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HDPM6000 Configuration Guide

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112 views34 pages

HDPM6000 Configuration Guide

Uploaded by

JULIAN
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
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You are on page 1/ 34

PowerLogic™ HDPM6000

Configuration Guide

HDPM6000 Multi-Circuit Metering Platform

Application Note: v1.0

General
Legal Information
The Schneider Electric brand and any registered trademarks of Schneider
Electric Industries SAS referred to in this guide are the sole property of
Schneider Electric SAS and its subsidiaries. They may not be used for any
purpose without the owner's permission, given in writing. This guide and its
content are protected, within the meaning of the French intellectual property
code (Code de la propriété intellectuelle français, referred to hereafter as
"the Code"), under the laws of copyright covering texts, drawings and
models, as well as by trademark law. You agree not to reproduce, other
than for your own personal, noncommercial use as defined in the Code, all
or part of this guide on any medium whatsoever without Schneider Electric’s
permission, given in writing. You also agree not to establish any hypertext
links to this guide or its content. Schneider Electric does not grant any right
or license for the personal and noncommercial use of the guide or its
content, except for a non-exclusive license to consult it on an "as is" basis,
at your own risk. All other rights are reserved.

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.

As standards, specifications and designs change from time to time, please


ask for confirmation of the information given in this publication.

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

The addition of either 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.

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

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

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

NOTICE
NOTICE is used to address practices not related to physical injury.

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, installation, and operation of electrical equipment and has
received safety training to recognize and avoid the hazards involved.

General
Safety Precautions

DANGER
HAZARD OF ELECTRIC SHOCK, EXPLOSION, OR ARC FLASH
• Submetering equipment shall not be mounted within 50.8 mm (2 in.) of any live parts
including primary conductors, primary terminals, primary lugs. This requirement
excludes insulated cables.
• Submeters attached to the enclosure shall not contact the panel interior insulation.
• Mounting provisions shall not be attached to any live part.
• Voltage sensing and power supply connections to the primary voltage shall have
overcurrent protection.
• Do not install submetering equipment in any area where breaker arc venting exhaust
gasses could be re-directed as a result of submetering equipment installation.
• This product must be installed inside a suitable fire and electrical enclosure.
• Follow safe electrical work practices. See NFPA 70E in the USA, or applicable local
codes.
• This equipment must only be installed and serviced by qualified electrical personnel.
• Do not use this device for critical control or protection applications where human or
equipment safety relies on the operation of the control circuit.
• Do not install this product in hazardous or classified locations.
• Read, understand and follow the instructions before installing this product.
• Turn off all power supplying equipment before working on or inside the equipment.
• Product may use multiple voltage/power sources. Disconnect all sources before
servicing.
• Use a properly rated voltage sensing device to confirm that power is off.
• Do not use data from this device to confirm power is off.
• Replace all doors, covers and protective devices before powering the equipment.
• Do not exceed the product's ratings or maximum limits.
• Treat communications and I/O wiring connected to multiple devices as hazardous live
until determined otherwise.
Failure to follow these instructions will result in death or serious injury.

If this product is used in a manner not specified by the manufacturer, the


protection provided by the product may be impaired.

The installer is responsible for conformance to all applicable codes.

The safety of any system incorporating this equipment is the responsibility


of the assembler of the system.

Note: See IEC 60950-1:2005, Annex W for more information on


communications and I/O wiring connected to multiple devices.

Protective bonding: electrical connection of accessible conductive parts or


protective screening to provide electrical continuity to the means for
connection of an external protective conductor.

General
CAUTION
PRODUCT DAMAGE DUE TO ELECTROSTATIC DISCHARGE
Circuit boards and components can be damaged by static electricity or electro-static
discharge (ESD). Observe the following electrostatic precautions when handling the
product, and cables and components connected to the product:
• Keep static-producing material such as plastic, upholstery, carpeting, etc. out of the
immediate work area.
• Store the product in ESD-protective packaging when it is not installed in the panel.
• When handling the product, or a conductive cable / an ESD-sensitive component
connected to the product, wear a conductive wrist strap connected to the Ground
through a minimum of 1 MΩ resistance.
• Avoid touching exposed conductors and component leads with skin or clothing.
Failure to follow these instructions can result in equipment damage.

WARNING
UNINTENDED OPERATION
• Do not use this device for critical control or protection of persons, animals, property or
equipment.
Failure to follow these instructions can result in death, serious injury or
equipment damage.

FCC Notice
FCC PART 15 INFORMATION

This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a
Class A digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC rules. These limits
are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference
when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment. This
equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if
not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may
cause harmful interference to radio communications. Operation of this
equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference in
which case the user will be required to correct the interference at his own
expense.

