Troubleshooting with a milliamp clamp meter, Troubleshooting manually – Baseline Systems BaseStation 1000 User Manual

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BaseStation 1000 Irrigation Controller Manual

Troubleshooting with a Milliamp Clamp Meter

1. Wire a solenoid in line with the red wire of the two-wire

path right after the controller as illustrated here.

2. Use the milliamp clamp meter to take a milliamps ac

reading on the red wire (two-wire) that is connected to

the controller. Write down this reading, which will be

referred to as the “over-current reading.”

3. Go to the first wire splice and use the milliamp clamp

meter to take a reading on all red wires (two-wire). As you

take the readings, look for a number that is close to the

over-current reading.

Note: The reading does not have to be identical.

4. Continue testing all red wires on the two-wire path,

looking for the over-current reading until you isolate a

wire segment or device that is generating that number.

5. Remove the suspected device from the two-wire path, and

then check the controller again.

6. Perform one of the following actions:

If the Over Current message persists, check the two-wire in that stretch for damage.

If the Over Current message goes away, remove the two-wire path and connect the

device directly to the controller. If the Over Current message returns, the device is faulty

and will need to be replaced.

Troubleshooting Manually

If you do not have a millamp clamp meter, you can manually break the two-wire connections in a

systematic manner to isolate a wire segment or device that is generating the Over Current

message.

1. Determine the approximate halfway point of the two-wire path, and then break the

connection at that valve box.

2. Check the controller again. Perform one of the following actions:

If the Over Current message persists, the problem is in the half of the two-wire that is

still connected to the controller. Find the halfway point of that segment and start at step

1 again.

If the Over Current message goes away, the problem is in the disconnected half of the

two-wire path. Reconnect the two-wire path, and then disconnect at the halfway point

of the problem section. Start at step 1 again.

3. When you have isolated the device or the stretch of two-wire where the problem seems to be

originating, remove the two-wire path and connect the device directly to the controller. If the

Over Current message returns, the device is faulty and will need to be replaced.

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