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Every year, hundreds of new products are introduced, but only a few go on to greatness. At Control Engineering, we try to predict which those will be. The Control Engineering Engineers’ Choice Awards seek to highlight and honor the many automation, instrumentation, and control products introduced in the previous year, and give readers a chance to revisit some they may have missed.

By Renee Robbins, Control Engineering April 1, 2007
Sidebars:
A guide to this supplement

Every year, hundreds of new products are introduced, but only a few go on to greatness. At Control Engineering , we try to predict which those will be.

The Control Engineering Engineers’ Choice Awards seek to highlight and honor the many automation, instrumentation, and control products introduced in the previous year, and give readers a chance to revisit some they may have missed. In this, our 20th year of awards, we’ve revamped the process and the timing to let our subscribers help make the predictions.

In January, we asked for nominations of products that readers found or heard about that made the biggest impression. Eligible products were those introduced in North America and available for purchase between December 1, 2005, and December 31, 2006. Vendor, reader and editor nominees numbered 113 candidates in 19 technology categories.

More than 700 ballots were completed, and those nominees were narrowed down to 40 winners by online voting conducted in March. Innovation reigned in the form of greater intelligence in the smallest of devices, extensive enterprise integration and connectivity, integrated safety features, and a range of wireless options.

Knowing most readers don’t own the new products they’re voting on, Control Engineering asked them to read vendor-supplied descriptions and choose two from each category they believed were “the most exceptional or noteworthy based on technological advancement (innovation), service to the industry (usefulness), and/or market impact (would buy it tomorrow if I could).” The top two vote getters in each category were declared winners. In some cases, a tie resulted in more than two winners in a category.

On the following pages you’ll see the 40 Control Engineering Engineers’ Choice Award winners and their product descriptions, as well as a list of the nominees. Descriptions and links to more information on the nominees and winners appear online at www.controleng.com/awards .

Thank you to everyone who cast a vote. Congratulations especially to the three lucky voters who entered our drawing to win a gift check. They are Satish B. Baliga of Houston, TX, Glen Jenkins of Houston, TX, and Larry Richardson of Village of Lakewood, IL.

And congratulations to all the vendors who introduced new and innovative products in 2006. Product innovation keeps North American manufacturing strong, and Control Engineering is proud to showcase the fruits of your hard work.

Adalet Wireless p.8
Baldor Electric Co. p.14
Beckhoff Automation p.6, 10, 16
Belden p.18
Christensen Display Products p.4
Cognex Corp. p.12
Control Station, Inc. p.20
ControlSoft, Inc. p.20
Eaton Corporation p.4
Emerson Process Management p.8
Honeywell Process Solutions p.20
Iconics p.4
InduSoft p.4
Innovasic Semiconductor p.10
Invensys Process Systems p.22
Kontron p.10
Lenze/AC Technology Corp. p.14
Mitsubishi Electric Automation, Inc. p.16
Modular Industrial Computers p.6
Moxa Technologies, Inc. p.18
MTL Open Systems Technologies p.22
National Instruments p.24
Ohio Semitronics, Inc. p.8
Opto 22 p.18
Panduit Corp. p.6
Phoenix Contact p.18
ProSoft Technology p.24
Rockwell Automation p.10, 12
Siemens Energy and Automation, Inc. p.14
Turck Inc p.16
Wago Corp. p.14
Weidmuller p.6
Wonderware p.22
Woodhead Industries, a division of Molex p.16

Renee Robbins is editorial director of Control Engineering. She can be reached at renee.robbins@reedbusiness.com .

A guide to this supplement

The Control Engineering Engineers’ Choice Awards highlight significant new products from the previous year. Below is an index to the 40 winning products, by category. In addition, throughout the supplement you’ll find the entire list of 113 new products considered for the awards. To learn more about those products, visit Control Engineering regrets the error, and has included the company’s 2006 nominated new products in the software and human machine interfaces/industrial PCs categories.)

Human-Machine Interfaces and Industrial PCs
• HMI hardware p.4
• HMI software p.4
• Industrial PCs p.6
Instrumentation, Process Sensors, Control Components
• Analysis instrumentation p.8
• Connectors p.6
• Process Sensors p.8
Machine and Embedded Control, Discrete Sensors
• Controllers p.10
• Discrete sensors and readers p.12
• Embedded products p.10
Motors, Drives and Motion Control
• Drives p.12
• Motion control p.14
• Motors p.14, 16
Networks, Communications Hardware, Software
• I/O products and cabling p.16, 18
• Switches, routers, and hubs p.16
• Wireless products p.18
Process and Advanced Control
• Advanced control p.20
• Process control p.20, 22
Software
• Enterprise integration p.22
• Programming p.24