The user is cautioned that any changes or modifications not expressly


approved by Schneider Electric could void the user’s authority to operate
the equipment.

This Class A digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003.

Cet appareil numérique de la classe [*] est conforme à la norme NMB-003


du Canada.

General
Contents
Legal Information .................................................................................................................. 2
Safety information ................................................................................................................. 3
Important Information ........................................................................................................ 3
Please Note ...................................................................................................................... 3
Safety Precautions ............................................................................................................ 4
FCC Notice ....................................................................................................................... 5
Contents .................................................................................................................................. 6
Document Version Tracking ................................................................................................. 7
Introduction ........................................................................................................................... 7
Product Version .................................................................................................................... 7
Document Scope .................................................................................................................. 7
Supporting Documentation ................................................................................................... 7
1 HDPM System Overview ................................................................................................ 8
2 HDPM System Installation ........................................................................................... 14
3 HDPM System Configuration ....................................................................................... 15
3.1 Basic Configuration.................................................................................................. 16
3.2 Branch Circuits ........................................................................................................ 17
3.3 Logs ......................................................................................................................... 18
3.4 Alarms ...................................................................................................................... 20
3.5 Waveforms ............................................................................................................... 22
4 PME and HDPM Systems ............................................................................................. 24
4.1 HDPM Sources and Measurements in PME ........................................................... 24
4.2 PME and HDPM Logs.............................................................................................. 27
5 HDPM Configuration Files............................................................................................ 29
5.1 Configuration Download .......................................................................................... 30
5.2 Configuration Upload ............................................................................................... 30
5.3 CT Type Table ......................................................................................................... 32
6 References ..................................................................................................................... 33

General
HDPM6000 Configuration Guide Contents

Document Version Tracking


Version Author Version Date Comments
1.0 John Van Gorp February 2024 Initial release

Introduction
This guide describes how to perform key HDPM6000 configuration tasks
such as correctly installing current transducers (CTs), grouping input
channels into circuits, and configuring onboard logging. This guide also
highlights configuration tasks involved in integrating a HDPM6000 system
with EcoStruxure Power Monitoring Expert (PME) software.

Product Version
Applies to Schneider Electric HDPM6000 systems with system firmware
v58.7 or greater and Power Monitoring Expert v2020 or greater.

Document Scope
Intended for Application Engineers, System Integrators, and other qualified
personnel who are responsible for configuring and maintaining power
meters and power monitoring systems.

Supporting Documentation
See the References section of this document for links to HDPM6000
installation and user guides with more detailed information.

© 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved. Page 7 of 34


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Overview

1 HDPM System Overview


The HDPM6000 product family is a modular, multi-circuit power monitoring
system that combines a central processing head unit (which includes an
integrated 3-phase power meter) with one or more branch circuit modules.

The HDPM6000 head unit is the foundation of the product family,


responsible for acquiring branch circuit measurement data from attached
branch circuit modules and communicating this power data to monitoring
systems and software. The head unit is also a 3-phase power quality meter
(PQM) with voltage and current inputs.

The Bus port on the head unit supports daisy-chain connections (using
CAT6 cables) to multiple branch circuit modules. The Bus port provides
power to connected modules and gathers data from those modules. The
Enviro port connects to compatible environmental sensors offered by
Schneider Electric.

Page 8 of 34 © 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved.


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Overview

The HDPM6000S strip module is designed to be installed next to the circuit


breakers being monitored. The modules are available in left-hand and right-
hand configurations. Each strip module has connectors for 21 current
transducers, and multiple strip modules can be daisy-chain connected to a
head unit. The Address dial configures the ANSI or IEC channel number
range used by the strip module.

The RJ-45 Bus port connectors support connection to the head unit and
other strip modules via CAT6 cables. The Enviro port connects to
compatible environmental sensors offered by Schneider Electric.

The HDPM6000S24 strip module, like the HDPM6000S module described


above, is designed to be installed next to the circuit breakers being
monitored. Each strip module has connectors for 24 current transducers,
and multiple strip modules can be daisy-chain connected to a head unit.
The Address dial configures the ANSI or IEC channel number range used
by the strip module.

The RJ-45 Bus port connectors support connection to the head unit and
other strip modules via CAT6 cables. The Enviro port connects to
compatible environmental sensors offered by Schneider Electric.

The HDPM6000R retrofit modules are designed for retrofit branch circuit
monitoring applications and are available in several configurations (24-, 42-,
and 84-circuit modules). Multiple retrofit modules can be daisy-chain
connected to the head unit, and the Address dial configures the ANSI or
IEC channel number range used by the retrofit module.

The RJ-45 Bus port connectors support connection to the head unit and
other retrofit modules via CAT6 cables.

