Chapter 2
– Safety Information
RPV311
RPV311-TM-EN-6
39
Testing may leave capacitors charged to dangerous voltage levels. Discharge capacitors by
reducing test voltages to zero before disconnecting test leads.
If the equipment is used in a manner not specified by the manufacturer, the protection
provided by the equipment may be impaired.
Operate the equipment within the specified electrical and environmental limits.
Before cleaning the equipment, ensure that no connections are energised. Use a lint free cloth
dampened with clean water.
Integration of the equipment into systems shall not interfere with its normal functioning.
The functioning of the device has been certified under the circumstances described by the
standards mentioned in Chapter 17 (item Type Tests). Usage of the equipment in different
conditions from the specified in this manual might affect negatively its normal integrity.
The equipment shall have all their rear connectors attached even if they are not being used, in
order to keep their levels of ingress protection as high as possible
Never manipulate liquid containers near the equipment even when it is powered off.
Avoid modification to the wiring of panel when the system is running.
VT circuits must never be left short circuited.
4.3
FUSING REQUIREMENTS
A high rupture capacity (HRC) fuse type with a maximum current rating of 10 Amps and a
minimum dc rating of 250 V dc may be used for the auxiliary supply (for example Red Spot
type NIT or TIA). Alternatively a miniature circuit breaker (MCB) of type C, 10A rating,
compliant with IEC 60947-2 may be used.
Digital input circuits should be protected by a high rupture capacity NIT or TIA fuse with
maximum rating of 10 A, or equivalent MCB as above. For safety reasons, current transformer
circuits must never be fused. Other circuits should be appropriately fused to protect the wire
used.
Summary of Contents for Reason RPV311
Page 2: ......
Page 15: ...INTRODUCTION CHAPTER 1...
Page 34: ...SAFETY INFORMATION CHAPTER 2...
Page 45: ...HARDWARE DESIGN CHAPTER 3...
Page 56: ......
Page 57: ...CONFIGURATION CHAPTER 4...
Page 75: ...RPV311 Chapter 4 Configuration RPV311 TM EN 6 75 Figure 21 Email Fax configuration...
Page 77: ...RPV311 Chapter 4 Configuration RPV311 TM EN 6 77 Figure 22 Adding and editing voltage circuits...
Page 117: ...OPERATION CHAPTER 5...
Page 121: ...RPV311 Chapter 5 Operation RPV311 TM EN 6 121 Figure 46 Status monitoring sequence...
Page 123: ...RPV311 Chapter 5 Operation RPV311 TM EN 6 123 Figure 47 Monitoring sequence...
Page 128: ...Chapter 5 Operation RPV311 128 RPV311 TM EN 6 Figure 50 Equipment settings monitoring sequence...
Page 155: ...RECORDS CHAPTER 6...
Page 172: ......
Page 173: ...TW FAULT LOCATOR CHAPTER 7...
Page 183: ...PMU CHAPTER 8...
Page 189: ...MODBUS CHAPTER 9...
Page 193: ...DNP3 CHAPTER 10...
Page 196: ......
Page 197: ...GOOSE MESSAGE DETECTION CHAPTER 11...
Page 200: ......
Page 201: ...SOFTWARE RPV TOOLS CHAPTER 12...
Page 228: ......
Page 229: ...SOFTWARE RPV MANAGER CHAPTER 13...
Page 249: ...COMMUNICATIONS CHAPTER 14...
Page 261: ...INSTALLATION CHAPTER 15...
Page 295: ...Chapter 15 Installation RPV311 RPV311 TM EN 6 295 Figure 138 RA331 RA332 and RA333 dimensions...
Page 299: ...MAINTENANCE AND TROUBLESHOOTING CHAPTER 16...
Page 310: ...TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS CHAPTER 17...
Page 331: ...RPV311 Chapter 17 Wiring Diagrams WIRING DIAGRAMS CHAPTER 18...
Page 340: ...APPENDIX A...