GE IS200STAOH2A

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GE - IS200STAOH2A Seperator

Product Info
GE IS200STAOH2A
  • Warranty. 12/18 Months

Description

S TYPE TB ANALOG OUT
  • Model No. IS200STAOH2A
Repair
GE - IS200STAOH2A Repair Lead Time:-
  • Standard Repair: 5-10 Business Days

ICC’s large inventory investment includes IS200STAOH2A. ICC’s highly skilled technicians have the training and expertise to repair IS200STAOH2A. In addition, our IS200STAOH2A repairs come with a warranty. Please fill out our Request a Quote form with IS200STAOH2A in the Subject Line, and/or include IS200STAOH2A in the Message, for additional information about ICC’s IS200STAOH2A. A ICC Business Development Leader will assist you with your IS200STAOH2A needs shortly!

Reman
GE - IS200STAOH2A

Purchasing a remanufactured GE IS200STAOH2A offers substantial savings over new/unused with the functionality and reliability to match. Our assurance in remanufactured products allows ICC to offer 24 Months Warranty.

Exchange
GE - IS200STAOH2A

Exchange is the combination of quick supply with applied discount against your old faulty card. Send us your old GE IS200STAOH2A and we will replace (exchange) with a remanufactured spare, supplied with 24 Months Warranty

Technical Specifications
GE - IS200STAOH2A

IS200STAOH2A is a Simplex Analog Output Terminal Board manufactured and designed by General Electric as part of the Mark VIe Series used in Distributed Control Systems. Compact analog output terminal boards are available, such as the Simplex Analog Output (STAO) terminal board, which is made for flat or DIN-rail mounting. Eight 0-20 mA analog outputs on STAO are powered by the PAOC I/O pack. Similar to the TBAO terminal board, the onboard circuitry and noise reduction are present. The board is equipped with high-density Euro-block style terminal blocks for connecting to the customers' devices. The board is identified to the I/O processor by an onboard ID chip for system diagnostics. The D-type connector is used to connect the I/O pack, which uses Ethernet to talk to the controller.

INSTALLATION:

The STAO and a plastic insulator are mounted in a panel or on a DIN-rail-mounted sheet metal carrier. The STAO plus insulator mount can also be attached to a sheet metal assembly that is bolted directly to a cabinet. Driven equipment can be placed up to 300 meters (984 feet) away from the turbine control cabinet and shouldn't have a resistance greater than 900. There are two varieties of Euro-block terminal blocks:

An unpluggable mount terminal block with 36 terminals is present on STAOH1.
A permanently installed terminal block with 36 terminals is present on STAOH2.
The eight analog outputs are attached directly to the terminal block. For the SCOM connection, there are two screws. Typically, shielded twisted pair (#18 AWG) wires are utilized. An external mounting bracket supplied by GE or the client is used by the I/O cable shield termination. The mounting holes E1 and E2 are for the chassis ground screw connection (SCOM). To save cabinet space, DIN-type terminal boards can be stacked vertically on the DIN rail.



STAO Wiring and Cabling


OPERATION:

Eight analog control current outputs are supported by STAO. The voltage drop across the current sense resistor in the local loop is detected for each output, and the signal is transmitted back to the I/O processor that regulates the current. Each output's surge is suppressed and high-frequency noise is reduced by filters close to the signal exit point. The D/A converter and drivers that produce the regulated currents are found in the I/O processor.



STAO Terminal Board

DIAGNOSTICS:

The output current is shown by the voltage drop across a series resistor on the board. A diagnostic alarm (fault) is generated by the I/O processor if either of the two outputs becomes unhealthy.
The I/O controller queries each ID device that each cable connector on the terminal board has to offer. The terminal board serial number, board type, revision number, and the placement of the JR, JS, and JT connectors are all encoded on a read-only chip known as the ID device.
A hardware incompatibility fault is produced when the I/O controller reads this chip and runs across a mismatch.

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