© 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved. Page 9 of 34


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Overview

Note
CT wires connected to HDPM6000R modules should be cut with insulation
flush to the end of the wire (not stripped).

The HDPM6000B busway module is designed for electrical busway


metering applications and is available in 4-circuit and 8-circuit
configurations. Multiple busway modules can be daisy-chain connected to
the head unit, and the two Address dials configure the channel number
range used by the busway module.

The RJ-45 Bus port connectors support connection to the head unit and
other strip modules via CAT6 cables. The Enviro port connects to
compatible environmental sensors offered by Schneider Electric.

In panelboard monitoring applications, a HDPM6000 head unit is


connected to one or more retrofit or strip modules as shown in the two
diagrams below. The branch modules are daisy-chain connected, and the
first (or last) branch module is connected to the bus port on the head unit.

Page 10 of 34 © 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved.


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Overview

In busway monitoring applications, a HDPM6000 head unit is connected


to one or more busway modules as shown in the diagram below. The
busway modules are attached to busway tap boxes and are daisy-chain
connected, and the first (or last) branch module is connected to the bus port
on the head unit.

Note
If more than 14 busway modules are daisy-chain connected, or the total
bus cable length is greater than 30 meters (98 feet), then a ring topology is
required. See the HDPM6000B sub-section in the Branch Modules section
for more details.

© 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved. Page 11 of 34


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Overview

Note
Only branch modules of same type (e.g. retrofit modules) can be daisy-
chain connected to the same head unit.

I/O modules and EIM modules may be combined with each other, and
daisy-chain connected with branch modules to a head unit. As an example,
four retrofit modules, two EIM modules, and an I/O module can be daisy-
chain connected to a head unit.

Note
An HDPM6000 system supports up to 8 I/O modules and 10 EIM modules.

Table 1.1 shows the maximum number of circuits possible in HDPM6000


systems with different combinations of HDPM6000S and HDPM6000R
branch circuit modules. Table 1.2 shows the maximum number of circuits
possible in HDPM6000 systems with HDPM6000B branch circuit modules.

Page 12 of 34 © 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved.


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Overview

Table 1.1: Circuits Available with HDPM6000S and HDPM6000R Modules

Table 1.2: Circuits Available with HDPM6000B Modules

© 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved. Page 13 of 34


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Installation

2 HDPM System Installation


See the references below for more information about installing HDPM6000
product family components. These references include information such as:

▪ Connecting head unit voltage and CT inputs to the power circuit to


be monitored.

▪ Setting the address on branch circuit modules and understanding


how the module address relates to branch channel numbering.

▪ Identifying the correct CT orientation when installing CTs on circuit


conductors.

HDPM6000 Head Unit Installation Guide (Z208128)

HDPM6000S Installation Guide (Z208130)

HDPM6000S24 Installation Guide (Z208449)

HDPM6000R Installation Guide (Z208129)

HDPM6000B Installation Guide (Z208131)

HDPM6000 Series Current Transducer Installation Manual (Z208152)

HDPM6000 I/O Module Installation Guide (Z208142)


Installation and configuration information for the HDPM6000 I/O module.

HDPM6000 Expanded Input Module (EIM 2.0) (Z208431)


Installation and configuration information for the HDPM6000 EIM module.

Page 14 of 34 © 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved.


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Configuration

3 HDPM System Configuration


A HDPM6000 system is configured via the web interface offered by the
head unit. The web interface can be navigated using the tabs on the
horizontal bar below the Schneider Electric logo.

Note
When changes are made using the HDPM6000 head unit web pages,
ensure the Save button on the page is pressed and do not navigate away
from the page until a popup appears confirming a successful save,
otherwise changes may be lost.

See the “Accessing the Device for the First Time” section in the HDPM6000
Head Unit Installation Guide (Z208128) document for details about
connecting to the head unit web server and logging in.

The steps below provide an overview of the key tasks involved in


configuring a HDPM6000 system.

1. Complete basic configuration tasks (such as communications and


power metering settings) on the General Settings tab page.

Note
Enabling DHCP and saving the change while directly connected to the
head unit with a PC will result in a loss of communications. Complete all
other configuration tasks before enabling DHCP.

2. Confirm that all connected branch circuit modules are recognized by the
head unit on the Taps tab page. Module addressing can optionally be
manually set using this page, and the orientation of strip modules can
be configured.

3. Set the CT Type for CTs connected to the head unit and connected
branch circuit modules on the Channel Cfg tab page. Set the expected
phase for each current channel, assign channels to circuits and load
types, and assign names to circuits. The Branch Circuits section below
provides additional information and examples.

4. Configure the demand calculation type to use and the length of each
demand interval on the Demand tab page.

5. If I/O modules or EIM modules are connected, assign module


addresses (“card allocations”) on the I/O tab page and Digital Input tab
page, respectively.

