MSE-Tetragenics SR4000
Speed Relay
Automation, Control, and Monitoring
Speed Relay SR4000
FEATURES
• Creep Detection
• Watchdog
• 8 Control Output Relays (1 creep, 1
watchdog, 6 with speed settings)
• Modbus TCP/IP Data Port
Speel Relay
• RS-232 Serial Edit Port
4000 Editor • LCD Display for Speed (RPM) and
Raw Frequency (Hz.)
DESCRIPTION
HIGHLIGHTS
T he RPM detector is a laser-based sensor that sends pulses based on the
speed of a rotating shaft wrapped with reflective tape. The number of pulses
per revolution is used in a timed calculation to derive the number of revolutions per
The Speed Relay 4000 minute (RPM). The serial edit interface allows you to select how often samples are
(SR4000) is based on taken (1, 2, 5, or 10 seconds) and how many pulses per revolution for a particular
a high-speed ARM™ shaft size.
processor. It is designed to Creep detection is based on the number of pulses received within a given time
function as an RPM detector period. There are three parameters for this feature that can be changed using
for a rotating shaft. The the Serial Edit Port: Creep On Pulses, Creep Off Pulses, and the Creep Off
number of pulses from Timer. The Creep relay is energized whenever the number of Creep On Pulses is
the laser detection device exceeded. The Creep relay will only be de-energized when the Creep OFF Timer
is translated into RPM has expired with less than the Creep Off Pulses.
that is monitored by the You can specify separate energization and de-energization speeds for each of the
application running on the 6 relays. The way each relay is used will depend on the mode selected. There are
ARM processor. The RPM two modes called ‘Range’ and ‘Setpoint’ when are defining relay parameters.
and frequency are displayed
Setpoint Mode: Range Mode:
on an LCD display on the You define at what speed the relay You define at what speed the relay
enclosure. There are eight is de-energized, and at what speed is energized and at what speed the
relays on the SR4000. The the relay is energized. The OFF relay is de-energized. The ON RPM
device can detect creep and RPM setpoint must be less than the must be less than the OFF RPM. For
energize the creep relay. A ON RPM setpoint. For example, if example, you could define that relay 1
Watchdog relay is energized your setpoints were 25 RPM de- energizes at 25 RPM and de-energizes
while the SR4000 is active. energized and 50 RPM energized, at 50 RPM. This creates an RPM
The other 6 relays can be then the algorithm would work as range in which the relay is energized.
activated at chosen speed follows. When increasing speed from
settings. The RPM can be 0 the relay is off. When it reaches 25
RPM the relay is still de-energized. Page 2 >>
sent to a SCADA host via
MODBUS TCP/IP protocol. When it gets to 50 RPM the relay is
energized. Any speed above 50 RPM,
the relay stays energized. When the
RPM decreases, the relay will not de-
energize until the speed is less than
or equal to the OFF RPM setpoint (25
RPM in this case).
MSE-Tetragenics 406.533.6800 www.tetragenics.com www.mse-ta.com
©MSE-Tetragenics 2009. MSE-Tetragenics reserves the right to make changes to this product to improve reliability or design . speedrelay4000 4/2009
MSE-Tetragenics
Automation, Control, and Monitoring
Speed Relay SR4000
SR4000 Speed Relay HIGHLIGHTS
The Watchdog relay will be energized while the SR4000 is operational. When the SR4000 is in the edit mode, the
Watchdog relay will be de-energized.
There is a RS-232 Serial Edit Port for configuring the parameters. This port allows you to set all the necessary
parameters for the speed relay. All parameters are stored in non-volatile memory. No special software is required to
use the Edit Port. Use a terminal program such as MS HyperTerm to configure the parameters.
There is an Ethernet port (RJ-45) that can be used to get data from the SR4000 over Modbus TCP/IP. You
initialize the IP information and Modbus ID from the Serial Edit Port.
The LCD display will show two values, the calculated RPM and the raw HZ from the detection device used.
Speed Relay 4000
ELECTRICAL DATA +5V PC-104 BUS
Input Power Options:
24VDC, 48VDC,
125VDC, 110VAC CPU CTC 8 RELAYS
Operation Temperature:
-20C to 70C E1 S1 S2 S3 C1 CE R1 R8
Sensing Distance:
25 to 610mm (~ 1 to 24 inches)
Speed Range: R1 – Watchdog
0 to 3 kHz
R2 – Creep
Dio R3 – Speed Setting 1
Power Consumption:
de R4 – Speed Setting 2
20Watts (Maximum)
R5 – Speed Setting 3
8 SPDT Relays LCD R6 – Speed Setting 4
277VAC/30VDC at 3A across con- Display R7 – Speed Setting 5
tacts R8 – Speed Setting 6
Speed
Reflective Tape Speed Sensor Sensor
Internally Powered
E1 – Ethernet RJ45 10/100 Modbus Slave
LCD Display
Internally Powered
S1 – Serial RS-232 Debug Port 115200
S2 – Serial RS-232 LCD 9600
S3 – Serial RS-232 EDIT 9600
MECHANICAL DATA
C1 – Input Counter (TTL signal and common)
Enclosure: NEMA 12, Wall Mount,
12 L x 12 W x 6 H inches CE – Enable Counter Jumper
R1-R8 – Relays (NO, NC, Common)
Speed Relay 4000
Schematic
MSE-Tetragenics 406.533.6800 www.tetragenics.com www.mse-ta.com
©MSE-Tetragenics 2009. MSE-Tetragenics reserves the right to make changes to this product to improve reliability or design . speedrelay4000 4/2009