Description
Engineered for high-integrity turbomachinery and rotational speed measurement applications, the Triconex 3002 serves as the dedicated physical interface for field-side pulse transmitters and speed sensors connecting to Tricon safety-instrumented systems. This passive external termination panel (ETP) routes critical pulse frequency signals from magnetic pickups, proximity probes, and turbine flowmeters directly to active Triplicated input modules, ensuring uninterrupted signal integrity and maximizing fault tolerance. The Triconex 3002 features industrial-grade screw terminals designed to withstand high-vibration environments, making it an essential component in critical overspeed protection and process monitoring architectures.
Features
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High-Integrity Signal Routing: Directly interfaces field pulse transmitters with Tricon 3511 and 3515 pulse input modules without signal degradation.
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Triplicated Architecture Support: Preserves the triple modular redundant (TMR) design integrity of the safety system down to the field connection level.
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Robust Vibration Resistance: Equipped with industrial screw-clamp terminals to prevent physical wire disconnection under high mechanical stress.
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Dedicated Shield Grounding: Features integrated bus bars for clean, centralized shield termination to eliminate high-frequency electromagnetic interference.
Applications
- Steam and gas turbine overspeed protection loops (API 670 compliant).
- Compressor surge control and shaft rotational speed monitoring.
- High-accuracy vortex and turbine flowmeter safety monitoring systems.
Technical Specifications
| Specification Parameter |
Value / Rating |
| Manufacturer |
Triconex (Schneider Electric) |
| Model Number |
3002 |
| Device Type |
Pulse Input Terminal Board (External Termination Panel) |
| Compatible Input Modules |
Tricon 3511 / 3515 Pulse Input Modules |
| Field Connection Type |
Screw terminal blocks |
| System Cable Interface |
Multi-pin high-density ribbon connector |
| Channel Support |
8-Channel isolated/non-isolated input configuration |
| Country of Origin |
United States |
| Shipping Weight (Calculated) |
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) |
| Package Dimensions (Calculated) |
35.0 cm x 25.0 cm x 12.0 cm |
Empirical Engineering Insights
Alternative Models & Compatibility
The Triconex 3002 is designed specifically for standard pulse signals and should not be used interchangeably with analog or digital input termination boards (such as the 3000 series voltage/current panels). Verify that your active chassis slot is populated with a 3511 or 3515 pulse input module, as mismatching the terminal board backplane connector can cause hardware diagnostic faults inside the TriStation 1131 software environment.
Application Pitfalls & Engineering Notes
Pulse sensors, particularly passive magnetic pickups (MPUs), generate low-voltage signals at low speeds. The Triconex 3002 relies on pristine field-side wiring practices to avoid signal attenuation. Ensure that signal lines are not routed parallel to high-power motor control center (MCC) feeds or variable frequency drive (VFD) output cables, which can introduce crosstalk and result in spurious overspeed trips.
Commissioning & Wiring Tips
Always terminate the field-side cable shield at the designated ground bar on the 3002 terminal board. The sensor end of the shield must be left floating (insulated) to prevent ground loops. During commissioning, use an oscilloscope at the terminal board test points to verify a clean, symmetric sinusoidal waveform from passive sensors, ensuring the peak-to-peak voltage exceeds the threshold configuration set in the controller logic.
Installation Guidelines
CRITICAL WARNING:
Before installing or servicing the Triconex 3002 terminal board, ensure that the safety system chassis is fully de-energized or that the respective loop has been placed in a secure manual bypass. Unintentional disruption of speed sensor loops can cause immediate trip actuation of critical rotating machinery.
1
Mount the Triconex 3002 terminal board securely onto the standard DIN rail or rear chassis panel inside the cabinet enclosure.
2
Connect the pre-fabricated system interface cable from the backplane connector on the 3002 to the corresponding slot on the Tricon main chassis containing the pulse input module.
3
Terminate individual field pulse sensor wires into the screw terminal blocks. Use a calibrated torque driver to tighten terminals to the manufacturer-specified rating of 0.5 Nm.
4
Verify shield-to-ground isolation using a megohmmeter (at low test voltage) to ensure no parallel ground paths have been established in the field wiring.