"Hands-On" Understanding Motor Control Circuits

A 2-Day "Hands-On" course for those needing to understand, create, test and troubleshoot electrical ladder diagrams, schematics and one line diagrams in their plant or facility.

Length Of Course
2 Days

About This Class
In the field of equipment maintenance, installation or modification, the ability to read and understand schematics and drawings is an absolute must. Several types of drawings and diagrams will be examined during this course including Block, Pictorial, One-line, Wiring, Terminal, and Schematic. The differences between these drawings will be emphasized and the purpose and flow of each type will be clarified.

In order to learn the symbolic language, you must start at the beginning. In doing so, individual component symbols will be presented along with an explanation of their function and purpose in the circuit. In order to make it easier to relate the diagrams to the actual equipment, students will see pictorial examples or photos of the components along with the description.

Students will be provided with a Laptop Computer operating Visual Simulation Software. The software makes the creation, testing, and trouble-shooting of electrical ladder diagrams, schematics and one line diagrams fast and easy. The complete circuit can be tested from the three phase power components to the control circuit.

Who Should Attend
This course is designed for anyone who needs to understand electrical drawings and schematics for servicing and troubleshooting facility and industrial electrical systems. Attendees come from a wide variety of industries, skill-levels, company sizes, and backgrounds - as long as you work with electricity! This is an introductory class that assumes no prior knowledge of electrical drawings. It is basic enough that individuals with no electrical background can understand the subject matter. It is great for technicians and maintenance personnel, engineers, supervisors or anyone wishing to learn more about this subject.

What You Will Learn

REFERENCE MANUAL

Section 1: Introduction

Section 2: Basic Electrical Fundamentals

Section 3: Commercial and Industrial Facilities Plans and Specifications

Section 4: Industrial Control Circuit Schematics and Ladder Drawings

Section 5: Programmable Logic Controller Ladder Diagrams

APPENDIX

EXERCISES

K 01-05 Two Wire Control
K 01-14 Two Wire Control with Pilot Light
K 01-15 Two Wire Control with Two NO PBs in Parallel
K 01-16 Two Wire Control with Two NO PBs in Series
K 01-17 Two Wire Control with Two NC PBs in Series
K 01-18 Two Wire Control with Two NC PBs in Parallel
K 01-19 Two Wire Control Controlling Two Loads
K 03-01 Two Wire Control
K 03-03 Two Wire Control Sump Pump
K 03-03 Two Wire Control with HOA
K 03-07 Two Wire Control with HOA
K 04-03 Sump Pump Circuit with Overload Relays
K 05-01 Three Wire Control Start
K 05-03 Three Wire Control Start with Contact
K 05-07 Three Wire Control Start Stop
K 05-14 Three Wire Control Multiple Start Stop
K 06-01 Jog Inch (Run)
K 06-02 Jog Inch (Jog)
K 06-03 Jog Inch with 2 Pos Selector Switch
K 06-04 Jog Inch with 3 Pos Selector Switch
K 06-09 Self Interrupting Inching with Timer
K 06-10 Self Interrupting Inching with Cascaded Relays
K 07-06 Sequence Start and Stop (Common Control)
K 08-02 Time On-Delay Relay
K 08-05 Master Start-Stop Circuit
K 08-06 Master Start-Stop Circuit with Time Delay
K 08-08 Automatic Sequence Starting
K 08-09 Protect Against Loss of Oil Pressure
K 08-10 Protect Against Loss of Air Flow
K 08-11 Protect Against Loss of Air Flow (Belt Driven Blowers)
K 09-05 Basic Forward/Reverse Circuit with Mechanical Interlock
K 09-06 Basic Forward/Reverse Circuit with Auxiliary Contact Interlock
K 09-08 Basic Forward/Reverse Circuit with Pushbutton Interlock
K 09-10 Basic Forward/Reverse Circuit with End of Travel Stop
K 09-11 Up/Down Circuit with Interlock

Seminar Fee

Contact William J. Dumas & Associates

Home Up