AI Stack Light Monitoring for CNC Machines | AI Bot Eye

AI Stack Light Monitoring for CNC & Manufacturing Machines

See When Your Machines Stop — Without Connecting to Every Machine

AI Bot Eye uses suitable existing CCTV views to monitor visible machine stack lights and record running, idle, warning and stopped time.

No PLC access. No CNC controller integration. No monitoring device on every machine.

  • Works with suitable existing CCTV
  • On-premise edge AI
  • No PLC or controller integration
  • Multiple machines per suitable camera view
Watch Live Status Detection
AI Bot Eye monitoring stack lights of nine CNC machines from one production-floor camera view
LIVE VIEW Scanning…
Watch status detection
Live production view: one suitable camera monitoring 9 machine stack lights.
Production floor · Live
Connecting to production floor feed…

The Hidden Loss

The Downtime That Hurts Most Is Often the Downtime Nobody Records

Major breakdowns are noticed.

The harder losses are the repeated five-minute, eight-minute, or ten-minute stoppages happening across machines throughout the day.

Supervisors cannot watch every stack light continuously. Operators may record major failures but miss shorter interruptions. Production reports may show lower output without clearly showing where available machine time was lost.

AI Bot Eye turns visible stack-light changes into a machine-wise status history, helping production teams see recurring inactivity that may otherwise remain scattered across the shift.

The downtime nobody records is often where available machine time quietly disappears.

Machine 01 · Line A One production shift · 08:00 – 16:00

See It Happen

Watch Machine Status Change in Real Time

Real production floor Watch the stack light and AI status box change together

Watch both change together: the physical stack light and its corresponding AI status.

As the physical stack light changes, AI Bot Eye updates the corresponding machine status in real time.

No PLC or controller integration is required. The state change is recognised visually from the existing camera feed.

Machine-wise identification

Each visible stack light is mapped to its machine.

Visible state recognition

Configured states are classified using site logic.

Timestamped status changes

Confirmed changes build a machine-wise timeline.

How It Works

Your Machines Already Show Their Status. AI Bot Eye Makes It Measurable.

Machine stack lights are designed to communicate operating conditions to people on the production floor.

AI Bot Eye observes those same visible signals through suitable camera views and converts confirmed changes into structured machine-state records.

Review the camera view

Assess stack-light visibility, angle, distance, resolution, lighting, reflections, obstructions, and stream compatibility.

Map every visible machine

Identify each machine and its stack-light region within the selected camera view.

Configure machine states

Map green, amber, red, off, blinking, or combined light states to the plant’s operating logic.

Record status changes

Register confirmed state changes and duration into machine-wise histories for production review.

Stack-light meanings differ between machines and factories. Final status names and logic must be configured during deployment.

Production Visibility

See More Than a Red or Green Light

A stack light is useful to the person standing near the machine. AI Bot Eye makes that visible status reviewable across machines, shifts, and days.

Stack light → existing CCTV feed → machine-wise status history

Now

  • Current visible machine state

    See whether a monitored machine is currently showing a configured running, idle, warning, stopped, or inactive state.

  • Time spent in each state

    Review how long each confirmed visible state continued.

Today

  • Machine-wise daily timeline

    See when machine states changed during the day instead of relying only on end-of-shift recollection.

  • Repeated short-stoppage patterns

    Identify machines and time periods where short inactive or warning states repeatedly occur.

Over time

  • Shift-wise and day-wise summaries

    Review broader patterns across operating periods.

  • Historical machine-state records

    Compare visible state behaviour across selected machines and dates.

The exact dashboard, summaries, exports, and alert workflows should reflect the deployed system. Do not display UI mock-ups for features that are not currently available.

Why Visual Monitoring

Machine Visibility Without Machine-Level Integration

Direct machine integration provides deeper controller data, but often requires machine-specific hardware, protocols and installation. AI Bot Eye provides visible machine-state history across suitable mixed or legacy equipment—without connecting to every machine individually.

Two approaches to machine visibility

Direct machine integration Deeper controller telemetry
Visual layer AI Bot Eye visual monitoring Visible-state coverage without per-machine connection
Controller access
Direct machine integrationUsually required
AI Bot EyeNot required
Per-machine hardware
Direct machine integrationOften per machine
AI Bot EyeOne camera may cover several machines
Machine wiring
Direct machine integrationMay require changes
AI Bot EyeNo internal wiring changes
Mixed machine brands
Direct machine integrationProtocol dependent
AI Bot EyeCommon visible stack-light signal
Legacy machines
Direct machine integrationCan be difficult
AI Bot EyePractical when lights are visible
Data depth
Direct machine integrationDetailed machine telemetry
AI Bot EyeVisible state and duration
Best suited for
Direct machine integrationProduction counts, controller alarms, tool data, spindle data and complete OEE
AI Bot EyeMachine-state history across visible mixed or legacy equipment

One suitable camera

Several visible machines.

No individual controller connection required for visible-state monitoring.