6. If environmental sensors are attached to the head unit and/or branch


circuit modules, configure sensor descriptions and Modbus address
layout on the Environmental tab page.

© 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved. Page 15 of 34


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Configuration

7. Set up event and measurement logging on the Logging tab page. The
Logs section below provides additional information about log
configuration, and the PME and HDPM Logs section describes how to
configure logs for use with Power Monitoring Expert (PME).

8. Configure voltage and current alarms for the head unit and attached
branch circuit modules on the Alarms tag page. The Alarms section
below provides additional details and examples.

9. Enable waveform capture triggers and set trigger thresholds on the


Waveform tab page. The Waveforms section below provides additional
details and examples.

Note
Waveform capture is an optional feature on most branch circuit modules

The HDPM Configuration Files section below describes how to use


configuration files to save much of the configuration state of an HDPM
system and propagate this configuration to other HDPM systems.

Additional HDPM6000 system configuration information can be found in the


“Commissioning” section in the HDPM6000 Head Unit Installation Guide
(Z208128).

3.1 Basic Configuration


Basic configuration settings for a HDPM6000 system can be found on the
General Settings tab of the head unit web user interface. An overview of
several key settings available on the General Settings tab is provided
below.

▪ HDPM system time. The Synchronize board time button will set time
on the HDPM head unit to match the time of the PC that has loaded the
General Settings page. The Network Time Protocol (NTP) settings can
be configured to enable the head unit to synchronize time with an NTP
server.

▪ TCP/IP settings. IPv4 and IPv6 communications can be enabled or


disabled. The head unit IPv4 address and associated settings will be
configured automatically if the IPv4 DHCP setting is enabled. Use the
IP Address filtering setting to configure specific IP addresses that the
head unit will accept connections from. The Second Ethernet Port
(Eth1) Functionality setting configures Eth1 for either Switched mode
or HMI mode (for use with an HMI connected to the Eth1 port).

▪ RS-485 communications. The RS485 speed setting is used to select


the serial baud rate, and the Modbus address setting configures the
Modbus unit ID of the head unit.

Page 16 of 34 © 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved.


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Configuration

▪ Circuit settings. The Channel numbering setting selects between


ANSI and IEC channel numbering schemes, and the Supply Type
setting selects which power system type the head unit is connected to
(Wye, Delta, or Split). The High power mode setting applies to branch
circuit current and power measurements and typically only needs
adjustment if channel currents exceed 655 amps. The Energy
resolution setting adjusts the scaling of 32-bit integer energy registers,
and the default 1 Wh setting is recommended. The Phase summary
setting determines which data summary (3-phase meter, Circuits, or
Split circuits) is shown at the top of the Circuit Data page.

3.2 Branch Circuits


Input channels on branch circuit modules connected to the HDPM head unit
are configured into circuits using the Channel Cfg tab of the head unit web
user interface. Channels can be assigned to circuit groups either
automatically or manually:

▪ Automatic circuit groups: uncheck the Manually assign


channels to circuits box in the lower-right corner of the Channel
Cfg web page and select the Add to circuit boxes between
channels to be combined into a circuit group. When finished, click
Save configuration.

▪ Manual circuit groups: check the Manually assign channels to


circuits box in the lower-right corner of the Channel Cfg web page
and assign circuit numbers to channels in the Circuit column.
Channels are part of a circuit when they share the same circuit
number assignment. When finished, click Save configuration.

Figure 3.2.1 shows an example circuit configuration with a view of a portion


of the Channel Cfg tab of the head unit web interface with several circuit
groups defined. The HDPM system is configured for ANSI channel
numbering and circuit grouping is set to automatic.

Figure 3.2.1: Example Branch Circuit Configuration

© 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved. Page 17 of 34


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Configuration

The screenshot in Figure 3.2.1 demonstrates the following circuit group


configurations:

▪ Channel 1 is on voltage phase 1 and given the name “Server 1”.


This circuit is assigned to the “Server” load type.

▪ Channel 3 is on voltage phase 2 and given the name “Server 2”.


This circuit is assigned to the “Server” load type.

▪ Channel 5 is on voltage phase 3 and given the name “Server 3”.


This circuit is assigned to the “Server” load type.

▪ Channels 7, 9, and 11 are grouped into a 3-phase circuit with


voltage phases 1, 2, and 3, and given the name “HVAC 1”. This
circuit is assigned to the “HVAC” load type.

▪ Channel 13 is not used, and the CT Type is set to “Unused”.

Note
If branch circuit channels are unused and do not have CTs attached,
disable them on the Channel Cfg tab by setting their CT Type to
“Unused”.

