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SCADAPack ES Hardware

Manual
2 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

Table of Contents

Part I SCADAPack ES Hardware 4


1 Technical
...................................................................................................................................
Support 4
2 Safety ...................................................................................................................................
Information 5
3 Introduction
................................................................................................................................... 8
4 Hardware
...................................................................................................................................
Overview 10
4.1 SCADAPack ES..........................................................................................................................................................
Model Num bers 10
4.2 External SCADAPack ..........................................................................................................................................................
ES Connections 12
4.3 Isolation & Protection
.......................................................................................................................................................... 13
4.4 Processor Board .......................................................................................................................................................... 14
4.4.1 Microprocessor .........................................................................................................................................................
(CPU) & RAM 15
4.4.2 Utility Port Compact
.........................................................................................................................................................
Flash, OS Flash, & Boot Monitor Flash 16
4.4.3 Serial (RS-232,.........................................................................................................................................................
RS-422, RS-485) Ports & Ethernet Ports 17
4.5 I/O Board (Local ..........................................................................................................................................................
Physical I/O) 18
4.6 Com m unication ..........................................................................................................................................................
Interfaces 19
5 Installation
................................................................................................................................... 19
5.1 Mounting .......................................................................................................................................................... 20
5.2 Field Wiring .......................................................................................................................................................... 21
5.3 Grounding .......................................................................................................................................................... 22
5.4 Pow er Supply..........................................................................................................................................................
Requirem ents 23
5.4.1 Auxiliary Pow .........................................................................................................................................................
er Output 25
5.4.2 Internal Fuses ......................................................................................................................................................... 26
5.5 SCADAPack ES..........................................................................................................................................................
Inputs/Outputs (I/O) 28
5.5.1 Digital Inputs ......................................................................................................................................................... 29
5.5.2 Counter Inputs ......................................................................................................................................................... 31
5.5.3 Digital Outputs......................................................................................................................................................... 32
5.5.4 Analog Inputs ......................................................................................................................................................... 34
5.5.5 Analog Outputs ......................................................................................................................................................... 37
5.5.6 5000 Series.........................................................................................................................................................
I/O Expansion 39
5.5.6.1 Pow er & Softw are .........................................................................................................................................
Requirements 40
5.5.6.2 Inter Module Cables ......................................................................................................................................... 41
5.5.6.3 Installation Rules .........................................................................................................................................
and Recommendations 42
5.6 Serial Com m unication
.......................................................................................................................................................... 43
5.6.1 Ports 0, 1 &.........................................................................................................................................................
2 44
5.6.2 Ports 3 & 4......................................................................................................................................................... 45
5.6.3 RJ-12 Modular .........................................................................................................................................................
Connector 46
5.6.4 Serial Communication
.........................................................................................................................................................
Cables 47
5.7 Ethernet Com..........................................................................................................................................................
m unication 50
5.8 Hex Sw itches ..........................................................................................................................................................
and Special Function Modes 51
5.9 Battery Replacem ..........................................................................................................................................................
ent 52
5.10 SCADAPack E..........................................................................................................................................................
Configurator 53
6 Startup...................................................................................................................................
Modes 54
6.1 Run Mode .......................................................................................................................................................... 55
6.2 Service Mode.......................................................................................................................................................... 56
6.3 Cold Boot Mode
.......................................................................................................................................................... 57
6.4 Other Startup..........................................................................................................................................................
Modes 58
Contents 3

6.5 SCADAPack ES..........................................................................................................................................................


Rem ote I/O Sw itch Settings 60
7 SCADAPack
...................................................................................................................................
ES Diagnostics 60
7.1 On Board Indication..........................................................................................................................................................
LEDs 61
7.1.1 I/O board LED .........................................................................................................................................................
Enable Jumper 63
7.2 Internal Analog ..........................................................................................................................................................
Points 64
7.3 Internal Binary..........................................................................................................................................................
Points 65
7.4 Start-Up & Diagnostic
..........................................................................................................................................................
Display Session 66
7.5 Com m and Line ..........................................................................................................................................................
Diagnostics 67
7.6 Error Codes .......................................................................................................................................................... 68
7.6.1 System Status .........................................................................................................................................................
Codes 69
7.6.2 DNP3 and PLC .........................................................................................................................................................
Device Communication Errors & TCP/IP Errors 71
7.7 Com m unication ..........................................................................................................................................................
Statistics 72
8 Calibration
................................................................................................................................... 73
8.1 Overview .......................................................................................................................................................... 74
8.1.1 Main Menu......................................................................................................................................................... 75
8.1.2 AI Menus ......................................................................................................................................................... 76
8.1.3 Calibrate AI.........................................................................................................................................................
Menu 77
8.1.4 AO Menus ......................................................................................................................................................... 79
8.1.5 Calibrate AO .........................................................................................................................................................
Menu 80
8.1.6 Calibrate Voltage
.........................................................................................................................................................
Monitor 83
8.1.7 Calibration .........................................................................................................................................................
Certificate Menu 84
8.1.8 Calibration .........................................................................................................................................................
Certificate 86
8.1.9 Entering the.........................................................................................................................................................
Operator Name 87
8.1.10 Entering the.........................................................................................................................................................
Calibration Equipment 88
8.1.11 Entering the.........................................................................................................................................................
Printed Circuit Board (PCB) Serial Numbers 89
8.1.12 Supplementary .........................................................................................................................................................
Test Data Menu 90
8.1.13 Analog Input .........................................................................................................................................................
Calibration Range 91
8.1.14 Analog Output .........................................................................................................................................................
Calibration Range 92
9 General...................................................................................................................................
Maintenance Recommendations 93
9.1 RTU Preventative ..........................................................................................................................................................
Maintenance 94
9.2 Routine Recom ..........................................................................................................................................................
m endations 95
9.2.1 Routine Maintenance
.........................................................................................................................................................
Schedule 96
10 Specifications
................................................................................................................................... 97
10.1 General .......................................................................................................................................................... 98
10.2 Data Capaciity.......................................................................................................................................................... 99
10.3 Pow er Supply .......................................................................................................................................................... 100
10.4 Com m unications
..........................................................................................................................................................
Ports 101
10.5 Digital Inputs.......................................................................................................................................................... 103
10.6 Digital Outputs
.......................................................................................................................................................... 103
10.7 Counter Inputs.......................................................................................................................................................... 104
10.8 Analog Inputs .......................................................................................................................................................... 104
10.9 Analog Outputs.......................................................................................................................................................... 105
10.10 Certifications.......................................................................................................................................................... 106

3
4 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

I SCADAPack ES Hardware

©2013 Control Microsystems Inc.


All rights reserved.
Printed in Canada.
Version: 8.05.4
The information provided in this documentation contains general descriptions and/or technical
characteristics of the performance of the products contained herein. This documentation is
not intended as a substitute for and is not to be used for determining suitability or reliability of
these products for specific user applications. It is the duty of any such user or integrator to
perform the appropriate and complete risk analysis, evaluation and testing of the products
with respect to the relevant specific application or use thereof. Neither Schneider Electric nor
any of its affiliates or subsidiaries shall be responsible or liable for misuse of the information
contained herein. If you have any suggestions for improvements or amendments or have
found errors in this publication, please notify us.
No part of this document may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or
mechanical, including photocopying, without express written permission of Schneider
Electric.
All pertinent state, regional, and local safety regulations must be observed when installing and
using this product. For reasons of safety and to help ensure compliance with documented
system data, only the manufacturer should perform repairs to components.
When devices are used for applications with technical safety requirements, the relevant
instructions must be followed. Failure to use Schneider Electric software or approved
software with our hardware products may result in injury, harm, or improper operating results.
Failure to observe this information can result in injury or equipment damage.

1 Technical Support
Support related to any part of this documentation can be directed to one of the following
support centers.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 5

Technical Support: The Americas


Available Monday to Friday 8:00am – 6:30pm Eastern Time
Toll free within North America 1-888-226-6876
Direct Worldwide +1-613-591-1943
Email TechnicalSupport@controlmicrosystems.com

Technical Support: Europe


Available Monday to Friday 8:30am – 5:30pm Central European Time
Direct Worldwide +31 (71) 597-1655
Email euro-support@controlmicrosystems.com

Technical Support: Asia


Available Monday to Friday 8:00am – 6:30pm Eastern Time (North America)
Direct Worldwide +1-613-591-1943
Email TechnicalSupport@controlmicrosystems.com

Technical Support: Australia


Inside Australia 1300 369 233
Email au.help@schneider-electric.com

2 Safety Information
Read these instructions carefully, and look at the equipment to become familiar with the
device before trying to install, operate, or maintain it. The following special messages may
appear throughout this documentation or on the equipment to warn of potential hazards or to
call attention to information that clarifies or simplifies a procedure.

The addition of this symbol to a Danger or Warning safety label


indicates that an electrical hazard exists, which will result in personal
injury if the instructions are not followed.

This is the safety alert symbol. It is used to alert you to potential


personal injury hazards. Obey all safety messages that follow this
symbol to avoid possible injury or death.
6 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

DANGER
DANGER indicates an imminently hazardous situation which, if not avoided, will
result in death or serious injury.

WARNING
WARNING indicates a potentially hazardous situation which, if not avoided, can
result in death or serious injury.

CAUTION
CAUTION indicates a potentially hazardous situation which, if not avoided, can
result in minor or moderate injury.

CAUTION
CAUTION used without the safety alert symbol, indicates a potentially hazardous
situation which, if not avoided, can result in equipment damage..

PLEASE NOTE
Electrical equipment should be installed, operated, serviced, and maintained only by qualified
personnel. No responsibility is assumed by Schneider Electric for any consequences arising
out of the use of this material.
A qualified person is one who has skills and knowledge related to the construction and
operation of electrical equipment and the installation, and has received safety training to
recognize and avoid the hazards involved.

BEFORE YOU BEGIN


Do not use this product on machinery lacking effective point-of-operation guarding. Lack of
effective point-of-operation guarding on a machine can result in serious injury to the operator
of that machine.

CAUTION
EQUIPMENT OPERATION HAZARD

Verify that all installation and set up procedures have been completed.
Before operational tests are performed, remove all blocks or other temporary
holding means used for shipment from all component devices.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 7

Remove tools, meters, and debris from equipment.

Failure to follow these instructions can result in injury or equipment


damage.

Follow all start-up tests recommended in the equipment documentation. Store all equipment
documentation for future references.
Software testing must be done in both simulated and real environments.
Verify that the completed system is free from all short circuits and grounds, except those
grounds installed according to local regulations (according to the National Electrical Code in
the U.S.A, for instance). If high-potential voltage testing is necessary, follow
recommendations in equipment documentation to prevent accidental equipment damage.
Before energizing equipment:
Remove tools, meters, and debris from equipment.
Close the equipment enclosure door.
Remove ground from incoming power lines.
Perform all start-up tests recommended by the manufacturer.

OPERATION AND ADJUSTMENTS


The following precautions are from the NEMA Standards Publication ICS 7.1-1995 (English
version prevails):
Regardless of the care exercised in the design and manufacture of equipment or in the
selection and ratings of components, there are hazards that can be encountered if such
equipment is improperly operated.
It is sometimes possible to misadjust the equipment and thus produce unsatisfactory or
unsafe operation. Always use the manufacturer’s instructions as a guide for functional
adjustments. Personnel who have access to these adjustments should be familiar with the
equipment manufacturer’s instructions and the machinery used with the electrical
equipment.
Only those operational adjustments actually required by the operator should be accessible
to the operator. Access to other controls should be restricted to prevent unauthorized
changes in operating characteristics.
8 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

3 Introduction

Figure 4.1: SCADAPack ES RTU

The SCADAPack ES is an intelligent microprocessor based telemetry and control unit.


The SCADAPack ES may operate Stand-alone providing data acquisition, process control and telemetry
functions, or in conjunction with other SCADAPack E RTUs and peripherals such as PLC’s.
The SCADAPack ES features extensive communications capabilities including Ethernet interfaces and a
powerful embedded micro-controller to provide the user with a sophisticated telemetry Remote Terminal
Unit (RTU) in an Open Systems environment.
Many operational facilities can be configured, depending on the required telemetry and control
application. This manual describes the hardware aspects of the SCADAPack ES.
Complete floating point PLC type operations are provided, which can be programmed in any of the five
IEC61131-3 programming languages. The SCADAPack ES supports hardware floating point capability for
high performance. Open systems communication protocols such as DNP3 and MODBUS are provided,
including TCP/IP, Open Modbus/TCP and Modbus RTU in TCP within the RTU’s firmware.
The SCADAPack ES has an extensive on-board I/O capability. The on-board switch mode power supply
allows operation from a single external voltage supply (10 – 30 Vdc, depending on model purchased).
The use of FLASH memory chips allows new firmware to be downloaded via the RTU interfaces, both
SCADAPack ES Hardware 9

locally and remotely, without removing the RTU from its enclosure, or removing the lid. RTU
configurations are maintained in the on-board battery backed RAM and may be modified locally or
remotely.
10 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

4 Hardware Overview
This section presents a brief introduction to the major components of the SCADAPack ES
The SCADAPack ES is an advanced Remote Telemetry Unit (RTU) combining a high speed processor,
large memory capacity, analog and digital I/O, serial and Ethernet communications, IEC 61131-3 logic
and a number of industry standard protocols in a single unit. The complete specifications of the
SCADAPack ES RTU are in the Specifications 97 section of this manual.
Generally Power Supply ports and I/O ports are protected against surge voltages and other conditions.
However, if you need to remove the lid of the RTU for any reason, first observe the following warning.

