OkiePC
Lifetime Supporting Member
Does that mean they can be operated as remote i/o for an Ethernet/IP controller ?
Yes. See the video quickstart:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fcWbGf73ldc&feature=emb_title
Does that mean they can be operated as remote i/o for an Ethernet/IP controller ?
The best IMO is Murrelektronik. I think at one point I could buy a bus node for ~$300 with 8 inputs, and add 32 more for another $150.
They have both Cube20 (inside a panel) and Cube 67 (outside the panel) versions.
If you just need a few I/O, the Turck blocks are pretty decent
That Ethernet/IP busmodule from AD sure looks a lot like the similar type from Beckhoff:
https://www.automationdirect.com/ad...s_x_i-z-o/protos_x_i-z-o_bus_couplers/px-eip1
https://beckhoff.de/german/bus_terminal/bk9055.htm?id=201539111686240
Apart from that, any remote i/o that uses cage-clamp terminals get a from me.
Push-in terminals are becoming the new standard, and I just hate them :angr:
The AD C0 line is probably Koyo.It's a Koyo product. The same company that made the GE Series One and Series Five PLCs.
In my experience, procuring a 5-7 year old son is most definitely not cheap.Really the cheapest?
5-7 year old son at the other end of a walkie-talkie.
That's awesome, never knew Clicks could do that!
The AD PX line seems to me is rebranded Beckhoff.
I have a customer that was using a lot of this for the low price and started having a lot of problems (I'll have to ask again about specifics), they've since switched to the Bailiff io-link solution. They use a lot of analog inputs.
Yes. See the video quickstart:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fcWbGf73ldc&feature=emb_title
The AD C0 line is probably Koyo.
The AD PX line seems to me is rebranded Beckhoff.
This is my question as well
Hacker trying to sell a video game, huh?