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Industrial radio remote control systems FLEX4EX /4ES Instruction Manual...
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It is the responsibility of the owners, users and operators of the ARC Products to know, understand and follow all of these requirements. It is the responsibility of the employer to make its employees aware of all of the above listed requirements and to make certain that all operators are properly trained.
Table of Contents Page Introduction Radio Controlled Safety 2.1. CRITICAL INSTALLATION CONSIDERATIONS 2.2. GENERAL 2.3. PERSONS AUTHORIZED TO OPERATE RADIO CONTROLLED CRANES 2.4. SAFETY INFORMATION AND RECOMMENDED TRAINING FOR RADIO CONTROLLED EQUIPMENT OPERATORS 2.5. TRANSMITTER UNIT 2.6. PRE-OPERATION TEST 2.7. BATTERIES General System Information 3.1.
1. Introduction The Flex ES/EX radio remote control systems are designed for control of industrial equipment and machinery such as overhead traveling cranes, jib cranes, gantry cranes, tower cranes, electric hoists, winches, monorails, conveyor belts, mining equipment, and all other material handling equipment where wireless control is preferred.
2. Radio Controlled Safety WARNINGS and CAUTIONS Throughout this document WARNING and CAUTION statements have been deliberately placed to highlight items critical to the protection of personnel and equipment. WARNING – A warning highlights an essential operating or maintenance procedure, practice, etc. which if not strictly observed, could result in injury or death of personnel, or long term physical hazards.
2.1. CRITICAL INSTALLATION CONSIDERATIONS WARNING PRIOR TO INSTALLATION AND OPERATION OF THIS EQUIPMENT, READ AND DEVELOP AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE CONTENTS OF THIS MANUAL AND THE OPERATION MANUAL OF THE EQUIPMENT OR DEVICE TO WHICH THIS EQUIPMENT WILL BE INTERFACED. FAILURE TO FOLLOW THIS WARNING COULD RESULT IN SERIOUS INJURY OR DEATH AND DAMAGE TO EQUIPMENT.
2.4. SAFETY INFORMATION AND RECOMMENDED TRAINING FOR RADIO CONTROLLED EQUIPMENT OPERATORS Anyone being trained to operate radio controlled equipment should possess as a minimum the following knowledge and skills before using the radio controlled equipment. The operator should: x have knowledge of hazards pertaining to equipment operation x have knowledge of safety rules for radio controlled equipment x have the ability to judge distance of moving objects x know how to properly test prior to operation...
operate any damaged or malfunctioning crane, hoist, lifting device or other material handling equipment change any settings or controls without authorization and proper training remove or obscure any warning or safety labels or tags leave any load unattended while lifted leave power on the radio controlled equipment when the equipment is not in operation operate any material handling equipment using a damaged controller because the unit may be unsafe operate manual motions with other than manual power...
3. General System Information 3.1. Transmitter 3.1.1. External Illustration STOP Button Pushbutton 4 (PB4) Power Key Switch Battery Cover Screw Status LED Indicator System Information Pushbutton 1 (PB1) Lanyard and Waist Belt Pushbutton 2 (PB2) Attachment Slot Pushbutton 3 (PB3) Flex 4ES/EX Instruction Manual September 2016 Page 9 of 37...
3.2. Receiver 3.2.1. External Illustration External Antenna Port (optional) Remote Pairing Button COM LED Indicator System Information Status LED Indicator Cord Grip Power LED Indicator Mounting Bracket Output Relay LED Indicators Mounting Bracket Release Infrared Sensors Flex 4ES/EX Instruction Manual September 2016 Page 10 of 37...
4. Function Settings 4.1. Transmitter 4.1.1. Transmitter Firmware Version 1) Rotate the power switch key to OFF ( 0 ) position. 2) With the STOP button elevated, press and hold PB1 and PB3 at the same time. 3) Rotate the power switch key to ON ( I ) position. 4) Let go PB1 and PB3 at the same time.
