PaulKraemer
Electrical
- Jan 13, 2012
- 145
Hi,
I am trying to design an Industrial Control Panel that can be a drop-in replacement for an existing control panel that has been in service in a machine control application since the 1990's. The existing control panel (and the machine it controls) still works, but many of the the components inside it (PLC, drive boards, temperature controls, etc) are obsolete and unsupported. We are afraid that the failure of one of these components would result in significant downtime if we are not prepared. For this reason, we are hoping to do a pre-emptive upgrade of the entire control panel. I have asked several questions related to this project on this forum, and the responses I have received have been incredibly helpful.
I have come up with another question. As my new control panel will be a drop-in replacement for the old control panel, I will have to disconnect all of the field wiring that enters the old panel and then re-terminate it in the new panel. In the old control panel, all field wiring connects to terminal blocks, as there is internal wiring that is neatly routed from the the terminal blocks to components inside the panel. In most cases, it is obvious to me that this is the best way to do it. I wouldn't want the installer to have to do complicated routing of wires and cables inside the panel.
I just have two components (one VFD and one SCR) where my intended location and the accessibility of terminals on the components would make landing the field wiring just as easy on the component itself as it would be if I were to provide terminal blocks. I feel that not providing terminal blocks for these connections will make my internal layout and wiring a lot simpler, and would make the field wiring just as easy.
I'm just wondering if there are any codes or general good practice guidelines that would make this a bad idea. This installation will be in the United States, but I'd be curious also to know if recommendations might be different for Europe or Canada. Any advice will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks and best regards,
Paul
I am trying to design an Industrial Control Panel that can be a drop-in replacement for an existing control panel that has been in service in a machine control application since the 1990's. The existing control panel (and the machine it controls) still works, but many of the the components inside it (PLC, drive boards, temperature controls, etc) are obsolete and unsupported. We are afraid that the failure of one of these components would result in significant downtime if we are not prepared. For this reason, we are hoping to do a pre-emptive upgrade of the entire control panel. I have asked several questions related to this project on this forum, and the responses I have received have been incredibly helpful.
I have come up with another question. As my new control panel will be a drop-in replacement for the old control panel, I will have to disconnect all of the field wiring that enters the old panel and then re-terminate it in the new panel. In the old control panel, all field wiring connects to terminal blocks, as there is internal wiring that is neatly routed from the the terminal blocks to components inside the panel. In most cases, it is obvious to me that this is the best way to do it. I wouldn't want the installer to have to do complicated routing of wires and cables inside the panel.
I just have two components (one VFD and one SCR) where my intended location and the accessibility of terminals on the components would make landing the field wiring just as easy on the component itself as it would be if I were to provide terminal blocks. I feel that not providing terminal blocks for these connections will make my internal layout and wiring a lot simpler, and would make the field wiring just as easy.
I'm just wondering if there are any codes or general good practice guidelines that would make this a bad idea. This installation will be in the United States, but I'd be curious also to know if recommendations might be different for Europe or Canada. Any advice will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks and best regards,
Paul