kwired
Electron manager
- Location
- NE Nebraska
- Occupation
- EC
Probably is better as a general rule as a controller sending current signal is maintaining a specific current for whatever conditions it is responding to to so that whatever it is interfacing with sees what was intended. I would guess there is still some maximum as to how far this will work, though it may be more dependent on individual devices capabilities more so than a general rule across all 4-20 mA signals. Increased conductor size you would think would also work as compensation if there is issues with this.I always thought 4-20ma was best in long run scenarios due to the fact voltage drop is not that big of deal and can be overcame easily and loop current change due to distance/resistance can be fixed with programming to an extent?
A device that is outputting say a 0-10 volt signal will put out it's signal, but the longer the run is the more risk there is for some voltage drop that will give undesired input to the receiving device, to compensate the sending device would need to know what the circuit resistance is and have an ability to account for that. Three wire RTD temperature probes do this, the third wire is parallel to one of the other two. The measuring device measures the resistance of those parallel conductors and uses it to compensate the reading it receives across the RTD and therefore there is no manual calibration necessary for varying cable lengths or for differences in ambient temperature of the cable.
