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3 non, Isolated analog inputs (ai) on tb6 of process i/o, Board – Emerson Process Management Bristol ControlWave ExpressPAC User Manual

Page 54

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ControlWave ExpressPAC Instruction Manual (CI-ControlWave EPAC)

3-8

I/O Configuration and Wiring

Revised Mar-2011

3.3.3 Non-Isolated Analog Inputs (AI) on TB6 of Process I/O Board

Process I/O Board terminal block connector TB6 provides interface to
three single-ended analog inputs (AIs).

Table 3-5. Non-Isolated AI General Characteristics

Type Number

Supported Characteristics

Analog
Inputs
(AI)

3 (on TB6)

Jumper-selectable using JP5, JP6, and

JP7 for either 4-20mA or 1-5V
operation.

Jumper JP4 determines whether AI

field power comes from system power
(bulk input supply applied to TB1-3
and TB1-4 on the CPU/System
Controller board) or the external loop
power source connected to TB7-3 and
TB7-4 on the Process I/O board.

2 Hz low pass filter for each AI.

Surge Suppression.

Self calibrating.

Setting Jumpers See Section 3.2.1 for details on setting jumpers.

Wiring Each AI includes three terminals (field power, AI# and DGND). See

Figure 3-2 for wiring diagrams. If using the ControlWave Loop Power
Supply, see document PIP-ControlWave-LS.

Notes:

You must connect cable shields associated with AI wiring to the
ControlWave ExpressPAC chassis ground.

Multiple shield terminations require you to supply a copper ground
bus. You must connect the ground bus to the ControlWave
ExpressPAC chassis ground using up to a #4 AWG wire size. The
ground bus must accommodate a connection to a known good Earth
ground (in lieu of a direct connection from the ControlWave
ExpressPAC chassis ground) and to all AI cable shields.

Use an appropriate terminal lug for shield wires and secure them to
the copper bus using industry rugged hardware (screw/bolt, lock
washer and nuts).

Software Configuration

To use data from these AIs you must include a CWM_EIO board in
your ControlWave project using ControlWave Designer’s I/O
Configurator, and then configure it. See the ControlWave Designer
Programmer's Handbook
(D5125) for more information. That same
manual includes an I/O Mapping section that describes, for advanced
users, the I/O map for this board.