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B. Assigned Channel Scheme (preset system channel) Both transmitter and receiver is assigned with a matching preset channel (channel 01~). Pitch & Catch, t-type, and multi-receiver configurations must set to assigned channel scheme. 1) Rotate the power switch key to OFF ( 0 ) position. 2) With the STOP button elevated, press and hold PB1 and PB2 at the same time.
4.1.3. Remote Pairing A. Transmitter-to-Transmitter Pairing: 1) Rotate the power switch key to OFF ( 0 ) position. 2) With the STOP button elevated, press and hold PB1 and PB3 at the same time. 3) Rotate the power switch key to ON ( I ) position. 4) Let go PB1 and PB3 at the same time (entered Remote Pairing mode).
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Service Information Your New Radio Remote Control System Thank you for your purchase of ARC Flex ES/EX radio remote control system. Without a doubt, our Flex ES/EX system is the ultimate solution for providing precise, undeterred, and safe control of your material.
4.1.4. Transmitter Start Function Settings When transmitter goes into sleep mode the system is temporarily deactivated (MAIN relays opened). Execute the START command or press any pushbutton to wake up the system (MAIN relays closed). Dipswitch Function Settings START xxxxxxxxx0 Reactivation Any Button xxxxxxxxx1...
IR programmer unit, such as the system serial number, frequency range, relay output status feedback, new and updated functions, and many others. Please contact ARC representative for more details. 4.1.7. Pushbutton Function Settings 1) Rotate the power switch key to OFF ( 0 ) position..
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4.1.7.2. A/B Pushbutton Select with LED Indication – Standard Right/ Left Pushbutton Configuration There are 4 different types of A/B selector sequence available. Choose one that is most suitable for your application. Refer to section 5.1 output relay connections. Type-A selector sequence : A Type-B selector sequence : Off Type-C selector sequence : A Type-D selector sequence : Off...
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4.1.7.3. Toggled Pushbutton with LED Indication – Inline Top/Bottom Pushbutton Configuration Set pushbutton toggled function (latching output relay) with LED indications. LED 1 ~ 4 shown inside the shaded box illustrates which LED on the transmitter lights up when the designated pushbutton is pressed.
Please contact ARC representative for more details. 4.1.10. Infrared Function Settings The transmitter is embedded with infrared sensors for infrared start function. These settings require using the infrared IR programmer unit. Please contact ARC representative for more details. 4.1.11. Zero-G Sensor Settings The transmitter is embedded with a Zero-G sensor to guard against any unintended control of the crane or equipment when transmitter is thrown or dropped.
Function output relays (K25, K26 or K30). This horn output setting requires the infrared IR programmer unit. Please contact ARC representative for more details. 4.2. Receiver 4.2.1. Receiver Channel Settings Set the receiver channel by configuring the channel dipswitch located on the decoder board, only the first 6 dip positions are used for channel programming.
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4.2.2.2. Output Relay Actions at 2 Speed (Flex 4EX only) 3 output relays configuration with Closed/Closed contact at 2 speed F1 (or R1) output relay closed at 1 speed and F1 + F/R2 (or R1 + F/R2) output relays closed at 2 speed.
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There are other types of auxiliary functions made available for K25, K26 and K30 Function output relays (refer to section 4.2.7). Please contact ARC representative if your application requires other types of auxiliary function connected to these Function output relays.
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“11” scans 4 channels (channel X… channel X+3)** 1 2 3 * Channel X channel set on the Channel dipswitch. ** Please contact ARC representative if your application requires scanning more than 4 channels. Flex 4ES/EX Instruction Manual September 2016...
Example: If the first 6 dipswitch positions are set to channel 01 (000001), when set to 2-channel scanning (type-2 above) the receiver will only scan channel 01 and 02. 4.2.3. Dipswitch Settings 4.2.3.1. Interlocked Pushbutton Pair Interlocked means any pushbutton pair can not be pressed simultaneously as it will cancel each other out.