CAUTION
The electronics inside the RTU can be destroyed by static electricity. If you need to
remove the lid you need to wear a wrist strap. This wrist strap needs to be
connected to the earth stud on the side of the unit. Not observing this simple step
can cause total or intermittent loss of operation and will void the warranty.

4.1 SCADAPack ES Model Numbers


Various models of SCADAPack ES units are available. Selected models are detailed in the following
table. The model number, indicated on a sticker on the SCADAPack ES case, is in the format:
P500-abcd-efgh-j

Table 5.1: SCADAPack ES Model Numbers

a Communication Serial Ports:


1. 3 RS232, 2 RS232//422/485, 2 Ethernet 10/100 BaseT, 1 Compact FLASH socket

b Processor/Memory:
A. AMD Elan SC520 CPU - 32MB Operating System FLASH, 128MB volatile SDRAM, 2MB
Battery Backed SRAM

c Protocol options:
0. Modbus, DNP 3, Modbus TCP, TCP/IP (included in all controllers)
1. IEC 60870-5-103 Master, Protection Relay Protocol (for data transmission with IEDs)
2. IEC 60870-5-101 Slave, Standard Telecontrol Tasks (allows a 101 Master to get data &
send commands to the SCADAPack ES)
3. both IEC 60870-5-103 Master and IEC 60870-5-101 Slave protocol options

d Programming Environment & SCADA security


0. IEC 61131-3: Executes two ISaGRAF kernels allowing two (2) control applications to run
simultaneously
1. IEC 61131-3 with AGA-12 SCADA Encryption Security

e License Option:
A. None
B. Data Concentrator License
SCADAPack ES Hardware 11

C. DNP Multi-Master License


D. Data Concentrator and DNP Multi-Master Licenses

f I/O configuration:
DI DO AI AO
A. 32 16 12 4 - Fully populated I/O
B. 0 0 0 0 - Telemetry Processor
E. 16 8 6 2 - Partially populated I/O

g Power Supply:
0. 10-30 Vdc Wide Range Power input, no auxiliary power supply.
1. 10-30 Vdc Wide Range Power input, auxiliary power supply with 5 Vdc output.
2. 10-30 Vdc Wide Range Power input, auxiliary power supply with 10 Vdc output.
3. 10-30 Vdc Wide Range Power input, auxiliary power supply with 24 Vdc output.

h Optional Agency Approvals:


1. None
2. Non-Incendive Electrical Equipment for Use in Class I, Division 2 Groups A, B, C and D

j Custom Options:
None. (default range is 4-20mA)
V. Analog Input range set for 1-5v
C. Custom Analog Input Range (specify range)
12 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

4.2 External SCADAPack ES Connections


Table 5-2 12 shows the external connections to a SCADAPack ES. Each port is labeled with polarity
where appropriate. The following table shows each connector, the connector type, connector wiring
polarity sensitivity and the description of the connector function.
External connections for the SCADAPack ES are terminated on removable multi-part connectors for
ease of wiring and maintenance. Some of connections are polarity sensitive: the analog input, analog
output, digital input and the power supply input.
The I/O terminals use 3.81mm (pitch) connectors. See the Specifications 97 for recommended wire
sizes.

Table 5.2: External Connections


Connector Name Connector Polarity Description
Type Sensitive

PORT 0 RJ12 NA RS-232C

PORT 1 RJ12 NA RS-232C

PORT 2 RJ12 NA RS-232C, RS-422 / 485

PORT 3 RJ12 NA RS-232C, RS-422 / 485

PORT 4 RJ12 NA RS-232C

ETHERNET 1 RJ45 NA UTP 10/100Base-T

ETHERNET 2 RJ45 NA UTP 10/100Base-T

DC-In Removable 3 YES Power supply input (10 to 30Vdc) and chassis
position terminal.

DC-Out Removable 3 YES Power supply output (5, 10 or 24Vdc nom.) and
position chassis terminal.

AI #1 to 12 Removable 2 YES Analog input (4-20mA, 1-5V etc.)


position

DI #1 to 32 Removable YES Digital input (1 common ground per 8 inputs)


4/5 position

DO #1 to 16 Removable 3 NO Digital output (relay, volt-free NO/NC contacts)


position

AO #1 to 4 Removable 4 YES Analog output (0-20mA, 4-20mA)


position

I/O Bus IMC cable NO 5000 Series I/O Expansion

Utility Slot NO Compact FLASH card slot


SCADAPack ES Hardware 13

4.3 Isolation & Protection


The SCADAPack ES RTU has been designed to provide extensive isolation from external connections
as follows:

Table 5.3: Isolation & Protection

Connections Isolation Protection

Digital Inputs Optical Current limiting resistor &


Reverse polarity diode

Digital Outputs Mechanical (relay) MOV

Analog Inputs Optical (channel to channel AND Fuse, zener diode and gas surge
channel to RTU) arrestor

Analog Outputs Optical MOV

External power supply DC-DC switch mode Fuse, MOV

Serial Ports (Port 0, etc.) None ESD protected buffers

Ethernet Ports Transformer ESD

External I/O is isolated from the RTU logic and are protected against surge voltages and other
conditions.
14 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

4.4 Processor Board


The processor board executes the RTU firmware and provides the main communication interfaces for the
SCADAPack ES. The following sections briefly describe the main components located on the processor
board.

Microprocessor (CPU) & RAM 15

Utility Port Compact Flash Socket, OS Flash, & Boot Monitor Flash 16

Serial (RS-232, RS-422, RS-485) Ports & Ethernet Ports 17


SCADAPack ES Hardware 15

4.4.1 Microprocessor (CPU) & RAM

Microprocessor (CPU)
The CPU is an AMD Elan SC520 Embedded device operating at 100MHz. The CPU executes a pre-
emptive multi-tasking operating system allowing the simultaneous, real-time, provision of:
Communications protocols (DNP3, TCP/IP, IEC60870-5 suite, Modbus, etc)
Time stamped event processing
Configuration management
User application execution (ISaGRAF)

RAM
The battery backed RAM is used to store
User Configuration (point definitions, port configurations etc)
User defined sequence and control applications (ISaGRAF)
Time stamped event data
16 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

4.4.2 Utility Port Compact Flash, OS Flash, & Boot Monitor Flash

Utility Port Compact Flash


The Utility Port is a Compact Flash (CF) slot that provides extra non-volatile file-system storage using
standard CF memory cards.
The SCADAPack ES provides one External Compact Flash socket (UTILITY), and an option for an
additional Internal Compact Flash Socket. These sockets can be used for supplementary file system
storage (e.g. Compact FLASH memory cards).
It is recommended that Compact Flash use the external Compact Flash socket, where possible. The
external socket provides physical access for card connectors, exposure for antennas, etc.

CAUTION
The UTILITY port supports the insertion and removal of Compact Flash or utility
cards on-line (hot-swap). However, the operation of the SCADAPack ES may be
adversely affected by doing so, particularly removing cards that are in use by the
SCADAPack ES.

The UTILITY and optional internal Compact Flash interfaces support the following card types:
3.3V card types only supported
up to 2GB memory capacity cards supported

Operating System Flash


The operating system flash stores the SCADAPack ES firmware. The firmware implements the
communications protocols (DNP3, TCP/IP, Modbus etc), the Point Database (point configurations) and
the ISaGRAF kernel (which runs the user-defined sequence and control applications).
The use of flash memory chips allows new firmware to be down-loaded either locally (via serial port) and
remotely (by file upload and command execution), without removing the RTU from its enclosure.

Boot Monitor Flash


The boot monitor firmware resides in a separate flash memory chip on the processor board. The boot
monitor firmware is the first code executed by the CPU when power is applied to the RTU. The boot
monitor configures the RTU hardware then verifies, loads, and executes the operating system firmware.
The boot monitor also provides facilities for re-programming the operating system and boot monitor flash
memory.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 17

4.4.3 Serial (RS-232, RS-422, RS-485) Ports & Ethernet Ports

Serial (RS-232, RS-422, RS-485) Ports


The serial ports of the SCADAPack ES use standard RJ-12 connectors. The following options are
software configurable, in various combinations, where supported for the serial port:

Function – DNP3, Modbus, Command Line, ISaGRAF etc

Mode – RS-232/422/485, Hayes Modem, GPRS etc

Baud Rate – Standard data rates between 300bps to 115200bps

Data Mode – Data bits, Stop bits, and Parity

Ports 2 and 3 support the software selection of RS-232, RS-422, or RS-485. Other ports only support
RS-232.

See Cold Boot Mode 57 for serial port default settings.

Ethernet Ports
The SCADAPack ES has two 10/100Base-T Ethernet Ports that can be used for TCP/IP communication
and Remote I/O.
The SCADAPack ES provides a range of TCP/IP services including FTP, TELNET, BOOTP, as well as
providing other TCP/IP enabled protocols such as DNP3 and Modbus.
The Ethernet Ports are disabled by default.
18 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

4.5 I/O Board (Local Physical I/O)


The SCADAPack ES Model A includes an I/O board containing the following I/O:
32 digital inputs (including 8 dual function high speed counter inputs)
16 digital outputs
12 analog inputs
4 analog outputs
Some SCADAPack ES models are shipped with less physical I/O. Refer to SCADAPack ES Model
Numbers 10 for details.

The Local I/O can be:


locally controlled using ISaGRAF user application code.
monitored & controlled from a remote site.
transferred to an attached PLC for processing by that PLC.
time-stamped and stored locally in files for later up-load to a SCADA Master.
These operations are provided by the SCADAPack E operating system firmware. For more information
see the SCADAPack E Technical Overview manual.

The local I/O of the SCADAPack ES is located on a separate circuit board.


I/O systems on this board are controlled by a local microprocessor.
The processor and I/O boards are connected via four 40-pin connectors and communicate via dual port
RAM.
Both the microprocessors on the processor board and the I/O board continually monitor the status of
each other, and if any problems are detected (e.g. loss of communications between the two boards), the
hardware peripherals are powered down and the binary outputs are cleared.
The microprocessor on the I/O board:
Monitors the state/value of inputs – Changes are time-stamped by the I/O board CPU and written to
the processor board
Performs basic filtering of analog inputs
Performs basic de-bouncing of digital outputs
Receives output control requests from the processor board and controls the corresponding outputs
SCADAPack ES Hardware 19

4.6 Communication Interfaces


The SCADAPack ES supports connection to a wide range of communication interfaces and services.
The following communication ports and options are available:

PORT 0 RS-232

PORT 1 RS-232

PORT 2 RS-232, RS-422, RS-485

PORT 3 RS-232, RS-422, RS-485

PORT 4 RS-232

Ethernet 1 UTP (10/100Base-T)

Ethernet 2 UTP (10/100Base-T)

Compact FLASH Memory card

I/O Bus 5000 Series I/O module bus

5 Installation
The following sections of the user manual describe specific aspects of installing the SCADAPack ES.
SCADAPack ES units are factory configured and under normal conditions do not require removal or
insertion of any peripherals or components. The configurations are stored in a combination of battery
backed RAM and FLASH memory. The battery has a shelf life of ~8 years. Life of the battery may be
increased past 8 years when the RTU is permanently connected to a power source.

CAUTION
The configuration information can be lost if the on-board battery goes flat, is
disconnected, if the RTU is damaged, or if there has been a firmware upgrage.
20 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5.1 Mounting
Refer to Figure 6.1 20 for the locations of the 4 mounting holes for the SCADAPack ES.

WARNING
The Class 1, Division 2 for Hazardous Locations version of the SCADAPack ES
has a cover with integrated connector retention. Check that when replacing the
cover that all connectors have been secured and that connector removal is not
possible.

0.315" 11.260"
8mm 286mm

1.083"
27.5mm

4.055"
103mm

Figure 6.1 : SCADAPack ES Mounting and Dimensions


SCADAPack ES Hardware 21

5.2 Field Wiring


The following drawing shows the locations of the field wiring connections, LED indicators and the fuses
and jumper links that are accessible to the user in the I/O board. The following sections describe the I/O
points and provide some example wiring.

DI DI DI DI DO DO DO DO DO DO DO DO AI AI AI AI AI AI AOUT AOUT
17- 20 21 - 24 25 - 28 29 - 32 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 7 8 9 10 11 12 3 4

Fuses FS7 to FS12


DC I/P
Ethernet Port 1
DC O/P

Ethernet Port 2 J14 J16 J18 J20 J22 J24 HEX SW1

HEX SW2

J1 - LEDs enabled LED 1 LED 2


position shown
Port 0
Port 4
Port 1

Port 2

RX TX
J2 J4 J6 J8 J10 J12 Port 3
Utility
Run

Fuses FS1 to FS6

DI DI DI DI DO DO DO DO DO DO DO DO AI AI AI AI AI AI AOUT AOUT
1-4 5-8 9 - 12 13 - 16 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2

Figure 6.2: Layout


22 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5.3 Grounding

CAUTION
The SCADAPack ES case includes an Earth connection stud located adjacent to
the power connector terminal block. This Protective Conductor stud needs to be
connected to Earth.

