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Using Jumpers

Jumpers are used to connect the terminals on a terminal strip with one another. The manufacturers of terminals offer numerous options for jumping terminals. Terminals that are a long way apart are normally connected with wire. In this case wire jumpers are used. For terminals that are right next to each other you can use screwable metal jumpers that allow you to connect multiple neighboring terminals with each other in order to distribute a certain potential to multiple connection points. These jumpers are designated as saddle jumpers. Saddle jumper-compatible terminals typically have a duct in the middle, which receives the metal jumper. Insertable jumpers can be used to connect neighboring or adjacent terminals together. Insertable jumpers are usually crowned connection elements which are attached to the terminal connection points. Saddle and insertable jumpers are normally used to connect immediately adjacent terminals, but they can also jump over a small number of terminals.
Switchable jumpers (switching jumpers) and isolating terminals are frequently used in energy-supply engineering.

Jumper types and jumper creation in EPLAN

In EPLAN, jumpers are connections with special properties. There are different types of jumpers:

Specify the jumper type in the connection properties using the function definition for the connection. This has priority over the jumper settings that you can specify on the terminal. If you connect two neighboring terminals of a terminal strip in the schematic with each other, "saddle jumper" is the default connection definition (provided that the terminals are saddle jumper enabled and are not PE / PEN terminals). If the connection is between two terminals of the same strip that are not neighboring, a "wire jumper" is the default connection definition.

At the terminals themselves itself you have the option of influencing the saddle jumper using the Saddle jumper field in the Properties <...> dialog. Here you specify whether a saddle jumper should be formed automatically or whether no saddle jumper should be formed. Default is "automatic" if you wish to add a terminal to the schematic.

Note:

Whether a terminal has a saddle jumper option can be seen in the Connection point logic dialog. In this case, the terminal has additional function connection points with the connection point type "Saddle jumper". (This is determined in the function definition.) The number of possible saddle jumpers is specified in the line Number of saddle jumpers.
In the Edit terminal strip dialog you can also recognize the saddle jumper option. A graphic (small dot) indicates whether the terminal disposes of at least one external / internal saddle jumper connection point in the columns Saddle jumpers (external) and Saddle jumpers (internal) .

Automatic saddle jumpers

The "Automatic" setting for saddle jumpers makes EPLAN automatically connect directly neighboring terminals in a terminal strip with a saddle jumper. The precondition is that the terminals are saddle jumper enabled and are not PE / PEN terminals. For automatic saddle jumpers you can also specify whether the selected terminal should be the jumper start or end.

Manual saddle jumpers

Manual saddle jumpers can also be generated between non-neighboring terminals. Connections do not need to exist for manual saddle jumpers. This allows you to create saddle jumpers even when there are terminals between the terminals you are connecting that should not be connected.

The saddle jumpers can be generated separately for internal and external saddle jumper connection points. To this purpose the Edit terminal strip dialog contains the buttons (Generate manual saddle jumper (external)) and (Generate manual saddle jumper (internal)).

The settings for a manual saddle jumper are stored at that terminal that represents the jumper start. To this purpose the terminals dispose of the properties Manual saddle jumpers (internal) (ID 20350) and Manual saddle jumpers (external) (ID 20351). The "jumper crest" is defined in these properties. To this purpose the increment to the next jumpered terminals is specified as well as the increment to the associated level starting from the jumper start.

The fact that manual saddle jumpers are defined at the terminal causes the jumpers to behave device-oriented. The jumper length is specified directly suitable to the jumper part at the terminal. The editing of other terminals of the terminal strip does not change the jumper length. Through the insertion of terminals between two manually jumpered terminals a different target is assigned to the saddle jumper.

If no jumper is found for the manual saddle jumper, this is displayed in the dialog Edit terminal strip as defective. The jumper has an open jumper end there. You can then correct or delete the jumper.

Note:

Automatic and manual saddle jumpers are differentiated in the dialog Edit terminal strip by the color of the graphic in the columns for the display of saddle jumpers (red = automatic, black = manual).

Through the new user setting Delete manual saddle jumpers during copying you now specify that the jumper information is to be deleted during the copying and pasting of terminals in the graphical editor.

Switching jumpers

A switching jumper connects one terminal with the subsequent terminal in a switchable manner. Switching jumpers have two switching states ("Open" or "Closed"), and are defined separately for the internal and external sides of the terminal. To create switching jumpers, the saddle jumper connection points are used (where available); otherwise, the terminal connection points. For external switching jumpers, only the external saddle jumper / terminal connection points are used; for internal switching jumpers, only the internal ones.

The "Closed" setting also affects the logic (connections, potentials, etc.). If this setting has been selected for a terminal, a switching jumper connection to the next terminal will be generated. The "Open" setting does not affect the logic; it only serves to recognize the switching state.

Isolating terminals

Isolating terminals connect or separate the external and internal sides of a terminal. The state of an isolating terminal in EPLAN is defined by the properties Switching lock (ID 20293) and Terminal opened (ID 20232). Switching states in the schematic can be displayed either directly via these properties, or via the block properties.

Rules for automatic jumper creation

Tip:

You can change the properties of a graphically represented connection through a connection definition point and for example change a wire jumper into an insertable jumper.

See also