jaykool said:
Should I be concerned about voltage drop for a 24V DC (4-20mA) circuit?
Distance between I/O cabinet and transmitter is approx. 1500 ft.
You could be. Not enough information.
Distance is not insurmountable. You're not stuck with 24V - no matter what they told you. If 24V is not enough 36V and 42V power supplies are available, and bigger wire is available
These circuits are a series loop. the voltage at the end of the loop really doesn't matter much - but there are some limits.
The receiver end is generally a 250 ohm resistor - develops 1V-5V.
Then there is the Vd of the interconnecting wire.
Next issue is the compliance of the transmitter. Consider the transmiter a current source. It is designed such that when the input parameter is 0% the output is 4ma. And when the input parameter is 100% the output is 20ma. The transmitter will drop whatever voltage across it that is needs to to limit the current to the value it is susposed to have. Compliance is a measure of how much voltage the transmiter can drop to hold the current. All can handle 24V, some quite a bit more.
Another issue is the minimum drop across the transmitter. Two wire transmitters use power from the current loop to run their electronics. These will have a minumum Vd - usually around 3V. Four wire transmitters have a separate pair to supply 24V to operate the transmitter electronics. On these the minimum drop is around 0.7V.
Get the specs for the receiver (probably 1V to 5V). Get the transmitter specs (compliance and minimum drop). Figure the wire Vd at 4ma and 20ma. See if the numbers add up the 24V. You are adding voltage drops around a loop and then seeing if the tramsmitter compliance is sufficient for the supply.
This is different than typical electrical work which is voltage source - not current source.
I read this over and it sounds overly complicated. Probably can slim it down with some more specific information on the application.
carl
carl