Rockwell Automation 8520 9/Series CNC Integration Maintenance Manual Documentation Set User Manual

Page 240

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Section 4D

Power Distribution and Wiring Guidelines

4D-10

All components and modules must be correctly grounded to protect against

electrical shock hazards. Proper grounding also helps to reduce the effect

of electrical noise by isolating induced noise voltages to individual ground

wires and shunting them to ground.

There are two types of grounds used in electrical system design, chassis

and earth. Chassis ground is defined as the internal ground of a cabinet.

Earth ground is defined as the central ground for all electrical equipment

and ac power within any factory.

For the chassis ground use a conductor such as the control cabinet or the

cabinet’s grounding bus bar. To provide good conductivity when the

cabinet is used as the conductor, remove rust and any coating from the area

of the cabinet that will be a contact point for the ground cables. Each

component installed in the cabinet will have a separate grounding cable

connected to the conductor.

Each electrical cabinet requires two separate connections from the cabinet

to the earth ground:

from the chassis ground -- each component installed in a cabinet is
connected to the cabinet’s chassis ground. The cabinet chassis ground is

connected to the earth ground by a single grounding cable.

from the cabinet -- each cabinet is connected separately to the earth
ground.

ATTENTION: To guard against damage to the machine, do not

interconnect chassis ground wires between the components.

This would place ground wires in series and cause their noise

voltages to be additive. The resulting increased noise energy

can interfere with proper control and machine functions.

A general system grounding diagram, which shows both chassis ground

and earth ground, is shown in Figure 5A.21.

4D.3

Protective Grounding

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