Greta:
Emergency Stopping is defined by NFPA 79 Electrical Standard for Industrial Machinery.
Quoting from .... 9.6.3 Emergency stop.
".....the emergency stop has the following requirements:
— it shall override all other functions and operations in
all modes.
— power to the machine actuators that can cause a
hazardous condition(s) shall be removed as quickly as
possible without creating other hazards (e.g., by the
provision of mechanical means of stopping requiring,
no external power, by reverse current braking for a
Category 1 stop.
— reset shall not initiate a restart."
"The emergency stop shall function as either a Category 0
or a Category 1 stop. The choice of category of emergency
stop shall be determined in accordance with the
requirements of the application."
"Where a Category 0 stop is used for the emergency stop function, it shall have only handwired electromechanical components. In addition, its operation shall not depend on electronic logic (hardware or software) or the transmission of commands over a communications network or link."
"Where a Category 1 stop is used for the emergency stop function, final removal of power to the machine actuators shall be ensured and shall be by means of electromechanical components.
Category 1 & 2 stops are defined in 9.5.2 Stop Functions as follows:
— Category 0: stopping by immediate removal of power to
the machine actuators (i.e., an uncontrolled stop)
— Category 1: a controlled stop with power to the
machine actuators available to achieve the stop and
then removal of power when the stop is achieved.
In either case, the term actuators includes the drive and/or the motor; be it of the AC or DC type.
So, a mechanical means must be provided to remove the power.
It must be mechanical because electronic drives can fail in the ON state.
Hope this helps.
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