The earth connection stud on the RTU’s case and the earth connection on the RTU’s power supply
terminal block should be connected to a clean earth point in the cabinet in which the RTU is installed.
Each piece of equipment (or multiple units) should be connected to the same earth point in a star
configuration.
The DC resistance between each item and the earth point should be < 0.1 ohms.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 23

5.4 Power Supply Requirements


The SCADAPack ES is powered through a 3 terminal connector, labeled I/P on the module cover.
The RTU is designed for a 10-30VDC operating voltages. The input power supply must be a filtered DC
supply.
An auxiliary DC power output (labeled O/P on the module cover) is optionally available for operation of
external equipment, such as modems or Vision operator interfaces. Refer to the SCADAPack ES
Model Numbers 10 and Specifications 97 sections in this manual for the voltage output and the
ratings of the auxiliary DC output.
The SCADAPack ES is typically powered from a 12VDC power supply, battery, or 24VDC power supply.
Refer to the Specifications 97 section for the input voltage limits and power requirements. The power
requirements will be determined by the number of relays energized, the loading on the auxiliary power
outputs and the number of analog outputs. The power required will range from as low as 6 W to as high
as 18.8W at 12V with every relay energized, the auxiliary supply output fully loaded and the analog
outputs in use.

WARNING
SELV (Safety or Separated Extra Low Voltage) power supplies are required on the
power input and I/O points. Power supplies with 100-240Vac inputs that comply
with safety standard IEC/EN 60950 generally have SELV outputs. Check with the
manufacturer or the agency certification listing to confirm that they have SELV
outputs.

The following 100-240Vac input, 24VDC output power supplies have SELV outputs:
Idec PS5R series (7.5 to 240W)
Weidmuller 9928890024 CP SNT 24W 24V 1A
Phoenix 2866983 MINI-SYS-PS-100-240AC/24DC/1.5
24 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

FS1
DC Input Power
FS2

Fuse +
FS3 +
Power supply or Battery
– –
FS4
Chassis connection suitable for cable shield

+
+
Auxiliary load
CPU Board – –

Chassis connection suitable for cable shield

DC Auxiliary
Output

Figure 6.3: Power Supply Wiring and Fuses


SCADAPack ES Hardware 25

5.4.1 Auxiliary Power Output

The SCADAPack ES has an Auxiliary Output available on a 3 terminal connector, labeled O/P on the
module cover.
The RTU is manufactured with several optional versions of the Auxiliary Output as shown in the table
below.
Refer to the SCADAPack ES Model Numbers 10 and Specifications 97 sections in this manual for
the voltage output and the ratings of the auxiliary DC output.

Table 6.1: Auxiliary Output

Description Comments

5VDC 5VDC (1A) is available at connector O/P. The same 5VDC is also
connected to the expansion I/O connector.

None No voltage is available at connector O/P. 5VDC (100mA max.) is available


on the expansion I/O connector.

24VDC 24VDC (200mA) is available at connector O/P. 5VDC (100mA max.) is


available on the expansion I/O connector.

10VDC 10VDC (500mA) is available at connector O/P. 5VDC (100mA max.) is


available on the expansion I/O connector.

The output capacity needs to be de-rated at high temperatures. Refer to the Specifications 97 section
of this manual.

CAUTION
A SCADAPack ES with 5000 Series I/O modules or Vision display installed needs
to be configured to supply sufficient power for these devices. Refer to the modules
specification for specific power requirements. It is recommended that systems with
5000 Series I/O modules be configured with a 5V Auxiliary Output.
26 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5.4.2 Internal Fuses

Internal fuses are provided for last resort protection of the SCADAPack ES.
It is highly recommended that external fuses and circuit breakers be used for protection and isolation of
the unit and associated power supplies.
External fuses to protect analog input circuits should be provided.
The DC Supply I/P and Auxiliary DC O/P fuses require removal of the upper I/O board before
replacement. The locations of FS1 through FS4 are shown in Figure 6.3 23 .

WARNING
RISK OF EXPLOSION
Before replacing the fuse verify that the area is non-hazardous and disconnect
power.
Failure to follow these instructions can result in death, serious
injury or equipment damage.

Before replacing the fuse assess the impact that disconnecting power may have on other devices.

WARNING
UNEXPECTED EQUIPMENT OPERATION
Evaluate the operational state of the equipment monitored and controlled by the
SCADAPack E RTU.

Failure to follow these instructions can result in death, serious


injury or equipment damage.

Replace a blown fuse with a fuse of the same rating. Under no circumstances should a fuse be
bypassed or replaced with a fuse of a higher rating.

WARNING
UNEXPECTED EQUIPMENT OPERATION
Replace the fuse with a fuse of the same rating.

Failure to follow these instructions can result in death, serious


injury or equipment damage.

Table 6.2: Fuse Ratings

Function Fuse Ref Fuse

DC Supply (I/P on CPU board) FS1, FS2 3.15A max.


SCADAPack ES Hardware 27

Littelfuse 396-1315
CMI part number 200091
Lower value fuses can be used in 24V
applications.

5V Auxiliary DC Out (O/P on CPU FS3 2A


board) Littelfuse 396-1200
CMI part number 200092

5V Auxiliary DC Out (O/P on CPU FS4 Bypassed.


board)

10V or 24V Auxiliary DC Out (O/P on FS3, FS4 1A


CPU board) Littelfuse 396-1100
CMI part number 200093

Analog In (I/O board) FS1-12 62mA fast acting


Littelfuse R251.062
CMI part number 200087
28 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5.5 SCADAPack ES Inputs/Outputs (I/O)


Inputs and outputs contained on the SCADAPack ES I/O boards are described in the sections that
follow.
See the section SCADAPack ES Model Numbers 10 for the I/O available for each model type.
These Inputs and Outputs can be:
monitored & controlled from a SCADA master station
monitored & controlled from a remote outstation
used to perform local control (using ISaGRAF user application code)
transferred to an attached PLC for processing by that PLC
time-stamped and stored locally for later retrieval manually or automatically
any combination of the above.
These facilities are provided by the SCADAPack ES Operating System firmware.
For more information see the SCADAPack E Technical Overview.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 29

5.5.1 Digital Inputs

Digital Inputs are organized into groups of eight inputs each with a single (shared) common.
The common for a group of inputs is isolated from the common for other input groups on the same
SCADAPack ES I/O card.
Optical isolation is provided on digital inputs.
Wetting voltage for the volt-free contacts is usually provided by the SCADAPack ES DC power used with
the SCADAPack ES.
The example shown in Figure 6.4 29 below has one switch contact monitored by Digital Input 8.

17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 COM 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 COM

I/O Board

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 COM 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 COM

+
Power Supply

Figure 6.4: Digital Input Connections

The SCADAPack ES I/O board time-stamps digital input changes for Sequence Of Event (SOE)
applications.
The following table shows the SOE capabilities on the SCADAPack ES I/O board models.

Table 6.3: Digital Input facilities

I/O board SOE time- Max. DI De-bounce


Model stamping de-bounce resolution

‘A’ 10 ms 2500 ms 10 ms

‘E’ 10 ms 2500 ms 10 ms
30 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

The SCADAPack ES I/O board also provides digital input state de-bouncing. The minimum resolution for
de-bouncing and the maximum de-bounce period is shown in the table above.

If the SCADAPack ES configuration enables de-bouncing on a digital input channel, then SOE time-
stamping on the digital point has the same resolution as the de-bounce resolution.
Each digital input channel on the SCADAPack ES can also be used as a counter input. Specific digital
input channels have hardware counter support providing high-speed counter facilities. The other digital
input channels have support for configuration as software counters.
For more information see Section Counter Inputs 31 , and configuration information in the SCADAPack
E Configuration Technical Reference manual.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 31

5.5.2 Counter Inputs

SCADAPack ES digital input channel can also be used as counter input channel.
SCADAPack ES counter inputs are represented as 32-bit counters. As defined in the following table,
some inputs can be used as software counters only, whilst others have high-speed hardware counter
capability.

Table 6.4: Counter Input facilities

I/O board Counter Inputs Software-only Maximum Hardware- Maximum


Model (DI channels) Counter Inputs Software capable Hardware
Count Rate Counter Inputs Count Rate

‘A’ 1-32 1-12, 17-28 40 Hz 13-16, 29-32 1 kHz

‘E’ 1-16 1-12 40 Hz 13-16 1 kHz

When Software-Only Counter Input channels are used, the corresponding digital input de-bounce and
invert settings are applied prior to counting transitions of the input. If set as non-inverting (default
configuration), counter input points count OFF to ON transitions. If configured as an inverted digital input
point, ON to OFF transitions are counted on the corresponding counter channel. De-bounce is applied
to input state changes in both directions, regardless of the point’s invert settings. A contact bounce of
duration less than the de-bounce period will not increment the software counter.
Hardware counting on hardware-capable counter channels does NOT include the capability for input de-
bounce or input state inversion. The hardware counts ON to OFF transitions only. It is recommended
that only clean-edge signals be counted using hardware counters.

If a de-bounce period is set on a digital input point corresponding to a Hardware-capable Counter input,
hardware counting is de-activated. The input will become a Software Counter with both de-bounce and
invert capability. In this case the software counter specifications apply.
32 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5.5.3 Digital Outputs

Each SCADAPack ES digital output is driven by a low-power relay.


Electrical isolation is provided between the SCADAPack ES and the device being controlled. Relays
comprise a DPDT relay. Each relay output connection comprising three terminals; COM, N.O. and N.C.
contacts for one relay pole.
A signal from the second pole on each relay is provided as feedback to software to verify correct relay
activation on each operation.
The relays have MOV protection provided across the outputs to provide basic surge protection and to
protect against spikes that can occur if the relays are used to drive inductive loads. External lightning
protection is required if the device being controlled is outside the area (building/cubicle) in which the
SCADAPack ES is located.
The example shown in Figure 6.5 32 below has Load 3 controlled by the NO contact of DO 3 and Load
7 controlled by the NO contact of DO7. Load 3 is switched from the +ve side of the power supply. Load 7
is switched by the –ve side of the power supply.

NO NC C NO NC C NO NC C NO NC C NO NC C NO NC C NO NC C NO NC C

DO 9 DO 10 DO 11 DO 12 DO 13 DO 14 DO 15 DO 16

I/O Board

DO 1 DO 2 DO 3 DO 4 DO 5 DO 6 DO 7 DO 8

C NC NO C NC NO C NC NO C NC NO C NC NO C NC NO C NC NO C NC NO

+
Load 3

+ Load 7 –
+
Power Supply

Figure 6.5: Digital Output Relay Connections


SCADAPack ES Hardware 33

See the Specifications 97 section for contact ratings of these outputs.


34 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5.5.4 Analog Inputs

SCADAPack ES Model A RTU has 12 analog inputs for external connection to analog field devices.
Each analog input can be individually configured to accept one of the following input signals:
Standard calibration is 4–20mA
Optional calibration is 1–5V
Custom calibrations possible. Contact the factory.
The input signal for each input is selected through a combination of hardware jumpers and software
calibration.
Each analog input is optically isolated from both the SCADAPack ES logic electronics, and the other
analog inputs.
For each analog input channel there is one jumper. This jumper selects between current and voltage
input modes.
If a voltage exceeding 16VDC is connected to the Analog Input channel terminals, the AI
channel protection fuses will blow.
The analog inputs are polarity sensitive. The polarity is marked on the cover of the
SCADAPack ES and in Figure 6.6 35 .
The default analog input calibration is 4-20mA. Removal of the jumper associated with the analog input
will result in an un-calibrated 1-5V analog input. Refer to Table 6.5 34 for jumper settings for analog
inputs.

Table 6.5: Analog Input Jumpers

Model ‘A’ Model ‘E’ Input type jumper


(Voltage/Current)
Analog Analog
Channel # Channel #

AI 1 AI 1 J2

AI 2 AI 2 J4

AI 3 AI 3 J6

AI 4 AI 4 J8

AI 5 AI 5 J10

AI 6 AI 6 J12

AI 7 J14

AI 8 J16

AI 9 J18

AI 10 J20
SCADAPack ES Hardware 35

Model ‘A’ Model ‘E’ Input type jumper


(Voltage/Current)
Analog Analog
Channel # Channel #

AI 11 J22

AI 12 J24

Voltage input – remove the two-pin jumper.

Current input – insert the two-pin jumper.

If an Analog Input channel is changed from Current to Voltage mode or from Voltage to Current mode,
the AI channel calibration should be checked.

The example shown in Figure 6.6 35 below has Transmitter 1 "grounded" and connected to AI1.
Transmitter 6 is connected to the +ve supply and AI6. These two different connections are possible
because the SCADAPack ES has isolated analog inputs.
The SCADAPack ES has extensive spike and over-voltage protection on each analog channel,
consisting of: gas arrestors, fuses, zener diodes and spike filters. If a transducer/transmitter connected
to an analog channel is placed outside of the building or structure where the SCADAPack ES is
installed, there is an increased possibility of extremely severe surges caused by lightning. In such cases
additional surge protection needs to be supplied by the user.
Presentation of analog channel quantities to the SCADAPack ES software is described in the
SCADAPack E Configuration Technical Reference manual.
36 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

+ – + – + – + – + – + –

AI 7 AI 8 AI 9 AI 10 AI 11 AI 12

Fuses FS7 to FS12

J14 J16 J18 J20 J22 J24

I/O Board

J2 J4 J6 J8 J10 J12

Fuses FS1 to FS6

AI 1 AI 2 AI 3 AI 4 AI 5 AI 6

– + – + – + – + – + – +

+ Transmitter 1 –

+ + Transmitter 6 –
Power Supply

Figure 6.6: Analog Input Connections, Jumpers and Fuses


SCADAPack ES Hardware 37

5.5.5 Analog Outputs

The analog output (AO) channels need to be powered with an external 9 to 30VDC (nominally 12 or
24VDC) power supply. The SCADAPack ES analog output channels can be configured to be 4-20mA or
0-20mA. If a voltage output is required (say 1V-5V), run the 4-20mA signal to the device requiring the
voltage input and place a 250 Ohm resistor across the device input terminals. The analog output is
electrically isolated from the rest of the RTU, but not isolated from the power supply.

