As with input modules, output modules rarely supply any power, but instead act as
switches. External power supplies are connected to the output card and the card will
switch the power on or off for each output. Typical output voltages are listed below, and
roughly ordered by popularity.
120 Vac
24 Vdc
12-48 Vac
12-48 Vdc
5Vdc (TTL)
230 Vac
These cards typically have 8 to 16 outputs of the same type and can be purchased
with different current ratings. A common choice when purchasing output cards is relays,
transistors or triacs. Relays are the most flexible output devices. They are capable of
switching both AC and DC outputs. But, they are slower (about 10ms switching is typical),
they are bulkier, they cost more, and they will wear out after millions of cycles. Relay
outputs are often called dry contacts. Transistors are limited to DC outputs, and Triacs are
limited to AC outputs. Transistor and triac outputs are called switched outputs.
- Dry contacts - a separate relay is dedicated to each output. This allows mixed
voltages (AC or DC and voltage levels up to the maximum), as well as isolated
outputs to protect other outputs and the PLC. Response times are often greater
than 10ms. This method is the least sensitive to voltage variations and spikes.
- Switched outputs - a voltage is supplied to the PLC card, and the card switches it
to different outputs using solid state circuitry (transistors, triacs, etc.) Triacs are
well suited to AC devices requiring less than 1A. Transistor outputs use NPN or
PNP transistors up to 1A typically. Their response time is well under 1ms.
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