The maintenance engineer should also be capable of making an (original) backup of the program and be able to load it into the PLC. To make a backup of the changes made to the program.Programming a counter and time measurement is desirable. To make links or to develop connections that changes the program conditions.The maintenance engineer must be able to read the documentation, understand the structure of the PLC and be aware of the most commonly used PLC instructions.To make the internal I/O status of the signal visible: – to call the ‘suspected’ section in the program – to make timer and counter files visible.
These faults can be investigated via the programming terminal and the signal status can be presented dynamically. Problems are most likely to occur with the installation itself and this is reflected in the PLC by for instance a defective sensor, a badly working cylinder etc. The maintenance engineers should be capable of making small changes to the program. Programming and documenting the program is of less importance. With regard to PLC’s and programming software, the maintenance engineer needs to be able to access specific parts of the program and to examine the I/O status. One needs to have sufficient knowledge of the equipment, coupled with knowledge of the installation to be able to diagnose the problem and then solve the problem. This course recognises that maintenance personnel cannot build up a profound technical knowledge of all the equipment to be maintained. By using these learning media, you increase your personal learning success in the attendance course.Global Contents Maintenance personnel are often confronted with equipment from several manufacturers. For an optimized postprocessing of the attendance course you get the Web-based training course (WBTs) "SIMATIC Safety Integrated".
diagnosing and troubleshooting of safety-related programs.programming of safety-related programs in the languages F-FBD and F-LAD.starting up failsafe CPUs of the SIMATIC PLC.
After attending the course, you can do the following:.
You will put your theoretical knowledge to use with the STEP 7 Safety Advanced software in practical exercises The Siemens S7 Controller Level 1 training course has been designed to familiarise Electricians, Technicians and Maintenance Engineers with little or no. In this course, you will learn about configuring, programming, starting up, diagnosing and troubleshooting of the failsafe CPUs of the SIMATIC S7 Safety PLC (no H systems) and the failsafe, distributed ET200 systems. The Totally Integrated Automation Portal (TIA Portal) forms the work environment for integrated engineering with SIMATIC STEP 7 and SIMATIC WinCC.