Upgrading your industrial PC is a significant investment of both time and money. Since Industrial PCs impact so many systems and processes, changes are met with an understandable level of hesitation. Many businesses forgo upgrades for too long, losing out on powerful performance improvements that can save time and reduce costs. So how do you know when it’s time to upgrade your industrial PC? Here are a few things to look for.
This is an obvious sign that it’s time to upgrade your industrial PC. Sometimes slow-downs happen all at once, and other times this sluggishness happens over a longer period, which makes it more difficult to notice. A sudden decrease in IPC performance may mean that an internal component is damaged. However, for older IPCs, this poses additional challenges (see point 6 below). If IPC performance has slowly decreased, this may be the result of a processor or hard drive that can no longer keep up with the demands of new programs. Either way, this is a clear sign that it’s time to upgrade your industrial PC.
If your OS is no longer supported and being actively upgraded and patched, your business is exposed to cybersecurity vulnerabilities as well as performance issues. In addition, older operating systems pose compatibility programs with many new programs, which creates obstacles for upgrades to any other part of your system. Windows 10 is the standard for most businesses. If you’re still working with Windows 7 and you’re counting on technology churn to skip to the next iteration beyond Windows 10, remember that all support and updates of Windows 7 will stop in 2020, while updates to Windows 10 will continue for the foreseeable future.
If you’ve already made upgrades to other programs or systems, but not your IPC, it’s likely that your dated technology is dragging down your other upgrades. The modern hardware and software supporting new machines and programs can’t run properly if it hits a bottleneck in a slower system. An outdated processor or insufficient RAM will ultimately slow the workflow, or insufficient storage capacity can cause data corruption or loss.
Your IPC does not have to be slow or broken to be costing you money. Many IPC upgrades can support better process coordination and data integration, which can mean energy savings, increased production, reduced waste, reduced downtime, lower maintenance costs, and other advantages across the production line. If your IPC cannot use data to make better decisions or improve process timing, but your competitors’ can, you’re ultimately losing out.
If your IPC hardware is no longer being manufactured, spare parts will be increasingly difficult to find. If your IPC starts to lag or, worse, damages or malfunctions cause it to stop working completely, you risk days of downtime and the high costs of expediting a hard-to-find replacement. If you are searching for outdated components, it’s a clear sign to upgrade your IPC.