Schneider Electric PM870 Manual De Usuario

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© 2011 Schneider Electric. All Rights Reserved.
PowerLogic
TM
 Series 800 Power Meter
63230-500-225A2
Chapter 4—Metering Capabilities
3/2011
34
You can reset the minimum and peak values of the quantities in a generic demand profile 
by using one of two methods: 
Use PowerLogic software
or 
Use the command interface. 
Command 5115 resets the generic demand profile. See Appendix C—Using the 
Command Interface
 on page 83 for mo
re about the command interface.
Input Metering Demand
The power meter has five input pulse metering channels, but only one digital input. Digital 
inputs can be added by installing one or more option modules (PM8M22, PM8M26, or 
PM8M2222). The input pulse metering channels count pulses received from one or more 
digital inputs assigned to that channel. Each channel requires a consumption pulse weight, 
consumption scale factor, demand pulse weight, and demand scale factor. The 
consumption pulse weight is the number of watt-hours or kilowatt-hours per pulse. The 
consumption scale factor is a factor of 10 multiplier that determines the format of the value. 
For example, if each incoming pulse represents 125 Wh, and you want consumption data in 
watt-hours, the consumption pulse weight is 125 and the consumption scale factor is zero. 
The resulting calculation is 125 x 10
0
, which equals 125 watt-hours per pulse. If you want 
the consumption data in kilowatt-hours, the calculation is 125 x 10
-3
, which equals 0.125 
kilowatt-hours per pulse.Time must be taken into account for demand data; so you begin by 
calculating demand pulse weight using the following formula:
If each incoming pulse represents 125 Wh, using the formula above you get 450,000 watts. 
If you want demand data in watts, the demand pulse weight is 450 and the demand scale 
factor is three. The calculation is 450 x 10
3
, which equals 450,000 watts. If you want the 
demand data in kilowatts, the calculation is 450 x 10
0
, which equals 450 kilowatts.
NOTE: The power meter counts each input transition as a pulse. Therefore, an input 
transition of OFF-to-ON and ON-to-OFF will be counted as two pulses. For each channel, 
the power meter maintains the following information:
Total consumption
Last completed interval demand—calculated demand for the last completed interval.
Partial interval demand—demand calculation up to the present point during the interval.
Peak demand—highest demand value since the last reset of the input pulse demand. 
The date and time of the peak demand is also saved.
Minimum demand—lowest demand value since the last reset of the input pulse 
demand. The date and time of the minimum demand is also saved.
To use the channels feature, first use the display to set up the digital inputs (see “I/O 
(Input/Output) Setup” on page 18). 
Then using PowerLogic software, you must set the I/O 
operating mode to Normal and set up the channels. The demand method and interval that 
you select applies to all channels. 
watts 
watt-hours
pulse
---------------------------- 3600 seconds
hour
-------------------------------------
pulse
second
-------------------
=