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PLC Encoder Faulty

PLC Encoder Faulty

PLC Encoder Faulty

(OP)
I am facing a problem with the encoder connected to a slip ring counter(uses pulses) that records the revolutions done by a motor, and the moment there are occations where it loses it pulse counts and ends up in the wrong postion.I need to know how to solve this problem, which is starting to cost us a lot of down time in our production.

Robotics Technician ( Mechanical Technician) Maintenance.

RE: PLC Encoder Faulty

The available techniques vary a lot. It depends mostly on what type of encoder you have got, what voltages and what repetition frequencies that are involved.

The standard encoder is typically fed with anything between 12 and 30 V DC, has two tracks with 90 degree phase difference and sometimes an index track. Fur such encoders, there are a set of standard measurements to be done. Check baseline (shall be 0 V +/- a few hundred millivolts), check amplitudes (shall be close to supply voltage). Then check phase difference between track A and B (shall be 90 degrees +/- five - ten degrees) and so on. Noise on low level and high level, cross-talk between channels and missing pulses are other things to look for.

If you have problems constantly, it is often easier to find the reason, while intermittent problems often are quite tough to identify.

If you have a less qualified measurement (like a prox that reacts to flags or something else) then you can often set up a 'mouse trap' in the PLC program that reacts to abnormal signals. Or you can use a transient recorder that trigs on either the signals themselves or fault signals.

There are so many different situations that it is impossible to give you a full picture. Your best bet is to contact someone that does this kind of work on a regular basis.  

Gunnar Englund
www.gke.org
--------------------------------------
100 % recycled posting: Electrons, ideas, finger-tips have been used over and over again...

RE: PLC Encoder Faulty

you should try and find root cause ...seperate the problem into two groups software and hardware.....you could measure the encoder with a scope ....or view it in the plc...
or you could raise an invoice and I'll come over and sort it out for you?

RE: PLC Encoder Faulty

Sorry, but I don't quite understand the setup or kind of machine. Are the encoder signals carried over slip rings?

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