See the HDPM Sources and Measurements in PME section for more
information about how circuit group names and load types appear as PME
source names. Configure branch channels as circuit groups (including
names and load types) before adding a HDPM system to PME to avoid the
creation of initial sources in PME that are later unused.

See the “Branch Circuit Configuration” and “Channel Cfg Tab” sections in
the HDPM6000 Head Unit Installation Guide (Z208128) for more
information about configuring branch circuit groups.

3.3 Logs
Onboard data logs are configured using the Logging tab of the head unit
web user interface. In Figure 3.3.1 below, region 1 (shown with 1 in a
green circle) is a left-hand column of radio buttons used to select a data log,
and web interface elements in the remaining regions on the screen are then
used to configure the selected data log. Web interface elements in region 2
are used to download data from the selected log, and web interface
elements in region 3 are used to configure the name and parameters of the
selected log. Finally, web interface elements in region 4 are used to set the
Modbus registers of measurements that will be included in the selected log.

Note
An SD card (provided with the HDPM head unit) must be inserted into the
HDPM head unit to use onboard logging features.

Page 18 of 34 © 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved.


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Configuration

Figure 3.3.1: HDPM Head Unit Web Interface – Logging Tab

Note
The drop-down box (with the text “Use standard config…”) in region 3 of
the screenshot above contains preset groups of Modbus registers to
include in the configuration of the currently selected log. These presets
can be used to quickly configure onboard logs to use common groupings
of Modbus registers.

See the “Logging Tab” section in the HDPM6000 Head Unit Installation
Guide (Z208128) for more information.

The HDPM6000 driver for EcoStruxure Power Monitoring Expert (PME)


requires specific onboard logs to include specific Modbus registers for
correct operation. See the PME and HDPM Logs section below for more
information.

A file containing the complete onboard log configuration can be downloaded


from and uploaded to a HDPM head unit using HDPM6000 Manager
software. See the HDPM Configuration Files section below for more
information.

© 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved. Page 19 of 34


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Configuration

3.4 Alarms
Alarms on a HDPM6000 system are configured using the Alarms tab of the
head unit web user interface. Warnings and alarms for voltage and current
are set based on user-defined thresholds and delays. Warnings and alarms
are available in both non-latching and latching forms. Non-latching
warnings and alarms (shown as Low, High, Warning, and Alarm in the web
interface) are only active during the time the condition that triggered them is
active. Latching warnings and alarms (shown as Low L, High L, Warning L,
and Alarm L in the web interface) remain active once triggered until
manually cleared via Modbus or the head unit web interface.

Figure 3.4.1 shows the portion of the Alarms tab web interface used to
configure low and high voltage alarms. The voltage measurement value and
low and high threshold values are shown for each phase. The non-
latching/latching Low and High alarm states for each phase are shown at
the right of the figure – a blank checkbox indicates no alarm and a blue
checkmark indicates an active (or latched) alarm.

Figure 3.4.1: Voltage Alarm Thresholds and High/Low Status

Figure 3.4.2 shows all global settings fields and controls visible for current
(and for the voltage alarm delay) when the Global settings button has
been toggled to enable this view.

▪ The Clear buttons at the top are used to clear all warnings or
alarms, or to clear specific alarms (such as voltage alarms).

▪ The Voltage alarm delay specifies how long a high/low voltage


condition is active before a voltage alarm becomes active.

▪ The Tripped breaker settings specify the threshold to be exceeded


(and for how long) before the tripped breaker alarm is armed.

▪ The Set all breaker sizes, thresholds, and warning/alarm delay


buttons are used to specify warning and alarm conditions for HDPM
system current inputs. The Set all breaker sizes button sets the
breaker size for both the head unit 3-phase meter and branch
channels.

Page 20 of 34 © 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved.


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Configuration

Figure 3.4.2: Global Settings Fields and Controls

Figure 3.4.3 shows several buttons for managing what is displayed on the
Alarms tab web interface and saving all user-entered settings.

▪ The Refresh controls configure how often the Alarms tab web
interface is refreshed (if the Refresh every checkbox is checked)
and allow manual refreshing of the page via the Refresh now
button.

▪ The Digital out cfg button toggles the Alarms tab web interface for
digital output configuration mode. In this mode, all checkboxes for
alarm signals change to drop-down menus that allow the
associated alarm/warning signal to be routed to an output relay on
an attached HDPM I/O module.

▪ The Channels/PQM button toggles between display of the branch


channels or head unit (PQM) channels in the table in the bottom
section of the Alarms tab web interface.

▪ The Global settings button toggles display of global settings fields


(see Figure 3.4.2 and associated text description) that are used to
configure all channels at the same time.

▪ The Save settings button is used to save all user-entered settings.

