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WIRING OVERVIEW

Electrical connections are made via screw-clamp terminals located on the

back of the meter. All conductors should conform to the meter’s voltage and
current ratings. All cabling should conform to appropriate standards of good
installation, local codes and regulations. It is recommended that the power
supplied to the meter (DC or AC) be protected by a fuse or circuit breaker.

Strip the wire, leaving approximately 0.3" (7.5 mm) bare lead exposed

(stranded wires should be tinned with solder.) Insert the lead under the correct
screw-clamp terminal and tighten until the wire is secure. (Pull wire to verify
tightness.) Each terminal can accept up to one #14 AWG (2.55 mm) wire, two
#18 AWG (1.02 mm), or four #20 AWG (0.61 mm).

EMC INSTALLATION GUIDELINES

Although this meter is designed with a high degree of immunity to Electro-

Magnetic Interference (EMI), proper installation and wiring methods must be
followed to ensure compatibility in each application. The type of the electrical
noise, source or coupling method into the meter may be different for various
installations. The meter becomes more immune to EMI with fewer I/O
connections. Cable length, routing, and shield termination are very important
and can mean the difference between a successful or troublesome installation.
Listed below are some EMC guidelines for successful installation in an
industrial environment.
1. The meter should be mounted in a metal enclosure, which is properly

connected to protective earth.

2. Use shielded (screened) cables for all Signal and Control inputs. The shield

(screen) pigtail connection should be made as short as possible. The
connection point for the shield depends somewhat upon the application.
Listed below are the recommended methods of connecting the shield, in order
of their effectiveness.
a. Connect the shield only at the panel where the unit is mounted to earth

ground (protective earth).

b. Connect the shield to earth ground at both ends of the cable, usually when

the noise source frequency is above 1 MHz.

c. Connect the shield to common of the meter and leave the other end of the

shield unconnected and insulated from earth ground.

3. Never run Signal or Control cables in the same conduit or raceway with AC

power lines, conductors feeding motors, solenoids, SCR controls, and
heaters, etc. The cables should be ran in metal conduit that is properly
grounded. This is especially useful in applications where cable runs are long
and portable two-way radios are used in close proximity or if the installation
is near a commercial radio transmitter.

4. Signal or Control cables within an enclosure should be routed as far as possible

from contactors, control relays, transformers, and other noisy components.

5. In extremely high EMI environments, the use of external EMI suppression

devices, such as ferrite suppression cores, is effective. Install them on Signal
and Control cables as close to the unit as possible. Loop the cable through the
core several times or use multiple cores on each cable for additional protection.
Install line filters on the power input cable to the unit to suppress power line
interference. Install them near the power entry point of the enclosure. The
following EMI suppression devices (or equivalent) are recommended:

Ferrite Suppression Cores for signal and control cables:

Fair-Rite # 0443167251 (RLC# FCOR0000)
TDK # ZCAT3035-1330A
Steward # 28B2029-0A0

Line Filters for input power cables:

Schaffner # FN610-1/07 (RLC# LFIL0000)
Schaffner # FN670-1.8/07
Corcom # 1 VR3

Note: Reference manufacturer’s instructions when installing a line filter.

6. Long cable runs are more susceptible to EMI pickup than short cable runs.

Therefore, keep cable runs as short as possible.

7. Switching of inductive loads produces high EMI. Use of snubbers across

inductive loads suppresses EMI. 

Snubber: RLC# SNUB0000.

4.0 W

IRING THE

M

ETER

4.1  POWER WIRING

DC Power

+9 to +28 VDC: +VDC
Power Common: -VDC

4.2  USER INPUT WIRING

Sinking Logic 

INP COMM
USR

The user input of the meter is
internally pulled up to +9 to +28 V
with 10 K resistance. The input is
active when it is pulled low (<1 .0 V).

Connect external switching device between the
User Input terminal and Input Common.

