

Share your material sample and guiding method so we can recommend the right sensor.

Contact KRD Automation