The controller does not turn on due to
one of the following problems:
- The transformer trips. Power is at the
transformer primary and there is no voltage at the
secondary.
- The breaker or fuse trips. Power is at
transformer primary. You find 24 V at secondary and 0 V at
breaker or fuse.
|
The transformer shorted. |
- Ensure that the polarity of ~24 V COM on the
controller, auxiliary devices, and input and output devices is
the same.
- Verify that the short circuit is resolved with
an ohm-meter.
- Reset the breaker or fuse, or replace the
transformer.
Note: If you
replace the transformer, replace it with a model that uses a
resettable circuit breaker. A circuit breaker makes it
easier to solve wiring problems.
- To verify the connection, complete the
following steps:
- Disconnect the secondary of the 24 VAC
transformer.
- Use an ohm-meter to measure between ~24
V H and G at the controller. Ensure that no short
circuit occurs.
Note: If your installation requires that
you earth ground the transformer secondary, verify
that the earth ground connection is valid and not
shared between multiple pieces of
equipment.
|
The 24 VAC powered sensor is not wired with the same
polarity as the controller. |
Analog output mode is invalid. 0 V to 10 V output is
set to 100%, but output terminals are less than 10 V. |
Load impedance is lower than 2k ohms. |
- Ensure that the voltage control device load
impedance is higher than 2k ohms. For more information, refer to
voltage device manufacturer specification.
- Disconnect the connected device and verify that
the value you require is present.
|
Analog mode for a configurable output is invalid. For
example, 0 V to 10 V output results in an unwanted offset of up to 1
V. |
The COM terminal is not
connected. |
- Connect the COM terminal of the configurable
output to the common of the connected end device.
- Measure the output and verify that it matches
the command.
- Disconnect the connected device and verify the
commanded value is present.
|
The Common Reference is incorrect. |