There is a set of two jumpers controlling the operation of each analog output channel. These are 3 pin
jumpers that have been permanently configured for external power required in the SCADAPack
ES.

The example wiring shown in Figure 6.7 37 shows a load connected to AOUT2.

24V 0V + – 24V 0V + –

AOUT 3 AOUT 4

Jumpers J26 to J33


permanently configured
for AOUT as externally
I/O Board powered.

AOUT 1 AOUT 2

– + 0V 24V – + 0V 24V

+
L
O
A
D

+
Power Supply

Figure 6.7: Analog Output Connections, and Jumpers

The AO circuitry is configured internally to accept power from an external power supply on pins 3 and 4
of the removable terminal block. Pin 1 (AO –) and pin 3 (power input –) are connected internally. Analog
38 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

outputs are isolated from each other and the RTU logic.
Figure 6.8 38 below displays the allowable output resistance range for any given AO input supply
voltage. The load resistance for any given power supply voltage is limited on the high resistance end by
the requirement for proper operation of the analog output circuit and on the low resistance end to limited
the power dissipation in the analog output. For instance, if the AO channel is powered using a 12VDC
supply, the load resistance needs to be in the 0 to 250 ohm range. If the AO channel is powered using
a 24VDC supply, the load resistance needs to be in the 0 to 850 ohm range. If the AO channel is
powered using a 30VDC supply, the load resistance needs to be in the 150 to 1150 ohm range.

1200

1000

800

Load 600
resistance
(ohms) 400
Resistance
limits
200

0
10 20 30
Power supply (V)
Figure 6.8: Analog Output Load Resistance Range
SCADAPack ES Hardware 39

5.5.6 5000 Series I/O Expansion

The SCADAPack ES I/O can be expanded using 5000 Series I/O expansion modules. The maximum
number of modules that can be added is 16. The 5000 Series I/O modules mount on DIN rails. Modules
addresses are configured using onboard DIP switches. Additional configuration is also possible on
some modules using onboard DIP switches.
For additional information on this feature, including supported I/O modules, refer to the SCADAPack E
5000 Series I/O Expansion Reference manual. Refer to the user manual for each expansion module for
configuration information.

The following 5000 series I/O modules are supported by SCADAPack ES controllers

5000 Series Type I/O


Module

5304 Analog Out 4 Analog Outputs

5405 Digital In 32 Digital Inputs

5411 Digital Out 32 Digital Outputs

5414 Digital In 16 Digital Inputs

5415 Relay Output 12 Relay Outputs

5505 RTD 4 RTD (Temperature) Inputs

5506 Analog In 8 Analog Inputs

5606 Composite I/O 32DI, 16 Relay Out, 8AI,


2AO (optional with 5305)

5607 Composite I/O 16DI, 10 Relay Out, 8AI,


2AO (optional with 5305)

5608 Composite I/O 12DI, 6 Relay Out

5610 Composite I/O 16DI, 10 Relay Out

Power & Software Requirements 40

Inter Module Cables 41

Installation Rules and Recommendations 42


40 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5.5.6.1 Power & Software Requirements

Power Requirements
5000 Series Input/Output modules require 5V. The SCADAPack ES controller provides this 5V.
SCADAPack ES models have a limited amount of current available at 5V. It is recommended that
applications that use 5000 Series I/O expansion be configured with a 5V Auxiliary supply. Refer to the
Power Supply 100 section for the power limitations of these 5V outputs.
Some of the 5000 Series I/O modules require a nominal 24Vdc to power the field side circuitry. Refer to
the individual module specifications for the voltage limits and the current requirements for these modules.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 41

5.5.6.2 Inter Module Cables

5000 Series I/O modules are supplied with a short inter module cable suitable for connecting two
adjacent modules. In larger systems it may become necessary to use longer inter module cables (IMC)
to complete the system. These longer cables are available in a variety of different lengths ranging from
12 inches (0.3m) to 450 inches (1.14m) long.

Table 6.6: Inter Module Cables

Name Length PID


IMC12 12 inches (0.30m) long 297269
IMC18 18 inches (0.45m) long 297192
IMC24 24 inches (0.61m) long 297193
IMC30 30 inches (0.76m) long 297131
IMC45 45 inches (1.14m) long 297162

The inter module cable connects to the connector in the lower right corner of the SCADAPack ES as
shown in Figure 6.9 41 .

Figure 6.9: 5000 Series I/O Expansion Connector


42 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5.5.6.3 Installation Rules and Recommendations

Use the shortest length inter module cable possible.


The maximum total length of inter module cables is 48 inches (1.22m). This length restriction does not
include the short inter module cable supplied with the I/O module. The maximum number of modules is
16.
Never run inter module cables near any electrical noise sources such inductive load switching or variable
frequency drives.
Do not install the inter module cable in the same cable tray or in parallel with field wiring. Inter module
cables may cross field wiring at 90° if necessary.
Connect the shielding wire on the inter module cable to a convenient chassis ground point. There is a
self tapping screw supplied with each cable. There is a small hole in the I/O module for grounding the
shielding wire.
Confirm that the power supply is rated for the total number of modules in the system. Install additional
power supplies if required.
For additional details, refer to the SCADAPack E 5000 Series I/O Expansion Reference manual.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 43

5.6 Serial Communication


The SCADAPack ES support 5 asynchronous serial data communication ports.
The data communication ports are labeled: PORT 0, PORT 1, PORT 2, PORT 3 and PORT 4.
The serial communication ports support data rates from 300 to 115200 bps and RS232 interfaces are
supported on each serial ports.

Ports 0, 1, & 2 44

Ports 3 & 4 45

See the RJ-12 Modular Connector 46 and the Serial Communication Cables 47 sections for
connection details on serial ports.

Table 6.8: Serial Port Communication Configurations

PORT 0 PORT 1 PORT 2 PORT 3 PORT 4

RS-232 Fixed Fixed Configurable Configurable Fixed


(default) (default)

RS-422 N/A N/A Configurable Configurable N/A

RS-485 2- N/A N/A Configurable Configurable N/A


wire

RS-485 4- N/A N/A Configurable Configurable N/A


wire

N/A indicates Not Available.

RJ-12 Modular Connector 46

Serial Communication Cables 47


44 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5.6.1 Ports 0, 1 & 2

Port 0
PORT 0 is a general-purpose serial data communications port. This port is fixed as an RS-232C
communication port. Port 0 uses an industry standard RJ-12 terminal socket conforming to RS-232
standards. The RJ-12 connection on the SCADAPack ES is a Data Terminal Equipment (DTE)
connection.
Default setting: RS232C, 9600 bps, 8 data bits, 1 start bit, 1 stop bit and no parity.

Port 1
PORT 1 is a general-purpose serial data communications port. This port is fixed as an RS-232C
communication port. Port 1 uses an industry standard RJ-12 terminal socket conforming to RS-232
standards. The RJ-12 connection on the SCADAPack ES is a Data Terminal Equipment (DTE)
connection.
Default setting: RS232C, 9600 bps, 8 data bits, 1 start bit, 1 stop bit and no parity.

Port 2
PORT 2 is a general-purpose serial communication data port. This port is normally configured as an RS-
232C communication port. Optionally, it can be configured as an RS-422 port or RS-485 port by
selecting RS-422 or RS-485 for PORT 2 using the SCADAPack E Configurator.
PORT 2 uses an industry standard RJ-12 terminal socket conforming to RS-232C signaling standards
when used as an RS-232C port. The RJ-12 terminal socket also allows for a RS-422 or RS-485 port
connection. The RJ-12 connection on the SCADAPack ES is a Data Terminal Equipment (DTE)
connection.
This port could be used as the network connector to implement an RS-485 network on twisted pair. A
maximum of 32 SCADAPack ES and other devices can be connected to any one RS-485 network.
Default setting: RS232C, 9600 bps, 8 data bits, 1 start bit, 1 stop bit and no parity.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 45

5.6.2 Ports 3 & 4

Port 3
PORT 3 is a general-purpose serial communication data port. This port is normally configured as an RS-
232C communication port. Optionally, it can be configured as an RS-422 port or RS-485 port by
selecting RS-422 or RS-485 for PORT 2 using SCADAPack E Configurator.
PORT 3 uses an industry standard RJ-12 terminal socket conforming to RS-232C signaling standards
when used as an RS-232C port. The RJ-12 terminal socket also allows for a RS-422 or RS-485 port
connection. The RJ-12 connection on the SCADAPack ES is a Data Terminal Equipment (DTE)
connection.
This port could be used as the network connector to implement an RS-485 network on twisted pair. A
maximum of 32 SCADAPack ES and other devices can be connected to any one RS-485 network.
Default setting: RS232C, 9600 bps, 8 data bits, 1 start bit, 1 stop bit and no parity.

Port 4
Port 4 is generally used for diagnostic or programming purposes, but is functionally similar to Port 0 and
can be used as a general-purpose communications port. Port 4 uses an industry standard RJ-12
terminal socket conforming to RS-232C signalling standards when used as an RS-232C port. The RJ-12
connection on the SCADAPack ES is a Data Terminal Equipment (DTE) connection.
Default setting: RS232C, 9600 bps, 8 data bits, 1 start bit, 1 stop bit and no parity.
46 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5.6.3 RJ-12 Modular Connector

The following table describes the pin assignments for the SCADAPack E RTU RJ-12 connectors. The
same connector is used for the various serial interfaces. Pin numbering is shown for cables connecting
to RTU’s RJ-12 connectors:

1 6
RJ-12
PLUG
PIN SIDE

Figure 6.10: RJ-12 Pin Connector

Table 6.9: RJ-12 Pin Connections

Pin RS-232 pin RS-422/485 pin


No. function function

1 RTS/DTR out TXD– out

2 TXD out TXD+ out

3 GND GND (biasing)

4 GND

5 RXD in RXD– out

6 CTS/DCD in RXD+ out

Each SCADAPack ES serial port can be configured for a variety of communications protocols, functions,
speeds and data formats. See the SCADAPack E Configurator User Manual for configuration details.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 47

5.6.4 Serial Communication Cables

1
2 TxD
2
3 GND
TO RTU 5 TO RS232
(DTE) 4 GND
DEVICE
5 RxD (DTE)
3
6

RJ-12
9 PIN ‘D’ TYPE
PLUG
1 6 FEMALE
RJ-12
PLUG
PIN SIDE

Figure 6.11: SCADAPack ES – RS-232 using 9-pin connector


48 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

1 TxD-
2 TxD+

3
GND
4
TO RTU TO RS485 4-wire device(s)
( DTE ) 5 RxD-
6 RxD+

RJ-12
PLUG

1 6
RJ-12
PLUG
PIN SIDE

Figure 6.12: SCADAPack ES RS-422 / 4-wire RS-485 cable

1 TxD-
2 TxD+ TO RS485 2-wire
device(s)
3
GND
TO RTU 4
( DTE ) 5 RxD-
6 RxD+

RJ-12
PLUG
1 6
RJ-12
PLUG
PIN
SIDE
SCADAPack ES Hardware 49

Figure 6.13: SCADAPack ES RS-422/2-wire RS-485 cable

1 DTR 2
‘ 0
2 TxD
2
3 1 GND
TO RTU 7 MODEM RS232
( DTE ) 4 GND 5
4 ( DCE )
5 RxD 3
6 DCD
8

RJ-12
25 PIN ‘D’
PLUG
TYPE
MALE
1 6
RJ-12
PLUG
PIN
SIDE

Figure 6.14: SCADAPack ES - Modem cable

Certain Hayes Registers may have to be set within the modem for correct operation.
Refer to the SCADAPack E Communication Interface Reference manual.
50 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5.7 Ethernet Communication


The SCADAPack ES provides two physical Ethernet network interfaces. Two external connectors are
provided permitting connection to the IEEE standard 10/100Base-T local area network (LAN) types. The
UTP Ports use RJ-45 connectors. Both ports can run at 10Mbps or 100Mbps, at Half or Full duplex.
The SCADAPack ES automatically detects an active Ethernet port and the supported speed of the
connected device, giving preference to 100Mbps Full Duplex connection if possible. The upper GREEN
LED situated adjacent to the UTP (RJ-45) Ethernet connector is lit when the UTP Ethernet interface is
ACTIVE. The lower GREEN LED blinks with Ethernet RX and TX activity.
The UTP ports are used for point-to-point Ethernet connections. They are usually connected to an
Ethernet Hub or Switch, although it is possible to connect devices together directly using an RJ-45
reversal or crossed cable.
The SCADAPack ES supports TCP/IP networking and communications integration. The SCADAPack
ES conforms to the relevant IEEE and TCP/IP RFC standards, and may be used in a wide range of LAN
and WAN topologies, including systems using Routers, Bridges, Terminal Servers, Hubs, Switches, etc.

Each SCADAPack ES Ethernet port can be configured for a variety of communications protocols,
functions, speeds and data formats. See the SCADAPack E TCP/IP Technical Reference manual and
the SCADAPack E Configurator User Manual for configuration details.

