Control Loops Troubleshooting
Control Loops Troubleshooting
As these tools become increasingly important in today’s automation and process control
environments, it is important to understand when, where and how to use them to their
best advantage – from tracing control loop problems or malfunctions to field testing
and commissioning.
Following is a look at some of the features and functions of mA process clamp meters,
along with troubleshooting guidelines to help you get the most out of your instrument
investment.
There are three likely causes when the loop current measured is not as expected:
broken, disconnected or shorted wires; a bad loop power supply; or faulty
instrumentation. If no problem is found in the wires, check the loop power supply. If
that supply shows no output, a meter with a 24-V loop power function can be used to
substitute for the missing output. If the loop works properly, then the source of the
problem is obviously the power supply.
When the wiring and power supply both check out, it’s time to check the transmitter.
Use the mA simulate mode on a loop calibrator, process calibrator or multi-function
clamp-on meter to substitute for the transmitter. If the loop performs as requested, the
problem lies with the transmitter.
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2. LOOP MALFUNCTIONS
An inaccurate (versus a dead) loop can be caused by a number of things, including a
bad input/output (I/O) card on the PLC, distributed process control system (DCS), or a
bad final control element (for example, an I/P on a valve positioner). It’s usually best to
start by doing a field check of the transmitter, local or remote indicator, or final control
element.
For a final control element, use a clamp-on meter to measure loop current and compare
the value to the local position indicator on the valve or other final control element.
Relay that information to the operator to verify your findings.
In the case of a measurement loop, use the clamp meter to measure loop current, then
check with the operator to see how well the value indicated on the control panel agrees
with the actual loop current. This will provide a quick check on the PLC or DCS I/O
card that handles that particular loop. It’s also possible to use the meter’s mA
source/simulate mode to send a known signal to the control room; and compare the
value as read by the operator to the actual current in the loop.
Some loops show random fluctuations or intermittent faults that need to be tracked
over time. A clamp meter with a scaled mA output can be used to measure the current
in the loop without breaking the circuit, and produce an identical and isolated mA
output. That output can be fed to a DMM with a logging function to enable recording
over time.
Classic troubleshooting involves checking the wiring, the power supply and the control
system’s I/O cards (i.e. using the meter to inject a signal into the I/O, and then
contacting the operator to ask what he sees). If the operator agrees with what is being
sent, then there may be something amiss with the transmitter – either the transmitter
itself or, if this is a new installation, the wiring.
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5. CHECKING A VALVE POSITIONER
As part of preventive maintenance programs, technicians can use milliamp clamp
meters for periodic in-field checks of electronic valve positioners. Accounting for
manufacturer-specific instructions, it is relatively easy to perform quick operational
checks using the meter as a signal source, while observing the valve stem position,
mechanical position indicators or flow indicators as input changes are made.
Colin Plastow is the industrial product manager for Fluke. He may be contacted at
[email protected].
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