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4.2.3.2. None-Interlocked Pushbutton Pair Non-interlocked setting allows the pushbutton pair be pressed simultaneously. It usually applies to equipment’s auxiliary functions such as lights, horn or buzzer. Each dipswitch on the decoder board corresponds to a pushbutton pair. Only the first 7 dipswitch positions are used (counting from left to right), the 8 dipswitch position (far right) is not used.
4.2.4. Jumper Settings Jumper setting applies to functions such as the standard or reversed logic A/B selector sequence, cable-free configurations, transmitter inline pushbutton configurations, firmware version, system testing and remote pairing methods. Jumper Settings Function Standard A/B selector sequence - Output relay A activated at A position, output relay B activated at B position, (Opened) both relays activated at A+B position.
4.2.7. Other Function Output Relays Settings Listed below are other types of functions that can be outputted through the three Function output relays (K25, K26 and K30) via the infrared IR programmer unit. Please contact ARC representative for more details.
5. Receiver Installation 5.1. Output Relay Contact Diagrams Flex 4ES (single speed model) Flex 4EX (dual speed model) * For 9~36VDC power supply, wire #1 corresponds to the negative charge (-) and wire #3 corresponds to the positive charge (+), wire #2 is GROUND. * If PB3 (or PB4) is set to A/B pushbutton select function, connect output A to K5 (or K6) and output B to K7 (or K8).
5.2. Pre-installation Precautions 1. Make sure the transmitter and receiver are with identical serial number and channel. 2. Make sure the receiver is not set to the same channel as any other systems in use in the surrounding area. 3. Make sure the crane or equipment is working properly prior to installation. 4.
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1. For best reception the location of the receiver should be visible to the operator at all time. 2. The location selected should not be exposed to high levels of electric noise. Mounting the receiver next to an unshielded 300 mm variable frequency drive may cause radio interference.
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Install Mounting Bracket Type 1 Mounting Bracket Type 2 Remove Mounting Bracket Type 1 Mounting Bracket Type 2 Flex 4ES/EX Instruction Manual September 2016 Page 31 of 37...
6. Operating Procedures 6.1. General Operation Reset the STOP button located on the top left hand corner of the transmitter by rotating it clockwise or counter clockwise, the button will pop up. Turn on the transmitter power by inserting the power switch key and rotate to ON ( I ) position. After turning on the transmitter power, check the Status LED on the transmitter for any sign of system irregularities (refer to section 6.6.1 Transmitter Status Indications).
After 5 or 30 minutes of inactivity (pushbutton not pressed) the receiver MAIN relays are temporarily disconnected (refer to section 4.1.5 Inactivity Timer Settings). The Status LED blinks 3 reds and then shuts off. Press any pushbutton or execute the START command to resume operation (refer to section 4.1.4 Start Function Settings).
6.5. Battery Charging The transmitter is designed to accept any off-the-shelf Ni-MH rechargeable batteries. When charging both transmitter and individual batteries at the same time the priority always goes to the transmitter charging. The individual battery charging begins only after the transmitter charging is completed.
6.6. System Status Light Indications 6.6.1. Transmitter Status Indications Type Display Type Indication Voltage below 1.8V at initial power on or Constant red during operation Voltage below 1.75V during operation 3 red blinks and then off (receiver MAIN relays shut off) Voltage below 1.85V during operation 1 red blink followed by a 2-second pause...
6.6.2. Receiver Status Indications Type Display Type (Green & Red) Indication Fast green blinks Decoding in process Slow green blinks Decoding on standby 2 red blinks Receiver MAIN relays jammed or defective 3 red blinks Decoding processors defective 4 red blinks Receiving RF board defective Fast red blinks Incorrect transmitter serial number...
7. General Specifications Frequency Range 433MHz ~ 440MHz channels Number of Channels Channel Spacing 50 KHz Modulation Digital Frequency Modulation based on Manchester Code, 20bit address, 32bit CRC and Hamming Code. Encoder & Decoder Microprocessor-controlled Transmitting Range 100 Meters (300 feet) Hamming Distance Frequency Control Synthesized PLL...
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