11
www.renishaw.com/xm60
XM-60 and XM-600 multi-axis calibrator
Mechanical safety
•
When setting up and mounting Renishaw XM and XC-80 systems
beware of pinch and/or crush hazards that may be created, for example,
due to magnetic mounting bases.
•
Beware of trip hazards that may be created when using the XM and
XC-80 systems, for example, due to trailing cables.
•
Exercise caution if components are to be mounted to moving or rotating
machinery. Beware of cables becoming entangled.
•
Exercise extreme caution if XM and XC-80 system components are to
be mounted to machinery that may accelerate rapidly or move at high
speed, which could lead to items colliding or being ejected.
•
If it is necessary to operate the machine with the guards or any
safety feature removed or disabled, it is the responsibility of the
operator to ensure that alternative safety measures are taken in
line with the machine manufacturer’s operating instructions or
relevant codes of practice.
•
If you are using a part program or error correction parameters
generated by the Renishaw software, it is your responsibility to validate
these at low feedrate and be prepared to operate the emergency stop
button if necessary.
•
The XM system weighs approximately 24 kg in the case (31 kg with the
machine tool fixturing kit attached). Users should exercise caution and
follow local manual handling guidelines.
Laser optical safety
•
In accordance with (IEC) EN60825-1, XM systems are
Class 2M lasers and safety goggles are not required
(under normal circumstances the eye will blink and look
away before damage can occur).
•
Do not stare directly into the laser beams or view them with optical
equipment such as telescopes, convergent mirrors or binoculars as
permanent retinal damage could occur. Do not direct the beam at
other people or into areas where people unconnected with laser work
might be present. It is safe to view a diffuse-reflected beam during
system alignment.
•
Complies with 21 CFR 1040.10 and 1040.11 except for conformance
with IEC 60825-1 Ed. 3., as described in Laser Notice No. 56, dated
May 8, 2019.
Rotating the shutter to the closed position (the right-hand position on the
picture) ensures no beam is emitted.