sbibiz
Civil/Environmental
- Jun 17, 2014
- 3
hi all,
first I want to apologize if this was covered somewhere else but... I didn't find it.
My question is really simple but I couldn't find an answer on the net.
in control engineering, is the work "trip" different from the word "interlock"? in other words, are they synonymous?
Do they both refer to preventing an undesired state in a state machine so they both act under "anomalous" conditions (for example the LL level inside a tank will trip the relative pump to prevent it from running dry).
Sorry but I'm new to this kind of subject and I want to make sure I understand it correclty.
Regards,
Alberto
first I want to apologize if this was covered somewhere else but... I didn't find it.
My question is really simple but I couldn't find an answer on the net.
in control engineering, is the work "trip" different from the word "interlock"? in other words, are they synonymous?
Do they both refer to preventing an undesired state in a state machine so they both act under "anomalous" conditions (for example the LL level inside a tank will trip the relative pump to prevent it from running dry).
Sorry but I'm new to this kind of subject and I want to make sure I understand it correclty.
Regards,
Alberto