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The risk of electrical shock should always be a top concern in the installation and operation of motion control systems. To keep people and equipment safe, always be sure the installation/operation environment for your motion system is conducive to good general practices for electrical components.
Electrical shock may result in serious injury or death.
Keep the following environmental considerations in mind:
The above environmental and safety considerations should be observed during all phases of operation, service, and repair of a motion control system. Failure to comply with these precautions violates safety standards of design, manufacture, and intended use of motors, drivers, controllers, actuators, and any other electronic or mechanical component.
Even in a well-designed and soundly-built motion control system, if the components within the system are operated or installed improperly, the situation may become hazardous. The customer is ultimately responsible for the proper selection, installation, and operation of the motion control system. Therefore, precaution must be observed by the integrator and/or user with respect to the load and operating environment at all times.
Human safety and equipment safety must be the first considerations when executing the installation procedures for a motion control system. When it comes to electronics in your factory or workplace, you want to make sure both your facility and the employees in it are safe at all times. The following is a basic checklist for general electrical safety, sourced from the Electrical Safety Foundation International:
General Electrical Safety Checklist:
Cords and Cables:
Plugs and Terminals:
Electrical Outlet Safety:
Ground Fault Circuit Interrupters (GFCIs):
GFCIs can help prevent electrocution and are used in areas where water and electricity may come into contact. When a GFCI senses leakage in an electrical circuit, it assumes a ground fault has occurred. It then interrupts power fast enough to help prevent serious injury from electrical shock.
Circuit Breakers/Fuses:
Computer, Controller, HMI, PLC, and Drive Products:
Mounting – Introduction
Proper installation of electronic and mechanical components will achieve the best results for the production capability of the motion control system. In order to ensure the system is properly and safely installed, be sure to implement these important steps, and heed safety precautions. (Note: Local city/county codes may suggest different requirements, but those given in this section must be satisfied as much as possible.)
Caution: Only qualified personnel should be allowed to open and work on motion control systems, as well as components inside electrical enclosures. Equipment and machinery should never be run unless the electrical enclosure door is closed and locked. The electronics in electrical enclosures and throughout a motion control system are sensitive to metal chips and filings. During installation and use, great care must be given to make sure metal chips or filings cannot fall onto or into any of the electrical or electronic devices.
Plan ahead before attempting any electrical installations. Gather all drawings, instructions, or procedural documents you have on the components that will be used within your motion control system. Reading and studying the product documentation before starting the project will alert you to any special situations, such as the need for specific tools or protective measures. Also, you will know where to begin and where to go from there. Always keep the specific product documentation with you while completing the installation, regularly referring to it, and rechecking as you move along.
Note: Documentation among manufacturers will vary greatly, as their design, layout, and connections are not the same. Match the part numbers to the documentation before attempting the installation. Even seasoned professionals need guidance and advice while performing complicated electrical installations. This ensures the safest results for everyone.
Mounting, Bonding and Grounding
After establishing all of the layouts for your motion control system, you can begin mounting, bonding, and grounding each chassis/enclosure/heat sink. Bonding is the connecting together of metal parts of chassis, assemblies, frames, shields, and enclosures to reduce the effects of EMI and ground noise. Grounding is the connection to the grounding-electrode system to place equipment at earth ground potential.
Important note: These guidelines assume that you follow surge-suppression guidelines. While these guidelines apply to the majority of motor, drive, and controller installations, as well as other motion control applications, certain electrically harsh environments may require additional precautions.
Grounding of equipment and machinery is required for two reasons:
Mounting and Bonding the Enclosure – General Practices
Generally speaking, you can mount the chassis either with bolts, or with welded studs:
Important note: Do not bend the chassis or heat sink material. Bending the chassis might damage the backplane and result in poor connections. Make good electrical connection between each chassis, back-panel, heat sink, and enclosure through each mounting bolt or stud. Wherever contact is made, carefully remove paint and any other non-conductive finish from around studs or tapped holes.
With motors, drives, and controls, proper bonding and grounding helps reduce the effects of EMI and ground noise. Also, since bonding and grounding are important for safety in electrical installations, local codes and ordinances dictate which bonding and grounding methods are permissible.
Anaheim Automation supplies motion control components only. Therefore, it is imperative that the integrator and user know all pertinent safety practices and local codes and ordinances where the machinery or system is built, and/or their machinery is shipped.
For example, for U.S. installations, the National Electrical Code (NEC) will provide the requirements for safe bonding and grounding, such as information about the size and types of conductors, and methods of safely grounding electrical components. Use such resources whenever in doubt about proper procedures. Use a steel enclosure to guard against EMI. If the enclosure door has a viewing window, it should be a laminated screen or a conductive optical substrate to block EMI.
Important note: Do not rely on the hinge for electrical contact between the door and the enclosure; install a bonding wire.
How Good Is Your Earth Grounding System?
