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Watlow ANASOFT User Manual

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Glossary

80 ANASOFT User’s Guide

N

No Key Reset

A method for resetting the controller's memory
(for instance, after an EPROM change).

Noise

Unwanted electrical signals that usually produce
signal interference in sensors and sensor circuits.
See Electromagnetic Interference.

Noise Suppression

The use of components to reduce electrical inter-
ference that is caused by making or breaking
electrical contact, or by inductors.

Non Linear

Through ANAFAZE software, the Non Linear
field sets the system to linear control, or to one of
two non linear control options. Input 0 for Linear,
1 or 2 for non linear.

O

Offset

The difference in temperature between the set-
point and the actual process temperature. Offset
is the error in the process variable that is typical
of proportional-only control.

On/Off Control

A method of control that turns the output full on
until setpoint is reached, and then off until the
process error exceeds the hysteresis.

Open Loop

A control system with no sensory feedback.

Operator Menus

The menus accessible from the front panel of a
controller. These menus allow operators to set or
change various control actions or features.

Optical Isolation

Two electronic networks that are connected
through an LED (Light Emitting Diode) and a
photoelectric receiver. There is no electrical con-
tinuity between the two networks.

Output

Control signal action in response to the difference
between setpoint and process variable.

Output Type

The form of PID control output, such as Time
Proportioning, Distributed Zero Crossing,
SDAC, or Analog. Also the description of the
electrical hardware that makes up the output.

Overshoot

The amount by which a process variable exceeds
the setpoint before it stabilizes.

P

Panel Lock

A feature that prevents operation of the front
panel by unauthorized people.

PID

Proportional, Integral, Derivative. A control
mode with three functions:
Proportional action dampens the system
response, Integral corrects for droops, and Deriv-
ative prevents overshoot and undershoot.

Polarity

The electrical quality of having two opposite
poles, one positive and one negative. Polarity
determines the direction in which a current tends
to flow.

Process Variable

The parameter that is controlled or measured.
Typical examples are temperature, relative
humidity, pressure, flow, fluid level, events, etc.
The high process variable is the highest value of
the process range, expressed in engineering units.
The low process variable is the lowest value of
the process range.

Proportional (P)

Output effort proportional to the error from set-
point. For example, if the proportional band is
20

º

and the process is 10

º

below the setpoint, the

heat proportioned effort is 50%. The lower the
PB value, the higher the gain.