Setting up the controller as a safety slave, Create safety slave i/o data – Rockwell Automation 1752-L24BBBE SmartGuard 600 Controllers User Manual User Manual

Page 87

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Rockwell Automation Publication 1752-UM001E-EN-P - June 2014

87

Configure Your Controller for DeviceNet Communication

Chapter 7

Setting Up the Controller as a
Safety Slave

As a safety slave, the controller can perform safety I/O communication with a
maximum of 4 connections, by using up to 16 bytes per connection. These
connections can be either single-cast or multi-cast. However, for 1 multicast
connection, the total number of masters that can be communicated with is 15.

For the SmartGuard controller to perform safety I/O communication as a safety
slave, safety slave I/O data must be created and safety I/O connections must be
configured in the safety master.

Figure 19 - SmartGuard Controller as Safety Slave and Safety Originator

When the controller operates as a safety slave, you can configure the safety slave
assemblies to transfer local I/O data (monitor data), controller and I/O status
data, and distributed I/O data to a safety master. The safety master can also write
safety data to the slave SmartGuard controller, which it can use in its application
program.

When status data is set, the status is allocated at the beginning of the remote I/O
area, with status data preceding local I/O data. User-registered I/O tags follow.
Status areas that are not set are not reserved. All valid data is allocated with no
unassigned areas.

Create Safety Slave I/O Data

Follow these steps to create a safety slave assembly.

1.

In RSNetWorx for DeviceNet software, right-click the SmartGuard
controller that will act as the safety slave and choose Properties.

GuardLogix System

Safety PLC
Safety Originator

SmartGuard Controller

Safety Slave
Safety Originator

Safety Communication

Safety Communication

CIP Safety I/O Modules

Safety

Control

System

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