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Dear All
An instrumentation issue - A machine is utilising three 4 to 20ma pressure transmitters for control purposes. They are all on different circuits which have their own supplies. For certain reasons it has become desirble to have just one transmitter perform the function of all three (same pressure being measured) - how can this be acheived? A spliter has been tried and whilst this did indeed generate three signals from one instrument (the original and two additional outputs) it could not be connected into the existing installation - for each circuit a loop was required and it's own voltage was present, whereas the splitter generated its own power etc. Is there a method or device that can do this? Any advice is greatly apprecited. Thanks in advance Steve |
#2
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Posted to alt.electronics,alt.binaries.schematics.electronic,sci.electronics.design
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Steve & Lizzie wrote:
Dear All An instrumentation issue - A machine is utilising three 4 to 20ma pressure transmitters for control purposes. They are all on different circuits which have their own supplies. For certain reasons it has become desirble to have just one transmitter perform the function of all three (same pressure being measured) - how can this be acheived? A spliter has been tried and whilst this did indeed generate three signals from one instrument (the original and two additional outputs) it could not be connected into the existing installation - for each circuit a loop was required and it's own voltage was present, whereas the splitter generated its own power etc. Is there a method or device that can do this? Any advice is greatly apprecited. Thanks in advance Steve It sounds easy in principal, and damned useful. I expect there is, but I'm not tuned into the industrial process control market. Try posting the question on sci.engr.control. Someone there ought to know if there are isolated repeaters out there. Alternately, call up GE, and Siemens, and Honeywell, and the other usual suspects, and see if they can sell you something or direct your attention to someone who can. -- Tim Wescott Wescott Design Services http://www.wescottdesign.com Do you need to implement control loops in software? "Applied Control Theory for Embedded Systems" gives you just what it says. See details at http://www.wescottdesign.com/actfes/actfes.html |
#3
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Posted to alt.electronics,alt.binaries.schematics.electronic,sci.electronics.design
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On Mon, 18 Feb 2008 18:38:12 GMT, "Steve & Lizzie"
wrote: Dear All An instrumentation issue - A machine is utilising three 4 to 20ma pressure transmitters for control purposes. They are all on different circuits which have their own supplies. For certain reasons it has become desirble to have just one transmitter perform the function of all three (same pressure being measured) - how can this be acheived? A spliter has been tried and whilst this did indeed generate three signals from one instrument (the original and two additional outputs) it could not be connected into the existing installation - for each circuit a loop was required and it's own voltage was present, whereas the splitter generated its own power etc. Is there a method or device that can do this? Any advice is greatly apprecited. Thanks in advance Steve You need two "loop isolators." Google that. John |
#4
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Posted to alt.electronics,alt.binaries.schematics.electronic,sci.electronics.design
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On Mon, 18 Feb 2008 18:38:12 GMT, the renowned "Steve & Lizzie"
wrote: Dear All An instrumentation issue - A machine is utilising three 4 to 20ma pressure transmitters for control purposes. They are all on different circuits which have their own supplies. For certain reasons it has become desirble to have just one transmitter perform the function of all three (same pressure being measured) - how can this be acheived? A spliter has been tried and whilst this did indeed generate three signals from one instrument (the original and two additional outputs) it could not be connected into the existing installation - for each circuit a loop was required and it's own voltage was present, whereas the splitter generated its own power etc. Is there a method or device that can do this? Any advice is greatly apprecited. Thanks in advance Steve As John says, isolators will work, but make sure you don't try to use the loop-powered type as they will probably have too much voltage drop. You would series the inputs of the two isolators with one load. In some cases, you can series all three loads and use a single supply, but you'd have to watch the voltage drop, voltage limit, compliance and grounding issues. Best regards, Spehro Pefhany -- "it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward" Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com Embedded software/hardware/analog Info for designers: http://www.speff.com |
#5
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Posted to alt.electronics,sci.electronics.design
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On Feb 18, 2:16*pm, Tim Wescott wrote:
It sounds easy in principal, and damned useful. *I expect there is, but To the principal's office with you! |
#6
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Posted to alt.electronics,alt.binaries.schematics.electronic,sci.electronics.design
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On Mon, 18 Feb 2008 18:38:12 GMT, "Steve & Lizzie"
wrote: Dear All An instrumentation issue - A machine is utilising three 4 to 20ma pressure transmitters for control purposes. They are all on different circuits which have their own supplies. For certain reasons it has become desirble to have just one transmitter perform the function of all three (same pressure being measured) - how can this be acheived? A spliter has been tried and whilst this did indeed generate three signals from one instrument (the original and two additional outputs) it could not be connected into the existing installation - for each circuit a loop was required and it's own voltage was present, whereas the splitter generated its own power etc. Is there a method or device that can do this? Any advice is greatly apprecited. Thanks in advance Steve I'm guessing that you want the three existing outputs from a single sensor? If so, decode the one sensor and fan out the decoded outputs. Tom |
#7
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Posted to alt.electronics,alt.binaries.schematics.electronic,sci.electronics.design
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Tom2000 wrote:
On Mon, 18 Feb 2008 18:38:12 GMT, "Steve & Lizzie" wrote: Dear All An instrumentation issue - A machine is utilising three 4 to 20ma pressure transmitters for control purposes. They are all on different circuits which have their own supplies. For certain reasons it has become desirble to have just one transmitter perform the function of all three (same pressure being measured) - how can this be acheived? A spliter has been tried and whilst this did indeed generate three signals from one instrument (the original and two additional outputs) it could not be connected into the existing installation - for each circuit a loop was required and it's own voltage was present, whereas the splitter generated its own power etc. Is there a method or device that can do this? Any advice is greatly apprecited. Thanks in advance Steve I'm guessing that you want the three existing outputs from a single sensor? If so, decode the one sensor and fan out the decoded outputs. Tom I believe Tom is correct in what the OP wants. So this should help: http://focus.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/xtr117.pdf Each Iloop connection can have its owm driver. donald |
#8
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Posted to alt.electronics,alt.binaries.schematics.electronic,sci.electronics.design
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or you could buy a small shoe box plc with 1 4-20ma in and 3 out
"Steve & Lizzie" wrote in message news ![]() Dear All An instrumentation issue - A machine is utilising three 4 to 20ma pressure transmitters for control purposes. They are all on different circuits which have their own supplies. For certain reasons it has become desirble to have just one transmitter perform the function of all three (same pressure being measured) - how can this be acheived? A spliter has been tried and whilst this did indeed generate three signals from one instrument (the original and two additional outputs) it could not be connected into the existing installation - for each circuit a loop was required and it's own voltage was present, whereas the splitter generated its own power etc. Is there a method or device that can do this? Any advice is greatly apprecited. Thanks in advance Steve |
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