10/100BASE-T Networks
These networks are also known as UTP (unshielded twisted pair), copper wire, Category 3, 4 and 5
Ethernet wire, or twisted pair.
The IEEE 802.3 10BASE-T specification requires that 10BASE-T and 100BASE-T devices support UTP
100-120 Ohm unshielded twisted pair cables of not less than 100m in length. This requirement does not
factor in losses due to connectors, patch panels, punch-down blocks, or other cable management
hardware, which introduce additional loss. For each connector or other intrusive cable management
device in the total link, subtract 12m from the total allowable link length.
As long as specifications are met for the entire length of the cable, UTP cable segments can be run up
to a maximum allowable length of 200m.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 51

5.8 Hex Switches and Special Function Modes


The SCADAPack ES has two Rotary Hex Switches. They are used for selecting the operating mode of
the RTU. The dual rotary hex switches provide a unique hexadecimal number from 00h to FFh. Settings
F0h to FFh are used for special modes such as firmware loading, calibration, etc. see the SCADAPack
E Operational Reference for more information. SCADAPack ES calibration is described in Section
Calibration 73 .
The Hex Switches may be altered with power applied to the unit and that this may (in most cases will)
initiate an automatic SCADAPack ES operating system restart.

Single SCADAPack ES
Where the SCADAPack ES is utilized as a single RTU, it is recommended that the HEX Switches be
set to “00”. In this mode, the SCADAPack ES is a Main RTU with all facilities enabled.

SCADAPack ES Remote I/O


Where multiple SCADAPack ES RTUs are used in Remote I/O architectures, the HEX Switches identify
Main and Remote I/O units. For more information see the SCADAPack E Remote I/O Technical
Reference manual.

See Startup Modes 54 .


52 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5.9 Battery Replacement


A flat-package Lithium battery located on the bottom processor card of the SCADAPack ES provides
backup power to the RTU's real time clock and RAM memory. This battery is a user replaceable
component.
It may be desirable to replace the battery on-line if it is still capable of sustaining the SCADAPack ES
memory. This should be the case if the battery is replaced soon after the RTU has reported an internal
BATTERY LOW condition. Take care not to confuse this with an external power supply low condition.
The following procedure requires the SCADAPack ES to be powered off briefly, but maintains the
SCADAPack ES configurations if there is some capacity remaining in the on-board battery.
To replace the battery, follow the steps given below:
1. Power-off the RTU
2. Remove the RTU cover
3. Unfasten the holding screws between I/O board and processor board
4. Carefully unplug the I/O board from the processor board
5. Observe static handling procedures when handling the I/O board
6. Power-on the RTU
7. Carefully remove the flat lithium battery from its socket
8. Replace battery with any industry standard 3V lithium cell type CR2450. "+" side of the battery is
facing up.
9. Power-off the RTU
10. Carefully plug the I/O board back into the processor board lining up all pin connectors between the
two boards
11. Fasten the holding screws between the I/O board and processor board
12. Replace the RTU cover
13. Power-on the RTU

CAUTION
SCADAPack ES memory contents will be lost if the on-board battery goes flat or is
replaced with the power disconnected. If this occurs, user configurations will need
to be re-loaded for correct RTU operation.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 53

5.10 SCADAPack E Configurator


The SCADAPack ES system is maintained and diagnosed using the SCADAPack E Configurator
software package.

SCADAPack E Configurator is included on the Installation CD that is included with all


Schneider Electric shipments. Contact Schneider Electric if you do not have a copy of
SCADAPack E Configurator.

This package is used to build and load RTU configurations.


SCADAPack E Configurator executes on PC desktop or server hardware using Windows® 2000 / XP
Professional / 2003 / VISTA Business, Ultimate, Enterprise and provides graphical user interfaces for
configuring and diagnosing SCADAPack E operations. It also integrates with the ISaGRAF®
Workbench for building and diagnosing IEC61131-3 sequences.

Figure 6.16: SCADAPack E Configurator

For more information refer to the SCADAPack E Configurator User Manual.


54 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

6 Startup Modes
The user can change the startup mode of SCADAPack E RTUs for maintenance purposes.

SCADAPack ES Startup Modes


SCADAPack ES RTUs use HEX Switches 51 for setting the startup mode.

00 on the HEX Switches is the normal RTU startup mode. See Run Mode 55 .
F0 on the HEX Switches is Service mode. See Service Mode 56 .
FC on the HEX Switches is Cold Boot mode. See Cold Boot Mode 57 .

01-EF settings are used for SCADAPack ES Remote I/O addresses. See SCADAPack ES Remote I/O
Switch Settings 60

Other HEX Switch settings are used for selecting special startup modes. See Other Startup Modes 58
.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 55

6.1 Run Mode


The RUN mode is the normal operating mode of the SCADAPack ES controller.
The controller starts in RUN mode when the HEX Switches are set to 00.
When the controller starts:
The RTU loads the defined serial and Ethernet communication parameters, for COM ports
RTU database configuration and point attributes are loaded
ISaGRAF application programs are loaded and executed
If there is no ISaGRAF application program in RAM and there is an application program in flash
ROM then the flash ROM program will be loaded in RAM and executed.
56 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

6.2 Service Mode


SERVICE mode is used for configuration, programming and maintenance work, usually when the
communication settings are unknown.
When the HEX Switches are set to F0, the SCADAPack ES controller restarts in SERVICE mode.
When the controller starts up:
Temporarily sets the DNP3 node address to zero (0), enabling communication via SCADAPack E
Configurator at a known DNP address. Connect SCADAPack E Configurator to PORT 0, PORT 1 or
PORT 2.
The ISaGRAF user applications are stopped.
Programs and configurations are retained in non-volatile memory.
PORT 4 is set as Cmd Line mode at 9600 bps (No Parity, 8-bits, 1 stop-bit).
Normal RTU functions are operational, other than port communication settings.
Serial port configurations are restored to default (see tables below)

SCADAPack ES Default Port Settings


PORT 0 PORT 1 PORT 2 PORT 3 PORT 4
Serial interface type RS232 RS232 RS232 RS232 RS232
Port speed 9600 bps 9600 bps 9600 bps 9600 bps 9600 bps
Duplex Full Full Full Full Full
Parity None None None None None
Data bits 8-bits 8-bits 8-bits 8-bits 8-bits
Stop bits 1-bit 1-bit 1-bit 1-bit 1-bit
Protocol ISaGRAF DNP3 DNP3 DNP3 Cmd Line
SCADAPack ES Hardware 57

6.3 Cold Boot Mode


The FC startup mode HEX Switch setting is used for COLD BOOT Mode for SCADAPack ES and
SCADAPack ER RTUs only.
To Cold Boot a SCADAPack ES controller:
Set the HEX Switches to FC mode
Power the controller OFF and then ON

When a SCADAPack ES controller starts in COLD BOOT mode:


The ISaGRAF user applications are erased.
The RTU point database is cleared
RTU configurations are returned to default
DNP3 Device Address is set to 0
Ethernet configurations are restored to default (Ethernet communications disabled)
Serial port configurations are restored to default (see tables 57 below)

Cold Boot mode does not format the Flash file system. See Format Boot in Other Startup Modes 58 .

SCADAPack ES Default Port Settings


PORT 0 PORT 1 PORT 2 PORT 3 PORT 4
Serial interface type RS232 RS232 RS232 RS232 RS232
Port speed 9600 bps 9600 bps 9600bps 9600bps 9600bps
Duplex Full Full Full Full Full
Parity None None None None None
Data bits 8-bits 8-bits 8-bits 8-bits 8-bits
Stop bits 1-bit 1-bit 1-bit 1-bit 1-bit
Protocol ISaGRAF DNP3 DNP3 DNP3 Cmd Line
58 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

6.4 Other Startup Modes


The complete list of HEX Switch settings applicable to SCADAPack ES RTUs is shown below.
Switch settings F0-FF are used for RTU startup modes on SCADAPack ES RTUs.
(The SCADAPack E device address for the various RTU protocols is set by software configuration and is
not by the switch settings).

As there are startup modes that force the SCADAPack E DNP3 device address to 0, it is recommended
that DNP3 device Address ‘0’ not be configured for use in SCADAPack E RTU DNP3 systems. For
more information see the SCADAPack E DNP3 Technical Reference manual.

Changing the HEX switch settings to a value in the range 00-F0 will cause an RTU system restart with
entry into the appropriate start mode.
Switching the RTU to addresses F1 - FF will require the RTU to be separately reset (e.g. powered off &
on) in order for the special operation to take affect.

Table 5.1: SCADAPack ES Startup Mode HEX Switch Settings

RTU Switch
Description Notes
Setting (Hex)

00 RUN Mode Normal RTU startup mode. See Run Mode


55 .

01-EF Remote I/O addresses See SCADAPack ES Remote I/O Switch


Settings 60 . RTU functions vary by Remote
I/O settings.

Overrides DNP3 device address and serial


port settings so device can be accessed
with known configurations. See Service
F0 Service Mode
Mode 56 .
Normal RTU functions are operational, other
than port communication settings.

Clears ISaGRAF applications from RAM and


FLASH memory. Command line interface is
F1 Clear ISaGRAF applications available on PORT 4. Connect a serial
terminal program to PORT 4 at 9600 bps.
Normal RTU functions are NOT operational.

Runs a test on the RAM of the SCADAPack


E RTU. Normal RTU functions are NOT
F8 System memory test
operational. Connect a serial terminal
program to PORT 4 at 9600 bps.

Allows Boot Monitor Flash to be re-


F9 Boot Monitor Re-programming mode programmed. Connect SCADAPack E
Configurator to PORT 4 on SCADAPack E.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 59

RTU Switch
Description Notes
Setting (Hex)

Normal RTU functions are NOT operational.

This mode forces the Command line


interface on PORT 4 so that file system
format commands can be entered. Connect
a serial terminal program to PORT4 at 9600
FB Format Boot Mode
bps. Normal RTU functions are NOT
operational. For more information see
SCADAPack E Operational Reference
manual.

See Cold Boot Mode 57 .


FC Cold Boot Mode
Normal RTU functions are NOT operational.

Calibration interface is provided on PORT 4.


Connect an ANSI (VT) terminal program to
FE Calibrate Hardware
PORT 4 at 9600 bps. Normal RTU functions
are NOT operational.

Allows RTU Operating System Firmware in


Flash Firmware transfer Flash memory to be re-programmed.
FF Connect SCADAPack E Configurator to
PORT 4 on SCADAPack E. Normal RTU
functions are NOT operational.
60 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

6.5 SCADAPack ES Remote I/O Switch Settings


The SCADAPack ES and SCADAPack ER RTUs use hardware HEX switches to set MAIN and Remote
I/O Group and Unit addresses for SCADAPack ES Remote I/O.
Both SCADAPack ES and SCADAPack ER RTU supports operation as a MAIN RTU for communication
with SCADAPack ES Remote I/O units via serial and Ethernet links.
Remote I/O operation uses HEX switch settings in the range 00- EF. The first switch setting (first hex
digit) indicates the Remote I/O Group number. Up to 15 different Remote I/O groups are supported on
the same physical link(s), being selected by switch settings 0 – 9, A – E. Each Remote I/O Group
needs to have 1 Main unit and may have multiple Remote I/O units.
In many systems there is only one remote I/O group. Typically the group number is set to 0.
The second switch setting (second hex digit) indicates the Remote I/O Unit number. One MAIN unit is
permitted per Remote I/O group (unit address 0), and up to 15 Remote I/O units may be connected to
the same Main unit, being selected by switch settings 1 – 9, A – F.
Each Main and Remote I/O unit on the same physical network needs to have a unique HEX address
switch setting.

For normal RTU operation as a Single RTU, it is recommended that the SCADAPack ES or
SCADAPack ER RTU HEX Switches be set to “00”.

For more information see the SCADAPack E Remote I/O Technical Reference manual.

7 SCADAPack ES Diagnostics
A range of diagnostic information is provided by the SCADAPack ES RTUs in order to facilitate trouble-
shooting and understanding of RTU operation.

Start-Up and Diagnostic Display Session 66

Command Line Diagnostics 67

Error Codes 68

Internal Analog Points 64


Internal Binary Points 65

Communication Statistics 72
SCADAPack ES Hardware 61

7.1 On Board Indication LEDs


The SCADAPack ES has several Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs), which provide status information such
as:
Each digital input and output has an individual LED, which illuminates when the input/output is active
(on)
Tx and Rx LEDs which illuminate data is transmitted or received
Several LEDs are provided by the processor board and displayed through the enclosure of SCADAPack
ES. These can be used for diagnostic and operational indication. Table 6.10 61 shows the LED name,
color and description.
Table 6.-10: Indication LEDs

LED Name Color Description


RUN Red Blinks when the SCADAPack ES is running
TX Yellow Transmitting data on a Network communication port
RX Red Receiving data on a Network communication port
LED1 / LANIP Green Blinks with Ethernet or TCP/IP activity
LED2 / COMM Green Blinks with peripheral communication activity
UTIL Red Blinks upon completion of a specific operations on the
Compact FLASH Utility port
Ethernet 1 Green (Upper) UTP Ethernet 1 Link Up
Ethernet 1 Green (Lower) UTP Ethernet 1 RX/TX
Ethernet 1 Green (Internal) UTP Ethernet 1 Full Duplex
Ethernet 2 Green (Upper) UTP Ethernet 2 Link Up
Ethernet 2 Green (Lower) UTP Ethernet 2 RX/TX
Ethernet 2 Green (Internal) UTP Ethernet 2 Full Duplex

RUN indicates the operational status of the SCADAPack ES micro-controller and software operation.
When the SCADAPack ES Boot Monitor is starting up, this LED will blink at approximately a 0.5-
second rate. Following Boot Monitor startup, it will blink rapidly in succession to indicate initialization of
the SCADAPack ES operating system firmware. After initialization is complete it blinks at approximately
a 1.5-second rate. If it ceases to blink (i.e. remains continuously on or off) for more than approx. five
seconds, the SCADAPack ES is not functioning correctly.
RX indicates receipt of date by the SCADAPack ES from a telemetry interface port (may be serial and/
or Ethernet depending upon the SCADAPack ES configuration).
RUN / RX LEDs may flash alternately when the SCADAPack ES is in Boot Monitor programming mode.
For more information see the SCADAPack E Operational Reference manual and the SCADAPack E
Firmware Update User Manual.
TX is turned on while the SCADAPack ES is transmitting data to a telemetry interface port (may be
serial and/or Ethernet depending upon the SCADAPack ES configuration).
LED1 or LANIP usually indicates TCP/IP communication activity on either of the SCADAPack ES
Ethernet Ports or via a serial port configured with a valid PPP configuration.
62 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

LED2 or COMM usually indicates communication activity with peripheral devices, such as PLC’s,
external to the SCADAPack ES.
UTIL may flash to indicate completion of an operation on the Compact FLASH Utility port (e.g. Security
key configuration successfully loaded from Compact FLASH card - for more information see
SCADAPack E Security Technical Reference Manual).
Ethernet LEDs adjacent to each Ethernet ports on the SCADAPack ES processor board indicates an
active UTP Ethernet connection and RX/TX data activity.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 63

7.1.1 I/O board LED Enable Jumper

By default, the indication LEDs on the SCADAPack ES I/O boards are enabled.
The default configuration for the “LED Enable Jumper” on the I/O Board appears below (jumper across
pins 2 &3, located on the top I/O board).
To disable indication LEDs on the I/O board, move the J1 jumper from the lower pins (2&3) to the upper
pins (1&2).

