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PNEUMATIC CONTROL FUNDAMENTALS
85
ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL
— The controller must be located where the condition it
measures is uniformly affected by changes in position
of the multiple valves. If not, the application requires
more than one controller.
A direct- or reverse-acting signal to a three-way mixing or
diverting valve must be selected carefully. Figure 58 shows
that the piping configuration determines the signal required.
M
M
M
S M B
M P
M P
POSITIVE
POSITIONING
ACTUATORS
N.C. COOLING
VALVE
8-13 PSI
N.O. HEATING
VALVE
2-7 PSI
SENSOR
DA
CONTROLLER
C2357
valve is closed. As the temperature rises, the branchline
pressure increases and the heating valve starts to close. At
7 psi branchline pressure, the heating valve is fully closed. If
the temperature continues to rise, the branchline pressure
increases until the cooling valve starts to open at 8 psi. The
temperature must rise enough to increase the branchline
pressure to 13 psi before the cooling valve will be full open.
On a drop in temperature, the sequence is reversed.
Valves with positive positioners ensure tight close-off of the
heating valve at 7 psi branchline pressure, and delay opening
of the cooling valve until 8 psi branchline pressure is reached.
Positive positioners prevent overlapping caused by a variation
in medium pressure, a binding valve or damper, or a variation
in spring tension when using spring ranges for sequencing.
A greater deadband can be set on the positioners to provide
a larger span when no energy is consumed. For example, if the
positioners are set for 2 to 7 psi on heating and 13 to 18 psi on
cooling, no energy is used when the controller branchline
pressure is between 7 and 13 psi. The positioners can also be
set to overlap (e.g., 4 to 9 and 7 to 12 psi) if required.
Valve and damper actuators without positioners have various
spring ranges. To perform the sequencing application in Figure
59 without positioners, select a heating valve actuator that has
a 2 to 7 psi spring range and a cooling valve actuator that has
an 8 to 13 psi spring range. Although this method lessens
precise positioning, it is usually acceptable in systems with
lower pressure differentials across the valve or damper and on
smaller valves and dampers .
LIMIT CONTROL
Figure 60 shows a sensor-controller combination for space
temperature control with discharge low limit. The discharge
low limit controller on a heating system prevents the discharge
air temperature from dropping below a desired minimum.
Fig. 59. Pneumatic Sequencing of Two Valves with
Positive Positioning Actuators.
When the temperature is so low that the controller calls for
full heat, the branchline pressure is less than 3 psi. The normally
open heating valve is open and the normally closed cooling
HOT WATER
SUPPLY
HOT WATER
SUPPLY
DIRECT-
ACTING
SIGNAL
THREE-WAY
MIXING VALVE
HOT WATER
RETURN
HOT WATER
RETURN
THREE-WAY
MIXING VALVE
REVERSE-
ACTING
SIGNAL
C2377
HOT WATER COIL
HOT WATER COIL
Fig. 58. Three-Way Mixing Valve Piping
with Direct Actuators.
SEQUENCE CONTROL
In pneumatic control systems, one controller can operate
several dampers or valves or several groups of dampers or valves.
For example, year-round air conditioning systems sometimes
require heating in the morning and evening and cooling in the
afternoon. Figure 59 shows a system in which a single controller
controls a normally open heating valve and normally closed
cooling valve. The cooling valve is set for an 8 to 13 psi range
and the heating valve, for a 2 to 7 psi range. The controller operates
the two valves in sequence to hold the temperature at the desired
level continually.
N.O.
VALVE
HEATING COIL
C2380
DISCHARGE
AIR
B S M
M
B
P
P
B S M
M
SENSOR
RETURN AIR
SENSOR
PRIMARY
CONTROLLER (DA)
LOW-LIMIT
CONTROLLER (DA)
LOW-PRESSURE
SELECTOR
RELAY
EXH
Fig. 60. Low-Limit Control (Heating Application).
Summary of Contents for AUTOMATIC CONTROL
Page 4: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL iv ...
Page 6: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL vi ...
Page 11: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL CONTROL FUNDAMENTALS 1 CONTROL SYSTEMS FUNDMENTALS ...
Page 12: ......
Page 46: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL CONTROL FUNDAMENTALS 36 ...
Page 66: ...PSYCHROMETRIC CHART FUNDAMENTALS 56 ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL ...
Page 128: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATION CONTROL ELECTRIC CONTROL FUNDAMENTALS 118 ...
Page 158: ...MICROPROCESSOR BASED DDC FUNDAMENTALS 148 ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL ...
Page 210: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL BUILDING MANAGEMENT SYSTEM FUNDAMENTALS 200 ...
Page 440: ...ENGINEERING MANULA OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL INDIVIDUAL ROOM CONTROL APPLICATIONS 430 ...
Page 516: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL GENERAL ENGINEERING DATA 506 Notes ...
Page 517: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL GENERAL ENGINEERING DATA 507 Notes ...
Page 518: ...ENGINEERING MANUAL OF AUTOMATIC CONTROL GENERAL ENGINEERING DATA 508 ...