Be sure to assess the grounding and power systems in the plant or factory into which a new machine or motion control system is to be installed at least 24 hours prior to the arrival of the new system or machine. We recommend performing this pre-installation inspection as soon as the install location is known to allow as much time as possible for making any changes that may be required. An effective and reliable system that has been used for this purpose for many years is a Dranetz line analyzer.
Power line disturbances should not exceed + or – 15% of the machine's, or motion control components', specified power requirements. This includes all forms of noise, voltage drop out, or voltage spikes. While most machinery and motion control systems can usually tolerate more deviation than this, it is best to maintain these limits to protect people and the machine/system performance. For U.S. installations, the National Electrical Code (NEC) will provide the requirements for safe bonding and grounding procedures. It may also be helpful to check local ordinances as well.
Water Pipes May Not Work
Although a utility ground, such as a cold water pipe or the metal frame of a building, is generally an adequate ground for safety purposes, it is NOT usually sufficient for minimizing the effects of electrical noise.
Sources of Noise
Normally, other electrical equipment is connected to water pipe grounds or building steel and, therefore, carries the transient electrical noise currents associated with all of the attached equipment. These combined electrical noise currents cause a voltage gradient to develop within the pipe or structural steel. Thus, transient ground shift voltage disturbances are present, which may be coupled into the electronics and cause the drives and controllers to malfunction.
What Is An Earth Rod?
A separate earth ground should always be used to ground a computer-controlled machine tool, or motion control system that uses drives, controllers, PLCs and/or HMIs. It may consist of a driven rod, driven pipe, buried plate, or any other device approved for this purpose. Be sure to keep earth rods out of any oily areas.
It is preferred that earth rods – also known as ground rods – are located where saltwater can periodically be poured down the side of the rod. If a parallel water pipe is provided, the rod should be located where it can easily be filled. This type of ground usually provides the low-impedance, stable, noise-free ground required for minimizing the effects of electrical noise on the control system, and will also provide personnel safeguards.
At no time should more than one machine be connected to one ground rod. The cable connecting the control panel's ground point to the earth rod should be continuous, as short as practical, and of at least the size of the conductors used to connect the electrical power to the machine tool or process line.
Installation of Earth Ground Rod
The length and diameter of the ground rod is dependent upon the soil in the area of machine site. A good starting point would be to use a ten foot long by 5/8” diameter rod. The actual dimensions of the earth ground rod should be determined by the length required to reach the water or moisture table in the subsoil. The local grounding conditions should be well-known by the plant electrical engineers and local electric company or electrical authority engineers, and Anaheim Automation recommends consulting with them. It is best to weld a steel spike or cone to the end of the rod to help it penetrate the soil.
Sizing the Transformer – General Practices
To determine the required rating of the transformer, add the external transformer load of the power supply and all other power requirements (input circuits, output circuits). The power requirements must take into consideration the surge currents of devices controlled by the processor.
Choose a transformer with the closest standard transformer rating above the calculated requirements. For example, a 500VA transformer should be used if there were 360VA of load.
Isolation Transformer
In applications near excessive electrical noise generators, an isolation transformer (for the second transformer) provides further suppression of electromagnetic interference (EMI) from other equipment.
Constant Voltage Transformer
In applications where the AC power source is especially “soft” and subject to unusual variations, a constant voltage transformer can stabilize the AC power source to the processor and minimize shutdowns.
The constant voltage transformer must be of the harmonic neutralizing type.
If the power supply receives its AC power through a constant voltage transformer, the input sensors connected to the I/O chassis should also receive their AC power from the same constant voltage transformer. If the input sensors receive their AC power through a different transformer from the power supply, the AC source voltage could dip low enough that erroneous input data enters memory. A constant voltage transformer prevents the power supply from shutting down the processor.
The output actuators being controlled should draw power form the same AC sources as the constant voltage transformer, but not from the secondary of the constant voltage transformer.
The following information is intended as a general guideline for the installation and mounting of Motion Control Products.
Warning: Dangerous voltages capable of causing injury or death may be present in the system. Use extreme caution during handling, testing, adjusting during installation, set-up, tuning, troubleshooting and operation. It is very important that the wiring of the motion control system be taken into consideration upon installation and mounting.
Subpanels
Subpanels installed inside the enclosure for mounting motion control system components must be a flat, rigid surface that will be free from shock, vibration, moisture, oil, vapors, debris or dust.
Here are some other subpanel guidelines:
Please note: Technical assistance for all Anaheim Automation- manufactured or distributed product lines is available at no charge. This assistance is offered to help the customer in choosing Anaheim Automation products for a specific application. However, any selection, quotation, or application suggestion offered from Anaheim Automation's staff, its representatives, or its distributors is only to assist the customer. In all cases, determination of fitness of a product in a specific system design is solely the customer's responsibility. While every effort is made to offer appropriate advice, and to produce technical data and illustrations accurately, such advice and documents are for reference only, and subject to change without notice.