J1

Figure 6.15: Standard Setting for I/O Board LED Enable Jumper
64 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

7.2 Internal Analog Points


Internal analog points measure RTU input Supply voltage and the controller's ambient temperature.
These can be accessed from a user application program or via remote RTU communications.

Internal temperature
Internal Temperature o C
System Analog Point 50062
This analog system point measures the ambient temperature at the controller circuit board in degrees
Celsius. It is useful for measuring the operating environment of the controller and returns an integer value
in the range –40 to 75.
The temperature reading represents temperatures in the range –40°C to 75°C. Temperatures outside this
range cannot be measured.
Use the system point directly by assigning an analog point of this point number (50062) in the RTU
database
Read the system point into a user ISaGRAF application as an Integer or Real variable from an Input
Board connection

Internal Temperature o F
System Analog Point 50063
This analog system point measures the ambient temperature at the controller circuit board in degrees
Fahrenheit. It is useful for measuring the operating environment of the controller and returns an integer
value in the range –40 to 167.
The temperature reading represents temperatures in the range –40°C to 167°F. Temperatures outside
this range cannot be measured.
Use the system point directly by assigning an analog point at this point number (50063) in the RTU
database
Read the system point into a user ISaGRAF application as an Integer or Real variable from an input
board
SCADAPack ES Hardware 65

7.3 Internal Binary Points


Internal system binary points are provided which indicate the status such as the RTU input Supply
voltage and the controller's on-board lithium battery. These can be accessed from a user application
program or via remote RTU communications.
Local Input Power Supply Low

Binary System Point 50206


An internal binary point indicates the condition of the input power supply. It compares the Supply
Voltage System Analog Point 50060 with the
Low Voltage Alarm Level set in SCADAPack E Configurator General / Control Modes page. If the input
power supply is lower than the Low Voltage Alarm Level then this Binary System Point is activated.

Use the system point directly by assigning a binary point to this point number (50206) in the RTU
database
For ISaGRAF applications, read the status point through an Input Board connection.

Local On Board Battery Low

Binary System Point 50207


An internal binary point indicates the condition of a monitor on the lithium battery that maintains the non-
volatile RAM in the controller.
If active, the point indicates that the on-board controller battery needs replacement.

Use the system point directly by assigning a binary point to this point number (50207) in the RTU
database
For ISaGRAF applications, read the status point through an Input Board connection.
66 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

7.4 Start-Up & Diagnostic Display Session


Start-Up Diagnostics
At start-up, the SCADAPack ES can display information about its start-up sequence and configuration.
If a CmdLine command line port is configured on the RTU, ASCII text is displayed through this port as
the RTU starts up. After completion of the RTU start-up, the SCADAPack ES usually terminates the
diagnostic session and enters command mode. The entry to command mode after start-up can be
optionally disabled, leaving the RTU in the diagnostic display session. This is achieved using the
SYSDIAG OVERRIDE command described in SCADAPack E Operational Reference manual.

Diagnostic Display Session


The SCADAPack ES, through the Diagnostic Display session, may indicate exceptional RTU operating
conditions. This is available from a CmdLine command line port on the RTU using the DIAG command.
Alternatively, a Command Line shell through an RTU ISaGRAF port (when IEC 61131-3 Target 3 is
enabled only), or via Telnet provides access to the diagnostic display session. Where a direct serial
connection or Telnet is not available, diagnostics can be remotely acquired by directing the diagnostics
to an RTU file. This is achieved using the FILEDIAG command described in SCADAPack E Operational
Reference manual. This diagnostics log file can then be retrieved using DNP3 file transfer for analysis.
SCADAPack ES diagnostics are provided for every aspect of RTU communications and exceptional RTU
operating conditions. The following operational diagnostics are specifically supported:
DNP3 diagnostics at each protocol layer, including network routing.
TCP/IP diagnostics including DNP3 over IP, IP servers, TCP service ports, etc.
PLC communication diagnostics including protocol packet displays, communication status and
device status for serial and network PLC services.
RTU system diagnostics.
SCADAPack ES diagnostics may indicate SCADAPack ES operational information that assists in
trouble shooting. To sort these diagnostics from normal operational messages, it may be advantageous
to disable DNP, TCP/IP, PLC and SYSTEM diagnostics using DNPDIAG, TCPDIAG, PLCDIAG and
SYSDIAG commands from the command-line. Other RTU diagnostics use the following format to assist
in identifying messages from various SCADAPack ES tasks:
Task-name>>diagnostic text
SCADAPack ES Hardware 67

7.5 Command Line Diagnostics


The SCADAPack ES command line operations & diagnostic display can be accessed using an ASCII
terminal via a SCADAPack ES port configured as Cmd Line, or its ISaGRAF port. Telnet can also be
used via TCP/IP links. The RTU also supports a Remote Command Line whereby the command line
interface can be accessed for remote SCADAPack ES units over DNP3 links. This uses DNP3 standard
Virtual Terminal capability. A Remote Command Line (Virtual Terminal) window is provided in
SCADAPack E Configurator to access this functionality in the RTU.
At RTU start-up, configuration information and diagnostics are displayed on an ASCII terminal on the
RTU’s Cmd Line port. The RTU then defaults to command line mode. The Diagnostic Display mode can
be connected by entering the DIAG command. To enter Command mode from Diagnostic Display
press <Escape>. When in SYSDIAG OVERRIDE mode, the RTU remains in Diagnostic Display mode
after start-up rather than entering Command mode. To enter Command mode press <Escape>.
Command mode provides a wide range of commands for interrogating the operational status of a
SCADAPack ES RTU. These are detailed in the SCADAPack E Operational Reference manual.
Command line operations and diagnostic display are also supported on the ISaGRAF workbench port.
The RTU need not be configured with a Cmd Line port in this case. An ASCII terminal can be
connected to the ISaGRAF workbench port, and after inputting <Enter><Enter><Enter>, the port enters
Command mode. To return to ISaGRAF Workbench debugging mode, enter the command “BYE”.

CAUTION
The "BYE" command should be issued prior to disconnecting the ASCII terminal for
correct ISaGRAF operation.

The Command line operations and diagnostic display are also supported via TCP/IP interfaces using
Telnet. In addition, command line operations are also supported via DNP3 Virtual Terminal. The RTU
need not be configured with a Cmd Line or ISaGRAF port in these cases. Multiple Telnet sessions
may be established with the RTU on the same TCP/IP interface, or multiple sessions may be
established on multiple TCP/IP interfaces, simultaneously.
68 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

7.6 Error Codes


Error codes are reported by the SCADAPack ES from various RTU facilities. RTU error codes fall into the
following major categories:

DNP3 and PLC Device Communication Errors & TCP/TIP Errors 71


SCADAPack ES System Error Points & ISaGRAF User Application Errors 69

Refer to the SCADAPack E Operational Reference manual for details of these system error codes.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 69

7.6.1 System Status Codes

SCADAPack E RTU provides a system status code through an RTU Analog System Point.

00000
The most recent status is retained as the value of the system status. DNP3 event reporting may be
configured for the system status point to provide a time-stamped history of status codes.
System status is reported through the RTU System Error Point.
User defined status codes may be generated via ISaGRAF using RTUPARAM function block with the
“SYS_ERR_CODE” parameter.
ISaGRAF user application statuses are reported using the following RTU facilities:
To the ISaGRAF Workbench Debugger if connected (locally or remotely)
Through the SCADAPack E System Error Point
Via the SCADAPack E Diagnostic Display session.

Table 7.1: SCADAPack E System Status Codes

Status Code Name Description

0 Normal Normal status on SCADAPack ES RTU

1-100 ISaGRAF Target Status See SCADAPack E ISaGRAF Technical


Reference manual. For Target 5, see
SCADAPack E Target 5 Technical
Reference manual.

100-999 User defined Status See SCADAPack E ISaGRAF Function


Blocks Reference manual -RTU_PARAM
function block. For Target 5, see
SCADAPack E Target 5 Function Block
Reference manual.

1001-1009 ISaGRAF Application Load Did not load ISaGRAF application files or
Status memory application for ISaGRAF targets

1010-1019 Configuration Status Configuration File status

1020-1029 Profile Status Profile configuration status

1030-1039 Event & Trend Status Event storage threshold status

1040-1049 Data Processing Status Run time data processing status codes

1050-1059 Remote I/O Status Firmware mismatch status codes

1060-1099 Magna I/O Status (SCADAPack I/O status reported by main OS firmware
ER only)

1100-1139 Magna I/O Status (SCADAPack I/O status reported by 386 IO Interface
ER only) firmware

2000-2999 TCP/IP Status TCP/IP configuration & run-time status


70 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

Status Code Name Description

See SCADAPack E TCP/IP Technical


Reference manual

For SCADAPack E System Error Point details see the SCADAPack E Operational Reference manual.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 71

7.6.2 DNP3 and PLC Device Communication Errors & TCP/IP Errors

DNP3 Communication Errors


DNP3 communication errors are reported by the RTU through the Diagnostic Display session as DNP3
driver diagnostic information. These error codes are also reported through the ISaGRAF Peer
Communication function blocks in the output STATUS variable.
The DNP3 communication errors are NOT reported via the RTU System Error Point.
See the SCADAPack E DNP3 Technical Reference manual for a complete list of DNP3 Communication
Error Codes.

PLC Device Communication Errors


Error codes reported from PLC Device drivers on the RTU are through Analog System Points that
represent an error code resulting from communication between an ISaGRAF PLC Device I/O Board and a
PLC Device. The PLC Device communication errors are NOT reported via the SCADAPack E System
Error Point.
These error codes are detailed in the following manuals:
SCADAPack E ISaGRAF Technical Reference manual
SCADAPack E Target 5 Technical Reference manual
SCADAPack E Modbus Communication Interfaces manual

TCP/IP Errors
TCP/IP communication and configuration errors are reported by the RTU through the Diagnostic Display
session as TCP/IP diagnostic information. These error codes are also reported through the ISaGRAF
TCP/IP function blocks in the output STATUS variable.
The TCP/IP errors are reported via the RTU System Error Point for TCP/IP configuration problems.
See the SCADAPack E TCP/IP Technical Reference manual for a complete list of TCP/IP
Communication Error Codes.
72 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

7.7 Communication Statistics


A variety of communication statistics are provided by the RTU via System Analog points. These analog
points may be read from the RTU using specific DNP3 point range read requests. Alternatively they may
be read into an ISaGRAF user application via Input Boards, or Function Blocks.
Communication Statistic point values may be reset at any time by controlling the relevant System Point
value and setting it to 0. This may be done by an ISaGRAF user application or via DNP3 point controls.
The Communication Statistics System Analog points cannot be directly added to the RTU point
database and returned in DNP3 Class data polls. To map Communication Statistic points to a SCADA
Master, the values may be imported in to an ISaGRAF user application, manipulated if required, then
exported to a derived point, which can be configured for access by a SCADA Master.
There are three types of communication statistic points provided by the RTU:
SCADAPack E (global) communication statistics.
Port communication statistics.
TCP/IP communication statistics.
Communication Statistics System Analog points may be accessed as 16-bit or 32-bit Analog Input
points.
For Communication Statistics details see the SCADAPack E Operational Reference manual.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 73

8 Calibration
This section describes how to calibrate the I/O interfaces provided on the SCADAPack ES.

CAUTION
The SCADAPack ES has been factory calibrated using high precision equipment.
Re-calibration of I/O should only be attempted by skilled personnel using high
quality, high precision equipment.

To check whether the calibration of the SCADAPack ES I/O meets the requirements of an attached
device, check the hardware jumper settings on the I/O board, and use SCADAPack E Configurator
software application to read from and control the RTU points associated with the device. For more
information refer to the SCADAPack E Technical Reference Manuals.

