ENGLISH –
53
EN
2.1 LIST OF CONSTITUENT PARTS
“
Figure
” shows the main parts making up the
M/L-BAR
.
C
E
A
B
B
A
F
OGI
Bluebus
Stop
SbS
Open
Close
HPSbS
Flash
Light
Loop1
Master/Slave
Loop2
D
1
A
Boom support
B
Gearmotor containment box
C
Cover
D
Electronic control and command unit
E
Boom
F
Locking/unlocking key
INSTALLATION
3
3
INSTALLATION
3.1 PRE-INSTALLATION CHECKS
a
The installation must be carried out by qualified
personnel in compliance with the current legislation,
standards and regulations, and with the instructions
provided in this manual.
Before proceeding with the product’s installation, it is necessary
to:
–
check the integrity of the supply
–
check that all the materials are in good working order and
suited to the intended use
–
check whether it is possible to observe the operating limits
specified in the paragraph “
“
–
check that the installation location is compatible with the
overall clearance of the product (see “
Figure
“)
–
check that the surface chosen for installing the boom gate is
solid and can ensure stable anchorage
–
make sure that the installation area is not subject to flooding; if
necessary, the product must be installed appropriately raised
above ground level
–
check that the space surrounding the boom gate allows for
executing the manual manoeuvres easily and safely
–
check that there are no obstacles along the boom’s path
capable of hampering the opening and closing manoeuvres
–
check that each device to be installed lies in a position that is
protected against the risk of accidental impact.
–
verify that the mounting positions of the various devices are
protected against impacts and that the mounting surfaces are
sufficiently sturdy
–
prevent any parts of the automation from being immersed in
water or other liquids
–
keep the product away from heat sources and open flames and
acid, saline or potentially explosive atmospheres; these may
damage the product and cause malfunctions or dangerous
situations
–
connect the control unit to an electricity supply line equipped
with a safety earthing system
3.2 PRODUCT USAGE LIMITS
Before proceeding with the product’s installation, it is necessary
to:
–
check that all the values appearing in the “
” chapter are compatible with the intended
use
–
check that the estimated durability (refer to the paragraph “
”) is compatible with the intended use
–
check that all limitations, conditions and warnings appearing
in this manual can be fully observed.
3.2.1 Product durability
The product’s durability is its average economic life value and is
strongly influenced by the degree of severity of the manoeuvres:
in other words, the sum of all factors that contribute to product
wear.
To estimate the durability of your automated device, proceed
as follows:
1.
add the values of the items in “
” relative to the
system’s conditions
2.
in the graph shown in “
Figure
above, trace a vertical line until it intersects the curve;
from this point trace a horizontal line until it intersects the
line of the “manoeuvre cycles”. The value obtained is the
estimated lifetime of your product.
The durability values shown in the graph can only be obtained
if the maintenance schedule is strictly observed – see the “
” chapter. The durability is estimated
on the basis of the design calculations and the results of tests
effected on prototypes. Being an estimate, therefore, it offers no
explicit guarantee of the product’s actual useful life.
Example of durability calculation: M5BAR with mobile
support, speed level 3
” shows the “severity indices” for this type of installation:
10% (“Mobile support”), 10% (“speed level 3”).
These indicators must be added together to obtain the overall
severity index, which in this case is 20%. With the value
calculated (20%), identify along the graph’s horizontal axis
(“severity index”) the value corresponding to the number of
“manoeuvre cycles” that the product can perform throughout its
lifetime = roughly 550.000 cycles.
Summary of Contents for L9BAR
Page 46: ...46 ITALIANO IT NOTE...
Page 95: ...ENGLISH 95 EN NOTES...
Page 144: ...144 FRAN AIS FR NOTES...
Page 193: ...ESPA OL 193 ES NOTAS...
Page 242: ...242 DEUTSCH DE ANMERKUNGEN...
Page 291: ...NEDERLANDS 291 NL OPMERKINGEN...
Page 340: ...340 POLSKI PL UWAGI...
Page 353: ...353 RU 3 7 a 1 15 2 16 3 4 4 5 17 1 0 15 0 2 3 0 25 0 8 2 0 9 4 12 400 1000 12 2 3 A m A B 18...
Page 354: ...354 RU 4 5 2 6 B 7 8 8 17 3 8 1 A A 19 2 B 3 B 20 m 4 C 6 C 21 5 D M BAR L BAR D D 22...
Page 355: ...355 RU 6 E E E 23 7 8 F G 1 F F F G G F F 24 9 H 10 I H I 25 11 J 12 6 J 26 l...
Page 357: ...357 RU 4 20 70 5 3 11 1 A 180 A A 30 2 1 A 2 1 A 180 2 U B 3 C A B C 31 4 5 U 6 A 7...
Page 358: ...358 RU 4 4 4 1 f a 1 A A 32 2 3 3 4 L N 33 5 34...
Page 363: ...363 RU 7 5 30 TX RX 41 8 20 50 9 EN 12445 10 200 20 1 11 6 2 a a a 1 2 42 42 3 4 5 6 l Nice...
Page 371: ...371 RU 1 1 24 10 2 2 24 10 3 3 24 10 4 4 24 10 24 10 OU4 xba7 24 0 5 0 5 Ogi OU4 xba8 2 1 3 2...
Page 384: ...384 RU 9 9 1 2 6 A A 57 3 4 B B 58 5 C STOP C C 59 6 7 a 60 8 LIGHT m LIGHT LIGHT 61...
Page 385: ...385 RU 9 62 10 6 63 9 10 XBA7 XBA8 Oview...
Page 386: ...386 RU 10 10 M L BAR a 1 6 20 000 2 3 4 5 11 11 l a l a...
Page 389: ...389 RU...
Page 390: ...390 RU a a a l 1 2 3 3 2 m m l 1...
Page 391: ...391 RU 1 A 180 A A 64 2 1 A 2 3 4 U 5 A 6...
Page 393: ...393 RU 22 ___ ___...
Page 394: ...394...
Page 395: ...395...