Figure 3.4.3: Buttons Used to Manage Alarm Tab Display

See the “Alarms Tab” section in the HDPM6000 Head Unit Installation
Guide (Z208128) for more information.

© 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved. Page 21 of 34


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Configuration

3.5 Waveforms
Waveform capture thresholds, display, and data export for the HDPM
system are available via the Waveform tab web interface. The Edit
settings button toggles the display of the waveform capture settings shown
in Figure 3.5.1 below. Note that waveform capture is an optional feature on
most branch circuit modules.

▪ The Over voltage and Voltage sag settings establish the


over/under voltage thresholds that trigger a waveform capture. For
a delta power supply type, only head unit voltage and current
channels will be captured.

▪ The Phase currents settings configure the threshold and hold time
for either an over current or tripped breaker condition. If the Over
current option is selected, a waveform capture will be recorded if
the mains current exceeds the threshold for at least the Hold time
duration. If the Tripped breaker option is selected, the mains
current must exceed this threshold for at least the Hold time
duration to arm the mains current tripped breaker waveform
capture. The Channels to capture option specifies whether all
channels are captured or only the channel that triggered the
waveform capture event.

▪ The Channel currents TB settings configure a waveform capture


when a tripped breaker is detected on a branch channel (i.e. zero
crossing timeout on a current channel). To trigger a waveform
capture, the branch channel current must exceed the Threshold
value for at least the Hold time duration to arm the branch current
tripped breaker waveform capture.

Page 22 of 34 © 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved.


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM System Configuration

Figure 3.5.1: Waveform Capture Settings

Note
An SD card (provided with the HDPM head unit) must be inserted into the
HDPM head unit to use waveform capture features.

See the “Waveform Tab” section in the HDPM6000 Head Unit Installation
Guide (Z208128) for more information.

© 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved. Page 23 of 34


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide PME and HDPM Systems

4 PME and HDPM Systems


EcoStruxure Power Monitoring Expert (PME) version 2023 natively
supports the HDPM6000 platform, and device drivers are available for PME
versions 2022, 2021, and 2020.

4.1 HDPM Sources and Measurements in PME


Use one of the following device types when adding a HDPM system to
PME:

Device Type Description

HDPM6000 HDPM head unit without branch modules

HDPM6000R HDPM head unit with retrofit branch modules

HDPM6000S HDPM head unit with strip branch modules


(either HDPM6000S or HDPM6000S24
modules)

HDPM6000B HDPM head unit with busway branch modules

The PME HDPM device driver creates the following sources for each
HDPM system:

▪ Head unit

▪ Each circuit group

▪ Each load type

The head unit source is assigned measurements generated by the head


unit 3-phase meter as well as several branch circuit measurements. The
head unit is given the name assigned to the HDPM system when it is added
to PME. As an example, the head unit may be given the source name
BuildingA.Panel1.

Each circuit group configured on the HDPM system is created as a


separate source in PME and given a name that combines the head unit
name with a circuit group name. As an example, a 3-phase circuit
combining channels 1, 3, and 5 may be given the name
BuildingA.Panel1_C001_003_005. If the circuit group has been configured
with a name on the HDPM, the source name in PME will include that
configured HDPM name instead of the generic Cxxx name. As an example,
if the 3-phase circuit combining channels 1, 3, and 5 has been assigned the

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HDPM6000 Configuration Guide PME and HDPM Systems

name “Server2A”, the PME source name will be


BuildingA.Panel1_Server2A.

Each load type configured on the HDPM is created as a separate source in


PME and given a name that combines the head unit name with a load type
name. As an example, a load type given the name “HVAC” on the HDPM
may appear with the source name BuildingA.Panel1_HVAC in PME.

The HDPM driver creates one or more new sources when an existing circuit
group is redefined. Consider the example of a 3-phase circuit combining
channels 1, 3, and 5 that is later redefined as 3 separate single-phase
circuits. PME may create a source named
BuildingA.Panel1_C001_003_005 when the 3-phase circuit is first defined
and will create 3 new sources (BuildingA.Panel1_C001,
BuildingA.Panel1_C003, BuildingA.Panel1_C005) when the 3-phase
circuit is redefined as 3 separate single-phase circuits. The original 3-phase
source name remains, and any measurement data logged under the 3-
phase source name is retained in the PME database.

Note
Configure branch channels as circuit groups before adding a HDPM
system to PME to avoid the creation of initial sources in PME that are later
unused.

Note
Do not use duplicate circuit group or load type names on the same HDPM
system to avoid the creation of spurious PME sources for the same circuit.

The table below (from the PME HDPM driver release notes) lists the
measurements and features available for the HDPM device types in PME.