One camera view observing four machines in running, waiting, warning and stopped states Camera view RUNNING WAITING WARNING STOPPED M01 M02 M03 M04
Works alongside deeper production systems

AI Bot Eye complements MES, OEE, SCADA and controller-level systems when production counts, rejection data, alarms, tool data, spindle data or complete OEE are required.

Proven on the Shop Floor

One System Across Multiple CNC Production Lines

At Rolex Rings Limited, AI Bot Eye monitors visible stack-light signals across several CNC production lines using existing production-floor camera views. One camera can monitor multiple machines where visibility permits.

The deployment has operated for more than a year across approximately 40 machines. Plant leadership reported that recurring short stoppages revealed through the system added up to approximately 30–45 minutes per machine per day.

One floor. Multiple machine states. Continuously recorded.

Green running stack light state detected on a CNC machine
Running — green
Amber warning stack light state detected on a CNC machine
Warning — amber
Red stopped stack light state detected on Muratec CNC machines
Stopped — red

Coverage across multiple production lines

Stack light monitoring camera view for CNC production line A
Line A
Stack light monitoring camera view for CNC production line C
Line C
Stack light monitoring camera view for CNC production line D
Line D
Stack light monitoring camera view for CNC production line G
Line G

See how the deployment monitors multiple CNC lines and builds machine-wise status history.

Rolex Rings Limited · live CNC manufacturing deployment

Explore the Full Deployment

Who It Is For

Built for Machine-Intensive Manufacturing Floors

The solution is strongest where many machines display visible status through stack lights, but direct integration across every machine would be slow, expensive, or impractical.

Industries

  • CNC, VMC, and HMC machining plants
  • Automotive component manufacturers
  • Bearing manufacturers
  • Precision engineering companies
  • Metal-processing factories
  • Mixed-brand production environments
  • Legacy-machine-heavy facilities
  • Automated equipment using tower or Andon lights

Strong-fit conditions

  • Several machines or production lines need common visibility
  • Stack lights are clearly visible from practical camera positions
  • Supervisors currently rely heavily on manual observation
  • Short recurring stoppages may not be consistently recorded
  • The plant contains machines of different brands or ages
  • Direct PLC or controller integration is not the preferred first step
  • The production team wants machine-state timing before a larger MES or IoT project

Clear Scope

What AI Bot Eye Measures — and What It Does Not

AI Bot Eye can provide

Visibility derived from camera-observed machine states.

  • Visible machine-state classification
  • Duration of configured visible states
  • Machine-wise status timelines
  • Repeated inactive-state patterns
  • Shift-wise and day-wise status visibility
  • Historical records for production review
  • Camera-based evidence from suitable views

Requires additional system data or integration

Information not available from visible stack lights alone.

  • Exact component production counts
  • Good-part or rejected-part counts
  • CNC controller alarm codes
  • Tool condition
  • Spindle speed or feed rate
  • Energy consumption
  • Automatic stoppage root cause
  • Complete OEE by itself

The practical outcome

Show when visible machines were running, waiting, warning, stopped or inactive—so the production team knows where to investigate.

FAQ

Common Questions From Plant and Production Teams

Does AI Bot Eye need a PLC or CNC controller connection?

No. For Stack Light Monitoring, AI Bot Eye visually observes the machine’s existing stack light through a suitable camera feed. It does not require PLC or controller access to monitor visible states.

Can it work with our existing CCTV?

Possibly. The camera must show the stack lights clearly enough for reliable machine-wise monitoring. We assess resolution, distance, angle, lighting, obstruction, and stream compatibility before recommending a deployment.

How many machines can one camera monitor?

There is no fixed number. One suitable view in the live deployment monitors 9 machines. Actual coverage depends on camera resolution, distance, angle, lighting, stack-light size, and whether every light remains clearly visible.

Can it monitor different machine brands?

Yes, where the machines use visible stack lights and the camera view is suitable. Because monitoring is visual, it does not depend on one common CNC controller protocol.

What do the light colours mean?

The system does not assume that every factory uses the same meanings. Green, amber, red, off, blinking, and combined states are mapped according to the machine and site-level operating logic.

Can it detect blinking stack lights?

Blinking states can be evaluated during the pilot. Reliability depends on camera frame rate, blink pattern, distance, image quality, and lighting.

Does it calculate OEE?

Not by itself. AI Bot Eye can contribute machine-state duration and availability visibility. Complete OEE also requires performance and quality data such as production counts, ideal cycle time, and rejected parts.

Can it tell us why a machine stopped?

Not from the stack light alone. It shows when a configured stopped, warning, idle, or inactive state occurred and how long it continued. The production team can then investigate or classify the reason.

Is processing cloud-based?

AI Bot Eye can process selected camera feeds locally through an on-premise edge system. Any remote dashboard, reporting, or integration should be configured according to the customer’s IT and security requirements.

Start With One Line

Start With One Suitable Camera View

Send your machine count, floor layout, or a camera screenshot. We assess stack-light visibility and practical coverage before recommending a pilot — no commitment to connect every machine individually.

View the Rolex Rings Deployment

A camera screenshot or short video helps, but is optional. The first discussion focuses on whether visible-state monitoring is practical for your floor.