1: The analog inputs provided on the RTU have an accuracy of 0.1% over the operating
temperature range. Therefore when calibrating these a source with an accuracy of
0.05% or better should be used.
Similarly the analog outputs provided on the RTU have an accuracy of 0.1% over the
operating temperature range. Therefore when calibrating these, a meter with better
than 0.05% accuracy should be used.
2: To confirm that maximum accuracy is obtained when calibrating the analog output
channels two requirements need to be met. Firstly the RTU should be powered with
each analog output driving maximum current into a load resistance of 270 to 560
for a duration of 30 minutes prior to calibration.
This confirms that components have achieved operational temperature. In addition to
this the calibration instrument used should have an accuracy of 0.05% or better,
displaying the measurement to 3 decimal places or better.
3: Before calibrating the RTU, the RTU clock should be set with the correct date and
time. See the SCADAPack E Configurator Users Manual (Transfer Menu) for
instructions on setting the RTU time.
74 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

8.1 Overview
The calibration interface is implemented as a simple menu system. To access the calibration menu,
connect a null modem serial cable to Port 4 of the SCADAPack ES RTU, set the configuration Hex
switches to FE, and cycle power to the controller.
The calibration menu enables calibration of the physical I/O as well as the voltage monitor. Additional
information can also be entered via the calibration interface that enables the generation of a ‘Test and
Calibration’ certificate. If any attempts are made to calibrate physical I/O, the user will be prompted to
enter the following information:
operator name
calibration equipment (source and measurement).
The following items are consistent throughout the calibration screens:
The menu title is shown at the top, in the middle of the screen.
The menu options are drawn in the centre of the screen.
The currently selected menu item is shown in reverse video.
To activate the currently selected menu item press the enter k ey.
To change the currently selected menu item, use the arrow k eys.
Alternatively the short-cut k ey, shown to the left of the menu item, may be used to immediately activate
any menu item.
The screen may be refreshed at any time by pressing the space bar.
The R short-cut key can be used from any menu to return to the previous menu (explanation of this
menu option is omitted from the remainder of this section).
At the bottom of the screen is the feedback area. This area displays the state of various calibration
settings and physical I/O. The information displayed in this area changes depending on the menu being
displayed.
For each of the following sections where selection of a menu item leads to a further menu, detailed
description of this item will be omitted from the section describing the higher-level menu, to avoid
duplication. Calibration screen examples are given for a SCADAPack ES A model RTU with the
32/16/12/4 I/O board. Calibration screen contents may vary for different I/O board models.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 75

8.1.1 Main Menu

After the RTU starts up in calibration mode, the Main Menu is displayed. The Main Menu, as shown in
Figure 8.1 75 , provides the highest-level overview of the operations that can be performed through the
calibration interface. These operations include:
Calibration of analog inputs
Calibration of analog outputs
Calibration of the voltage monitor
Actuation of the output relays (toggles state)
Viewing and Editing the Calibration Certificate
Figure 8.1 75 shows the feedback area associated with the Main Menu. It gives an overview of the state
of various calibration settings and physical I/O including:
On-board battery status
The state of the digital inputs
The raw value of the analog inputs

Menu Items
1 is used to access the menus that permit the calibration of analog inputs 1 to 6.
2 is used to access the menus that permit the calibration of analog inputs 7 to 12.
3 is used to access the menus that permit the calibration of analog outputs 1 to 4.
4 is used to actuate the output relays for visual inspection and testing.
s is used to access the menus that permit the calibration of the power supply.
c is used to access the menus that view and edit the calibration certificate.
x is used to restart the RTU.

Figure 8.1: Calibration Main Menu Screen


76 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

8.1.2 AI Menus

Selection of menu items 1 or 2 from the Main Menu will display an AI Menu as shown in Figure 8.2 76 .
This menu consists of a selection items for each analog input in the selected group. This menu is
basically a springboard to the individual channel calibration screens. The feedback area on this screen is
changed to show the state of calibration settings and current values for the selected analog input group.

AI Menu
S/N 10577
I/O 2.07 1. Calibrate AI 01
CPU 7.5-1 2. Calibrate AI 02
B/M 2.15 3. Calibrate AI 03
4. Calibrate AI 04
5. Calibrate AI 05
6. Calibrate AI 06
r. Return to previous menu

Analog Input : 1 2 3 4 5 6
Cal Minimum : 00780 00819 00819 00819 00819 00189
Cal Maximum : 03899 04095 04095 04095 04095 04095
Current Value : 00100 00010 00004 00004 00000 00000
A/D Reference = 02029 (raw count)

Figure 8.2: AI Menu


SCADAPack ES Hardware 77

8.1.3 Calibrate AI Menu

The Calibrate AI Menu is used to change the calibration settings for the analog inputs on a per channel
basis and is shown in Figure 8.3 77 . The menu contains items for changing the following calibration
settings and information for the selected AI channel:
Minimum input (current/voltage)
Maximum input (current/voltage)
Calibration Range (for calibration certificate)

Menu Options
1 will set the input minimum for the selected channel. This means that the input current/voltage
applied to the terminals of the selected analog input, at the time of selecting this option, will be
represented in the RTU by the value set as the user minimum (set by option 3).
2 will set the input maximum for the selected channel. This means that the input current/voltage
applied to the terminals of the selected analog input, at the time of selecting this option, will be
represented in the RTU by the value set as the user maximum (set by option 4).
c will record the calibration range for the selected channel (e.g. 1 – 5V). This entry has no effect
on the calibrations themselves and is provided for information purposes only. There is also an entry in
the Calibration Certificate menu that will set the calibration range for analog inputs (see section Analog
Input Calibration Range 91 )

Calibration Procedure
Plug current/voltage source into selected channel.
Apply desired minimum current to input and select menu option 1.
Apply desired maximum current to input and select menu option 2.
Select Calibration Range for this channel (if required). The range can be selected for ALL analog inputs
from Calibration Certificate menu entry (see section Analog Input Calibration Range 91 ).
78 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

Figure 8.3: Calibrate AI


SCADAPack ES Hardware 79

8.1.4 AO Menus

Selection of menu option 3 from the Main Menu will display an AO Menu as shown in Figure 8.4 79 .
This menu consists of a menu item for each analog output. This menu is basically a springboard to the
individual channel calibration screens. The feedback area on this screen is changed to show the state of
calibration settings and current values for the analog output channels.

Figure 8.4: AO Menu


80 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

8.1.5 Calibrate AO Menu

The Calibrate AO Menu is used to change the calibration settings for the analog outputs on a per
channel basis and is shown in Figure 8.5 80 . The menu contains options for changing the following
calibration settings and information for the selected AO channel:
minimum and maximum current output
25%, 50% and 75% current output
calibration range for this channel (for calibration certificate)

Menu Options
1 used to access menu for calibration of the minimum current output
2 used to access menu for calibration of the 25% current output
3 used to access menu for calibration of the 50% current output
4 used to access menu for calibration of the 75% current output
5 used to access menu for calibration of the maximum current output
c will record the calibration range for the selected channel (e.g. 4 – 20mA). This entry has no
effect on the calibrations themselves and is provided for information purposes only. There is also an entry
in the Calibration Certificate menu that will set the calibration range for analog outputs (see section
Analog Output Calibration Range 92 ).

Figure 8.5: Calibrate AO Menu

Each of the menu entries shown in Figure 8.5 80 allow calibration of the selected analog output channel
at the minimum, 25%, 50%, 75%, and maximum levels. The minimum calibration menu is shown in
SCADAPack ES Hardware 81

Figure 8.6 81 .

Figure 8.6: Calibrate Minimum Menu

These lower level AO menus contains options for changing the calibration settings of the selected level
(min, 25%, 50%, 75%, or max) as well as recording the measured value at that level (min, 50%, and
max levels only).

Menu Options
1 will set the channel’s output current to the selected level (min, 25%, 50%, 75%, or max).
‘ will increase the output current associated with the selected level in large steps.
/ will increase the output current associated with the selected level in small steps.
; will decrease the output current associated with the selected level in large steps.
. will decrease the output current associated with the selected level in small steps.
2 will prompt the user to enter the channel’s measured output current for the selected level (valid
for minimum, 50% and maximum levels only).

Calibration Procedure
Attach a current meter to the selected channel.
Select the menu entries corresponding to the selected channel as shown in Figure 8.4 79 .
Select the desired level for calibration (menu shown in Figure 8.5 80 ).
Select menu option 1 to set the output current to the nominal output.
Use menu options ‘, /, ; and . to set the output current to the desired value.
82 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

Use menu option 2 to enter the measured output current for this calibration point (valid only for minimum,
50% and maximum levels).
SCADAPack ES Hardware 83

8.1.6 Calibrate Voltage Monitor

This menu is used to change the calibration settings for the supply voltage monitoring circuit. There is
also a low supply voltage alarm. The low voltage alarm level is not set in the calibration screens as it is
configurable at runtime and can be included in RTU configuration files (see the or the SCADAPack E
Configuration Technical Reference Manual for low volts alarm point number and type). The menu,
shown in Figure 8.7 83 , contains items for performing the following operations:
Setting minimum voltage point.
Setting maximum voltage point.

Menu Items
1 will set the minimum voltage. This means that the voltage applied to the supply terminals at the
time of selecting this option will be represented in the RTU by the value set as the user minimum.
2 will set the maximum voltage. This means that the voltage applied to the supply terminals at the
time of selecting this option will be represented in the RTU by the value set as the user maximum.

Calibration Procedure
Set the RTU power supply voltage to the recommended minimum value (displayed in menu entry) and
select menu option 1.
Set the RTU power supply voltage to recommended maximum value (displayed in menu entry) select
menu option 2. (The unit should now indicate that it is calibrated, as can be seen in Figure 8.7 83 )

Figure 8.7: Voltage Monitor Menu


84 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

8.1.7 Calibration Certificate Menu

This menu is used to view and edit the calibration certificate and is shown in Figure 8.8 84 . The
calibration certificate displays I/O board calibrations along with other calibrations information entered by
the user to provide a single page certificate suitable for archiving. The menu contains options for the
following:
displaying the calibration certificate
entry of operator name and equipment used.
entry of PCB serial numbers.
entry of supplementary test data (e.g. dates of particular tests)
entry of a single calibration range for analog inputs / outputs.

Menu Options
1 will display the calibration certificate with the current calibration information

2 will prompt the user to enter their name


will prompt the user to enter the calibration equipment. (Two successive dialog boxes will
3
prompt the user to enter both the generating and measuring equipment)
will prompt the user to enter PCB serial number. (Two successive dialog boxes will prompt the
4
user to enter both the I/O board and CPU board serial numbers)
5 will prompt the user to enter Processor Board PCB serial number.

6 will prompt the user to enter I/O Board PCB serial number.

t is used to access the menus to enter the supplementary test dates menu

i will prompt the user to enter a single calibration range for analog inputs

o will prompt the user to enter a single calibration range for analog outputs
SCADAPack ES Hardware 85

Figure 8.8: Calibration Certificate Menu


86 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

8.1.8 Calibration Certificate

The menu selection to display the calibration certificate will produce a display similar to that shown in
Figure 8.9 86 . The user needs to manually enter much of this information.

Figure 8.9: Displayed Calibration Certificate


SCADAPack ES Hardware 87

8.1.9 Entering the Operator Name

Selection of menu item 1 from the Calibration Certificate Menu will display a dialog box, prompting the
user to enter their name, as shown in Figure 8.10 87 . The certificate allows for a name of 32 characters
(maximum).

Figure 8.10: Enter Operator Name


88 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

8.1.10 Entering the Calibration Equipment

Selection of menu item 3 from the Calibration Certificate Menu will display two successive dialog boxes,
prompting the user to enter both the generating equipment and the measuring equipment. The prompt for
the generating equipment is shown in Figure 8.11 88 . The certificate allows for equipment names up to
32 characters each (maximum). If the same equipment was used for both source and measurement,
press <enter> when prompted for the measuring equipment to enter the generating equipment into both
fields.

Figure 8.11: Enter Calibration Equipment


SCADAPack ES Hardware 89

8.1.11 Entering the Printed Circuit Board (PCB) Serial Numbers

Selection of menu item 4 from the Calibration Certificate Menu will display two successive dialog boxes,
prompting the user to enter both the I/O board and CPU board serial numbers. The prompt for the I/O
board serial number is shown in Figure 8.12 89 . The certificate allows for board serial numbers of 5
characters each (maximum). These serial numbers may differ from the case serial number entered from
the Main Menu.

Figure 8.12: Enter PCB Serial Numbers


90 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

8.1.12 Supplementary Test Data Menu

Selection of menu item t from the Calibration Certificate Menu will display the Supplementary Test Data
menu as shown in Figure 8.13 90 . The menu entries prompt the user to enter in the appropriate dates in
the format dd/mm/yy. The feedback screen displays the test data entered in this menu along with the
last calibration date and the power supply calibration date, both of which are automatically entered by
the RTU.
The menu contains options for the entering the following data
date that RTU clock was originally set
date of serial port tests
date of Ethernet port tests
date of auxiliary power O/P test
date of digital I/O tests.

Menu Options
1 will prompt the user to enter the date that the RTU clock was initially set.
2 will prompt the user to enter the date of the serial port tests.
3 will prompt the user to enter the date of the Ethernet port tests.
4 will prompt the user to enter the date of auxiliary power output tests.
5 will prompt the user to enter the date of digital I/O tests.

Figure 8.13: Supplementary Test Data Menu


SCADAPack ES Hardware 91

8.1.13 Analog Input Calibration Range

Selection of menu item i from the Calibration Certificate Menu will display the Analog Input Range menu
as shown in Figure 8.14 91 . The entries through this menu have no effect on the calibrations
themselves and are provided for information purposes only. There is also an entry in the individual analog
input calibration menus that allows the calibration range to be set for an individual analog (see section
Calibrate AI Menu 77 ). This menu contains options for the entering a single calibration range for all
analog inputs.

