Hello all,
Sorry for being long-winded, but here goes:
I am an Electrical tech for an OEM of conveyor control systems. I mainly build control panels and wire industrial equipment. Allen Bradley/Rockwell is about 99% of what we use. I am currently taking the RSTrainer series of modules provided by my employer. I also have access to RSLogix 500, 5000 as well as Linx, Factory Talk View Studio Machine Edition, etc and I have several PLC set-ups at our shop to train on. And, hundreds of programs in our database to use as reference. I also work under three great Engineers who really know their stuff, all of whom want to see me get good at this stuff so I can take some of their service and commisioning workload.
What I am looking for is a great resource for learning Ladder logic programming. I need some good theory and fundamentals training. I currently have the SLC500 instruction set and another book that explains the instructions. I understand the basics...latching, flip-flops, simple circuits.
Hope I haven't been too long-winded here...
All help would be immensly appreciated.
Sorry for being long-winded, but here goes:
I am an Electrical tech for an OEM of conveyor control systems. I mainly build control panels and wire industrial equipment. Allen Bradley/Rockwell is about 99% of what we use. I am currently taking the RSTrainer series of modules provided by my employer. I also have access to RSLogix 500, 5000 as well as Linx, Factory Talk View Studio Machine Edition, etc and I have several PLC set-ups at our shop to train on. And, hundreds of programs in our database to use as reference. I also work under three great Engineers who really know their stuff, all of whom want to see me get good at this stuff so I can take some of their service and commisioning workload.
What I am looking for is a great resource for learning Ladder logic programming. I need some good theory and fundamentals training. I currently have the SLC500 instruction set and another book that explains the instructions. I understand the basics...latching, flip-flops, simple circuits.
Hope I haven't been too long-winded here...
All help would be immensly appreciated.