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HDPM6000 Configuration Guide PME and HDPM Systems

Note
The HDPM device driver doesn’t support High Power mode on the
HDPM6000 – configure the HDPM6000 system for High Power mode Off
or use Custom mode instead.

See the HDPM driver release notes in the HDPM driver ZIP file HDPM6000
Series SE Driver PME 2022 (7EN12-0382) for more information.

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HDPM6000 Configuration Guide PME and HDPM Systems

4.2 PME and HDPM Logs


The HDPM driver requires onboard logs on connected HDPM6000 systems
to have a specific configuration for correct operation. The HDPM driver
release notes contain a table (in the “On-Board Logging” section) that
specifies the configuration for each onboard log.

Table 4.2.1 below shows the required configuration for the first 7 onboard
logs as an example. See the PME HDPM6000 driver release notes for the
table listing the complete HDPM onboard logging configuration
requirements.

HDPM6000 Series SE Driver PME 2022 (7EN12-0382)

Table 4.2.1: HDPM Onboard Log Configuration (First 7 of 17 Onboard


Logs)

Note
Configure onboard logs as required before adding a HDPM system to PME
to ensure the HDPM driver will download log data as expected.

The Logs section above provides information about configuring onboard


logs on a HDPM head unit.

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HDPM6000 Configuration Guide PME and HDPM Systems

The PME HDPM driver supports the following factory-provided reports


within the PME web-based Reports application:

▪ Trend

▪ Tabular

▪ Load Profile

▪ Energy Cost

▪ Energy Period over Period

▪ Energy Usage by Shift

▪ Hourly Usage Report

▪ Single Device Usage Report

▪ Multi Device Usage Report

▪ Branch Circuit Power report

▪ Energy by IT Customer report

See the HDPM driver release notes in the HDPM driver ZIP file HDPM6000
Series SE Driver PME 2022 (7EN12-0382) for more details about onboard
logging configuration requirements.

A file containing the complete onboard log configuration can be downloaded


from and uploaded to a HDPM head unit using HDPM6000 Manager
software. See the HDPM Configuration Files section below for more
information.

Page 28 of 34 © 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved.


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM Configuration Files

5 HDPM Configuration Files


A HDPM6000 system is configured using the web user interface on the
head unit, but the complete configuration of a HDPM system can be
downloaded to a file and then propagated to other HDPM systems.

HDPM6000 Manager is a Microsoft Windows software utility used to


manage the configuration of one or more HDPM6000 head units. Some
capabilities of this software utility include firmware upgrades, HTTPS
certificate management, and downloading/uploading meter configuration
files. This utility is packaged as a standalone software executable (no
installation step required).

The HDPM6000 Manager screenshot below is an example showing three


connected head units, each with different branch and I/O modules attached.
The Download Configuration button is used to download the
configuration(s) of one or more selected HDPM head units, and the Upload
Configuration button is used to upload a configuration file to one or more
selected HDPM head units.

© 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved. Page 29 of 34


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM Configuration Files

HDPM6000 Manager is included with HDPM6000 firmware bundle ZIP files


available in the Software and Firmware section (web link) of the HDPM6000
product page.

Additional HDPM6000 Manager information can be found in the


“HDPM6000 Manager” section of the HDPM6000 Head Unit Installation
Guide (Z208128).

5.1 Configuration Download


To download the configuration of a HDPM head unit, select the HDPM
system(s) (checkbox next to the serial number) in HDPM6000 Manager and
click the Download Configuration button.

▪ If one HDPM system was selected, choose a folder location, and


enter a name for the configuration file (ending in .cfg) in the file
explorer window.

▪ If more than one HDPM system was selected, choose a folder


location to store the downloaded configuration files – each
downloaded file will contain the HDPM head unit serial number in
the file name.

Click the Save button in the file explorer window to save the configuration
file.

A Download Configuration dialog box with a progress bar will appear after
the Save button has been clicked. If the progress bar is green once
progress has completed and the OK button can be clicked, one or more
configuration files were downloaded and successfully saved to the
configuration file. If the progress bar is red once progress has completed,
the configuration was not successfully downloaded and saved for one or
more selected head units.

5.2 Configuration Upload


To upload a configuration to one or more HDPM head units, select the
HDPM system(s) (checkbox next to the serial number) in HDPM6000
Manager and click the Upload Configuration button. Select the
configuration file in the file explorer window and click the Open button.

Note
Only upload configuration files to HDPM head units with the same
firmware version as the head unit the configuration file was downloaded
from. Uploading a configuration file to head units with different firmware
versions might result in an incorrect configuration on target head units.

Page 30 of 34 © 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved.


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM Configuration Files

The Configuration Category Selection dialog box shown in the screenshot


below will appear after clicking the Open button in the file explorer window.
This dialog box shows the configuration category items that will be
uploaded to selected HDPM head units when the OK button is clicked.