Menu Options
1 will set the calibration range for analog inputs to be 0 – 5V
2 will set the calibration range for analog inputs to be 1 – 5V
3 will set the calibration range for analog inputs to be 0 – 10V
4 will set the calibration range for analog inputs to be 1 – 10V
5 will set the calibration range for analog inputs to be 4 – 20mA
6 will set the calibration range for analog inputs to be 3.5 – 20.5mA
7 will identify the calibration range for analog inputs as non-standard

Figure 8.14: Analog Input Calibration Range Options


92 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

8.1.14 Analog Output Calibration Range

Selection of menu item o from the Calibration Certificate Menu will display the Analog Output Range
menu as shown in Figure 8.15 92 . The entries through this menu have no effect on the calibrations
themselves and are provided for information purposes only. There is also an entry in the individual analog
output calibration menus that allows the calibration range to be set for an individual analog (see section
Calibrate AO Menu 80 ). This menu contains options for the entering a single calibration range for all
analog outputs.

Menu Options
1 will set the calibration range for analog outputs to be 0 – 5V
2 will set the calibration range for analog outputs to be 1 – 5V
3 will set the calibration range for analog outputs to be 0 – 10V
4 will set the calibration range for analog outputs to be 1 – 10V
5 will set the calibration range for analog outputs to be 4 – 20mA
6 will set the calibration range for analog outputs to be 3.5 – 20.5mA
7 will identify the calibration range for analog outputs as non-standard

Figure 8.15: Analog Output Calibration Range Options


SCADAPack ES Hardware 93

9 General Maintenance Recommendations


The following sections detail recommended maintenance procedures for the SCADAPack ES.

RTU Preventative Maintenance 94

Routine Recommendations 95

o Routine Maintenance Schedule 96


94 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

9.1 RTU Preventative Maintenance


Keep circuit boards free from contaminants such as dust and moisture.

Handling Procedures
Treat batteries with care
Follow the manufacturers’ instructions concerning battery storage, use and disposal
Keep batteries clean, and free from contaminants or other materials that could short the terminals
Connect new batteries using the correct polarity
Replace batteries with new units of the same chemistry, capacity and make
Observe the manufacturers’ instructions regarding disposal of batteries. Considerable energy remains
in the battery.

ESD Procedures

CAUTION
Static can damage electronic devices. Follow these precautions:

Earth all test equipment, soldering irons, etc.


Keep all Printed Circuit Boards (PCBs) in anti-static packaging – except when
connected in service
Wear anti-static wrist straps that are connected correctly to earth when
handling boards, changing ICs, etc.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 95

9.2 Routine Recommendations


This section explains maintenance recommendations for:

Primary Power Supply


The primary power for the SCADAPack ES is a DC power supply. If this is a mains operated power
supply charger with battery backup, replace the batteries every 36 months or earlier if necessary.

Real Time Clock and RAM Backup Battery


The battery for the real time clock and static RAM backup is found on the CPU (bottom) board. The
main task of the battery is to backup the microprocessor RAM chips and real-time clock, but it also
maintains the RTU configuration during a power-supply interruption.
The static RAM backup battery will retain the RTU configuration for at least two years if the unit is not
powered. Replace the battery after every five years of continuous use, or earlier if necessary.

RAM backup batteries are not re-chargeable.

Power Supply Alarms


The SCADAPack ES provide alarms for the following:

On-board lithium battery low.


Input power supply low.
If an Input Power Supply LOW alarm is generated, it may be due to power supply interruption, and/or low
voltage on primary DC backup batteries.

Cleaning
There are no special cleaning instructions for this product.
96 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

9.2.1 Routine Maintenance Schedule

The frequency of routine maintenance depends on the specific piece of equipment and the environment
in which it is installed. Routine maintenance is recommended at two time-intervals:
Every three years
Every five years

Routine Maintenance Quick-Reference Table


This table summarizes the frequency of maintenance procedures, for various items of equipment:

Table 9.1: Routine Maintenance Reference Table


Component Three (3) Years Five (5) Years

Connections and ground points B

Power Supply Units B

Calibrate RTU C

Modems B

Batteries (primary) B A

Batteries (secondary) A

Fuses (wire type) B

A Replace B Check and replace if necessary C Check and re-calibrate if necessary

Routine Maintenance
In some cases, the period stated is the maximum interval between maintenance activities. Experience,
or the high usage of a particular piece of equipment, may determine that maintenance procedures need
performing more frequently than indicated in the table
Check that any replaced fuses are of the correct rating
Items requiring re-calibration may not be suitable for user servicing. Contact Schneider Electric for
advice.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 97

10 Specifications
Disclaimer: Schneider Electric reserves the right to change product specifications without notice.
For more information visit Schneider Electric.

General 98

Data Capaciity 99

Power Supply 100


Communications Ports 101
Digital Inputs 103
Counter Inputs 104
Digital Outputs 103
Analog Inputs 104
Analog Outputs 105
Certifications 106
98 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

10.1 General

Processor AMD 586 Elan SC520 Embedded

Floating Point Integrated Hardware Floating Point Unit

CPU Speed 100MHz operation

Memory 512K Boot Flash


2048K System Static RAM
32M Flash
128M System Dynamic SDRAM

Environment 10 % RH to 95 % RH (non-condensing)
–40oC to 65oC (operating)
–40oF to 150oF (operating)
–40oC to 70oC (storage)
–40oF to 158oF (storage)
Pollution Degree 2, Installation Category I, Indoor use

Elevation 3000m.
9842 ft.

Non-volatile CMOS RAM with lithium battery retains contents for 2 years with
RAM no power

Terminations Max Wire size : 2.5 mm2 (without ferrules)


Recommended : 1.0mm2 (with Bootlace / pin ferrule)

Dimensions 300 mm (11.81 inch) wide


175 mm (6.89 inch) high 40 mm (1.57 inch) deep

Packaging corrosion resistant zinc plated steel with black enamel paint
SCADAPack ES Hardware 99

10.2 Data Capaciity

Maximum Approx. 20,000


Database Points
(Reduced if event pool increased above approx. 7,000 events)

Maximum DNP3 40,000


Events
(Reduced if database points increased above approx. 10,000)

Maximum Data
Concentrator
Approx. 15,000
points

Maximum Data
Concentrator
Approx. 100
Devices

File System
Typical Storage
10 MB

Trend sample 400 (when no user programming used)


files

Integers 100,000

Floats 50,000

Trend up to 10 MB (with ISaGRAF Restart History user programming.


aggregation See SCADAPack E Trend Sampler technical manual)

Integers 2,500,000

Floats 1,250,000

Compact FLASH 2 GB (with ISaGRAF Restart History and file copy user
Trend Storage programming. See SCADAPack E Trend Sampler technical
manual)

Integers 500,000,000

Floats 250,000,000
100 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

10.3 Power Supply

Input Voltage 10 to 30VDC

Maximum Power 20W

Power 12VDC 24VDC


Requirements
Base power 6W 6.3W

All relays energized Add 3.3W Add 3.0W

Auxiliary supply fully Add 7.5W Add 6.5W


loaded

Per analog output Add 0.36W Add 0.72W

Auxiliary Output None. (Optional)


Supply
Isolated 5 VDC 1.0A Max. (standard, required for Vision and
5000 Series I/O expansion)
Isolated 24 VDC 200mA Max. (Optional)
Isolated 10 VDC 500mA Max. (Optional)
De-rate linearly from 100% output at 50ºC to 65% output at 65ºC

5000 Series I/O 5V at 100mA when 5V Auxiliary supply is not installed.


Expansion
5V at 1A when 5V Auxiliary supply is installed.

Isolation Power Input and Auxiliary Output are functionally isolated from
each other and all I/O points.
SCADAPack ES Hardware 101

10.4 Communications Ports

Port 0 RS-232

Port 1 RS-232

Port 2 RS-232, RS-422/485 (software configurable)

Port 3 RS-232, RS-422/485 (software configurable)

Port 4 RS-232

RS-232 RXD, TXD, RTS and CTS available

RS-422/485 2 wire or 4 wire operation

Baud Rates Port 0, Port 1, Port 2, Port 3, Port 4 serial ports support rates up to
115200 bps.

Connector RJ12

Protection RS232 ports are static protected to ±15kV (IEC 801-2, Air-gap
discharge).

Ethernet 1 10/100Mbps UTP (10/100Base-T) transformer isolated

Ethernet 2 10/100Mbps UTP (10/100Base-T) transformer isolated

Utility Port
Compact Flash supports 3.3V cards up to 4GB capacity, Type I, Flash memory only
Buffered, hot-swap support

I/O Bus 5000-series I/O module bus

The following 5000 series I/O modules are supported by SCADAPack E


controllers:
5000 Series Type I/O
Module

5304 Analog Out 4 Analog Outputs

5405 Digital In 32 Digital Inputs

5411 Digital Out 32 Digital Outputs

5414 Digital In 16 Digital Inputs

5415 Relay Output 12 Relay Outputs

5505 RTD 4 RTD (Temperature) Inputs


102 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

5506 Analog In 8 Analog Inputs

5606 Composite I/O 32DI, 16 Relay Out, 8AI,


2AO (optional with 5305)

5607 Composite I/O 16DI, 10 Relay Out, 8AI,


2AO (optional with 5305)

5608 Composite I/O 12DI, 6 Relay Out

5610 Composite I/O 16DI, 10 Relay Out


SCADAPack ES Hardware 103

10.5 Digital Inputs


Normal operation 10 to 30VDC
range

Turn on voltage 9V

Turn off voltage 4V

Input current 3mA, constant over normal operating voltage range

Isolation 500Vac minimum to RTU logic

Channels per 8
common

Reporting Quality flags, time-stamped events, polled and unsolicited


reporting

I/O Model 'A' 32 channels, 10ms SOE (Sequence of Events)

I/O Model 'E' 16 channels, 10ms SOE

10.6 Digital Outputs


Type Form C. SPDT relay available to the application.
3 terminal connection. (NO/Common/NC) Non-Latching DPDT
Relay.

Isolation 500Vac minimum to RTU logic

Output Current Class 1 (IEC60870-3)


Class

Max switching 30VDC / 25VAC


voltage

Max switching 60W / 50VA (2A)


load

Status & individual relay pole feedback to software, output state poll
Reporting

Controls Direct Operate, Select Before Operate, Trip/Close, Latch, Pulse

I/O Model 'A' 16 channels

I/O Model 'E' 8 channels


104 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

10.7 Counter Inputs


Electrical Shared with Digital Input channels
characteristics
see Digital Inputs 29

Reporting 16 & 32 bit counters, deviation, time-stamped events, polled,


unsolicited reporting

I/O Model 'A' up to 32 channels


DI’s 1 – 12 & 17 – 28 maximum Count Rate: 40 Hz
DI’s 13 – 16 & 29 – 32 maximum Count Rate: 1 kHz

I/O Model 'E' up to 16 channels


DI’s 1 – 12 maximum Count Rate: 40 Hz
DI’s 13 – 16 maximum Count Rate: 1 kHz

10.8 Analog Inputs


Type Uni-polar

Resolution 12-bit

Accuracy ±0.1% of full scale at 25ºC (77ºF)


±0.3% over temperature range

Isolation Isolated from channel to channel and from and RTU logic.
Analog inputs need to be within the 50Vac or 70Vdc of chassis
or earth.

Ranges Calibration: 4-20mA


Underrange: 4-20mA measures to 0mA.
Overrange: Typically 3%
Individual inputs are current or voltage jumper selectable.
Calibration in voltage mode (1-5V) is available as an option.
Contact factory for custom calibrations.

Status A/D Reference Check

Reporting deviation, 8 alarm limits, under/over range events


quality flags, integer / floating point, time-stamped events,
polled, unsolicited reporting on deviation and per alarm limit

Internal Analog Power input - analog input and low indication


Inputs
On board lithium battery - low indication
SCADAPack ES Hardware 105

I/O model 'A' 12 channels, 30ms update rate

I/O model 'E' 6 channels, 20ms update rate

10.9 Analog Outputs


Type Uni-polar

Resolution 12-bit

Accuracy ±0.1% at 25ºC (77ºF) with 250 ohm load


±0.5% over temperature range

Power Supply 9V min., 30V max.


External

Isolation Optical
500Vac minimum to RTU logic

Range 4-20mA
Voltage output may be accomplished with external precision
resistor.

Load Range 0 ohms min., 100 ohms max., with 9V supply


150 ohms min., 1150 ohms max., with 30V supply.

Logic End-Of-
Scan to Signal
<10ms (typically 5-8ms)
Update Latency
Status & Open Loop status, output value poll
Reporting
Controls Direct Operate and Select Before Operate

I/O Model 'A' 4 channels

I/O Model 'E' 2 channels


106 SCADAPack ES Hardware Manual

10.10 Certifications

Safety c(CSA)us. CAN/CSA-C22.2 No. 61010-1. Requires the use of


SELV power supplies on all power and IO points for compliance.

Hazardous Non-Incendive Electrical Equipment for Use in Class I, Division 2


Locations Groups A, B, C and D (optional)

Digital Emissions FCC Title 13 Part 15, Subpart B, Class A


CISPR22 Class A
AS/NZS CISPR22 Class A

Immunity EN61000-4-2 Electrostatic discharge immunity


EN61000-4-3 Radiated radio-frequency electromagnetic immunity
EN61000-4-4 Electrical fast transient immunity
EN61000-4-5 Surge immunity

Declaration This product conforms to the above Emissions and Immunity


Standards and therefore complies with the requirements of
Council Directive 89/336/EEC (as amended) relating to
electromagnetic compatibility and is eligible to bear the CE mark.
This product falls below the voltages specified in the Low Voltage
Directive 73/32/EEC (as amended).
SCADAPack ES Hardware 107

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