Keterangan
Bently Nevada 135031-01 Rack Interface I/O Module
Configured for signal bridging and control system interfacing in the 3500 Machinery Protection System, the Bently Nevada 135031-01 (135031-01 Rack Interface I/O Module) provides direct physical/electrical execution of analog output forwarding, discrete alarm relay signaling, and communication routing between internal monitor modules and external PLC or DCS networks.
Hardware Specifications
| Parameter |
Specification |
| Model |
135031-01 |
| Brand |
Bently Nevada |
| Weight |
0.45 kg |
| Dimensions |
241.3 x 24.4 x 99.1 mm |
| Operating Temp |
-30 deg C to +65 deg C |
| Storage Temperature |
-40 deg C to +85 deg C |
| Power Consumption |
Derived from 3500 rack backplane |
| Mounting |
Rack-mounted, slot-specific |
| Inputs/Outputs |
Analog outputs (4-20 mA typical), discrete alarm outputs |
| Communication Protocols |
Ethernet, serial, Modbus, Profibus, OPC |
| Connections |
Screw terminals / D-sub connectors |
| Indicators |
LED status and communication activity |
| Configuration |
System 1 / 3500 configuration software |
Bently Nevada Backplane Communication and I/O Routing Behavior
The 135031-01 module operates as a backplane-linked interface node within the 3500 architecture, forwarding conditioned measurement data from monitoring modules to external automation systems. Data routing is executed through deterministic backplane bus transactions, where analog and discrete signals are mapped into communication frames such as Modbus or OPC endpoints.
Channel-level alarm states are translated into relay or digital output structures without additional signal conditioning. Communication timing is governed by rack-level synchronization, ensuring alignment between vibration or temperature monitor updates and external PLC/DCS polling cycles. LED indicators reflect backplane transaction status and communication handshake integrity.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q: Does the 135031-01 perform signal measurement or only interfacing?
A: It does not perform primary measurement. It functions as an interface module for forwarding processed signals and alarm states from 3500 monitor modules.
Q: What happens if backplane communication is interrupted?
A: Output states remain in last valid condition or configured fail-state behavior depending on system-level 3500 configuration.
Q: Can the module operate independently without a 3500 rack?
A: No. Power, communication, and signal routing are derived entirely from the 3500 rack backplane architecture.
Field Installation Guidelines
The module must be inserted into a compatible 3500 rack slot with full backplane engagement confirmed before system energization. Improper seating can result in loss of communication with upstream monitoring modules.
Signal wiring at screw terminals or D-sub interfaces must be separated from high-voltage conductors to prevent induced noise on analog output lines. Shielded cabling is required for communication links using Modbus, Profibus, or Ethernet.
All shield terminations should be referenced to a single-point ground within the cabinet to avoid ground loop formation across communication and analog output circuits.