}

4

The Plug-in cards are separately purchased option cards that perform specific

functions. The cards plug into the main circuit board of the meter. After
installing the cards, replace the rear cover before wiring the meter.

CAUTION:

The Plug-in cards and main circuit board contain static

sensitive components. Before handling the cards, discharge
static charges from your body by touching a grounded bare
metal object. Ideally, handle the cards at a static controlled
clean workstation. Also, only handle the cards by the edges.
Dirt, oil or other contaminants that may contact the cards can
adversely affect circuit operation.

REPLACING THE REAR COVER

To replace the rear cover, align the cover with the input terminals and press

down until the cover snaps into place.

3.0 I

NSTALLING

P

LUG

-I

N

C

ARDS

Comms Card

Setpoint Card

Locking Tab

Summary of Contents for CUB5B

Page 1: ...Setpoint capability is field installable with the addition of the single setpoint relay output module or the dual setpoint solid state output module Serial communications capability for RS232 or RS48...

Page 2: ...ature 35 to 85 C Operating and Storage Humidity 0 to 85 max relative humidity non condensing Vibration According to IEC 68 2 6 Operational 5 to 500 Hz in X Y Z direction for 1 5 hours 5 g s Shock Acco...

Page 3: ...se widths to 10 msec To access the switches remove the rear cover of the meter as described below A bank of 4 switches is located in the upper right hand corner After setting the switches install any...

Page 4: ...pplications where cable runs are long and portable two way radios are used in close proximity or if the installation is near a commercial radio transmitter 4 Signal or Control cables within an enclosu...

Page 5: ...erators Etc Input A Two Wire Proximity Current Source Input A Magnetic Pickup Input A Current Sourcing Output Input A Interfacing With TTL Input A Current Sinking Output Input A Switch or Isolated Tra...

Page 6: ...move to the next parameter PROGRAMMING MODE EXIT SEL KEY The Programming Mode is exited by pressing the SEL key with Pro NO displayed This will commit any stored parameter changes to memory and return...

Page 7: ...is value if Reset to Count Load action is selected 9999999 to 99999999 00000500 CmtA Ld COUNTER B BATCH COUNT ENABLE The Counter B batch count function internally counts the number of output activatio...

Page 8: ...y reset of the selected counter s Change backlight color with each activation backlight version only Inhibit Maintained Reset Freeze display of selected counter s while allowing counts to accumulate i...

Page 9: ...a pulse every 2 seconds RATE HIGH UPDATE TIME 0 2 to 99 9 seconds 01 0 LO Udt 02 0 HI Udt SCALING FOR RATE INDICATION To scale the rate enter a Scaling Display value with a corresponding Scaling Input...

Page 10: ...are only active when Counter B is enabled Dual Count mode or batch counter FRONT PANEL COUNTER RESET ENABLE RST The yES selection allows the display to automatically scroll through the enabled displa...

Page 11: ...Setpoint Action not applicable for Counter B Assignment Select the Setpoint Output to be programmed starting with Setpoint 1 The n in the following parameters reflects the chosen Setpoint number After...

Page 12: ...vated Reverse rEV turns the output off when activated and on when deactivated NOr SPn OUt SETPOINT ANNUNCIATOR Normal NOr displays the setpoint annunciator when the corresponding output is on Reverse...

Page 13: ...om the meter in response to a Transmit Value command or a Block Print Request Select NO for a full print transmission consisting of the meter address mnemonics and parameter data Select YES for abbrev...

Page 14: ...es not issue a reply to value change commands follow with a transmit value command for readback verification Receiving Data From The Meter Data is transmitted from the meter in response to either a tr...

Page 15: ...o take place The figures list the data formats employed by the meter Start Bit and Data Bits Data transmission always begins with the start bit The start bit signals the receiving device to prepare fo...

Page 16: ...16 CUB5 PROGRAMMING QUICK OVERVIEW Press and hold SEL key to enter Programming Mode...

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