Click the checkbox next to each configuration category item to include in


the upload to the selected HDPM head unit(s). Click the Select All button to
select all configuration category items, and the Deselect All button to
deselect all configuration category items. Once configuration category item
selections have been made, click the OK button to upload data for the
selected configuration categories to the selected HDPM head unit(s).

An Upload Configuration dialog box with a progress bar will appear after the
OK button has been clicked. If the progress bar is green once progress has
completed and the OK button can be clicked, the configuration was
successfully uploaded to the selected head unit(s). If the progress bar is red
once progress has completed, the configuration was not successfully
uploaded to one or more selected head units.

Note
Configuration files contain a copy of the CT Type table from the source
HDPM head unit. Uploading a configuration file will overwrite the target
head unit CT Type table with the CT Type table data in the configuration
file.

© 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved. Page 31 of 34


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide HDPM Configuration Files

5.3 CT Type Table


A HDPM6000 head unit maintains a CT Type table with calibration data for
CTs that are compatible with HDPM6000 systems. Each CT entry in the
table is given a unique name, CT factor (magnitude) value, and PHCAL
(phase shift) value. The CTs defined in the CT Type table can be selected
when configuring CTs connected to the head unit and branch circuit module
channels within the Channel Cfg tab of the web user interface on the head
meter. CT Type table files (CSV format) are used to add new CT entries to
the CT Type table maintained by a HDPM head unit.

To upload a CT Type table file to one or more HDPM head units, select the
HDPM system(s) (checkbox next to the serial number) in HDPM6000
Manager and click the drop-down arrow to the right of the Upload
Configuration button. Click the Upload CT Type Table button that
appears, and then select the CT Type table file (CSV format) and click the
Open button.

An Upload CT Type Table dialog box with a progress bar will appear after
the Save button has been clicked. If the progress bar is green once
progress has completed and the OK button can be clicked, the CT Type
table was successfully uploaded to the selected head unit(s). If the progress
bar is red once progress has completed, the CT Type table was not
successfully uploaded to one or more selected head units.

Note
Uploading a CT Type table file to a HDPM head unit does not delete
existing entries in the CT Type table maintained by the head unit.
Modifications to existing CT parameters in the table will be applied and
new entries will be added.

Note
HDPM head unit firmware v62.7 and above supports up to 500 CT Type
table entries. Head units with previous firmware versions support fewer
table entries and may display an error if a CT Type table file upload adds
new entries that exceed the table limit.

Page 32 of 34 © 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved.


HDPM6000 Configuration Guide References

6 References
HDPM6000 Technical Datasheet (PLSED310185EN_Web)
Description of HDPM6000 components with technical specifications.

HDPM6000 Head Unit Installation Guide (Z208128)


Installation and configuration information for the HDPM head unit. Includes
instructions for using HDPM6000 Manager utility software.

HDPM6000S Installation Guide (Z208130)


Installation and configuration information for HDPM6000S strip modules.

HDPM6000S24 Installation Guide (Z208449)


Installation and configuration information for HDPM6000S24 strip modules.

HDPM6000R Installation Guide (Z208129)


Installation and configuration information for HDPM6000R retrofit modules.

HDPM6000B Installation Guide (Z208131)


Installation and configuration information for HDPM6000B busway modules.

HDPM6000 Series Current Transducer Installation Manual (Z208152)


Specifications and installation instructions for low-voltage output current
transducers compatible with the HDPM6000 platform.

HDPM6000 HMI Display User Guide (web link, PDF)


Installation and user guide for the HDPM6000 HMI display.

HDPM6000 Protocol Guide (ZL0192)


Modbus, BACnet, and SNMP protocol details for the HDPM6000 platform.

HDPM6000 I/O Module Installation Guide (Z208142)


Installation and configuration information for the HDPM6000 I/O module.

HDPM6000 Expanded Input Module (EIM 2.0) (Z208431)


Installation and configuration information for the HDPM6000 EIM module.

HDPM6000 Temperature and Humidity Instruction Sheet (web link, PDF)


Installation instructions for HDPM temperature/humidity sensors.

HDPM6000 Series SE Driver PME 2022 (7EN12-0382)


PME HDPM driver ZIP file with driver software installer and release notes.

HDPM6000 Software and Firmware downloads (web link)


HDPM6000 product page on se.com with links to download HDPM system
firmware.

© 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved. Page 33 of 34


Schneider Electric
35 rue Joseph Monier
92500 Rueil Malmaison – France
www.schneider-electric.com

As standards, specifications, and designs change from time to time, please


ask for confirmation of the information given in this publication.

Copyright 2024 Schneider Electric. All rights reserved.

02/2024

General

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