Overview and Selection Core Dimensions of AC 800M Series
ABB AC 800M is a modular controller family with rail mounting, widely used in process automation, hybrid applications, and safety related systems. Its core advantages lie in scalable processor performance, flexible communication interfaces, and support for high integrity (SIL3) security controllers. The correct selection should revolve around the following five dimensions: CPU computing power, memory capacity, redundancy support, I/O expansion capability, and communication protocol compatibility.
This article provides a systematic methodology for controller selection, redundant configuration, communication module troubleshooting, and shutdown module replacement based on official technical specifications and practical engineering experience. All data is sourced from the latest hardware manual to ensure complete correspondence with the on-site equipment.
Detailed comparison and selection suggestions for CPU modules
2.1 List of mainstream CPU models
The AC 800M includes a complete product line from economical to high-end redundant. The following key models are listed in ascending order of performance:
Model Clock Frequency RAM User Available RAM Redundancy Supports High Integrity (SIL3) Typical Application Scenarios
PM851A 24 MHz 8 MB 2.282 MB No No Small standalone device control
PM856A 24 MHz 8 MB 2.282 MB No No Small and Medium sized Logic Control
PM857 96 MHz 32 MB 22.184 MB is a safety related process (SIL3 required)
PM858 33 MHz 16 MB 7.147 MB Is it a medium redundant system
PM860A 48 MHz 8 MB 2.282 MB No No General Process Control
PM861A 48 MHz 16 MB 7.155 MB redundant system economic choice
PM862 67 MHz 32 MB 23.521 MB High Performance Non Safety Redundancy
PM863 96 MHz 32 MB 22.184 MB is a SIL3 secure application
PM864A 96 MHz 32 MB 23.522 MB High speed logic and data processing
PM865 96 MHz 32 MB 22.184 MB is a mixture of safety and process control
PM866A 133 MHz 64 MB 51.389 MB Is it high-end process automation
PM867 133 MHz 64 MB 46.559 MB is a high-performance security system
PM891 450 MHz 256 MB 208.985 MB Is it a large redundant control system with built-in advanced communication
2.2 Interpretation of Key Parameters for Selection
The available RAM directly affects the size of the application and the capacity of complex data structures such as arrays and PID loop tables. For example, PM857 provides 22.184 MB of user RAM, while PM891 has up to 208.985 MB, making it suitable for large-scale recipe management and historical data storage.
Boolean operation speed: PM851A requires 0.46 ms to perform 1000 Boolean operations, while PM891 only requires 0.043 ms, a difference of over 10 times. For high-speed logic (such as 1 ms cycle tasks), a CPU with a frequency of 96 MHz or higher must be selected.
Redundant switching time: Models that support redundancy (PM857/858/861A/862/863/864A/865/866A/867/891) have a switching time of ≤ 10 ms, meeting the interrupt time requirements of most continuous production processes.
High integrity controllers: PM857, PM863, PM865, PM867 have passed IEC 61508 SIL3 certification. Note that PM857 does not have Flash storage for applications and requires external backup; PM863/PM865/PM867 all come with Flash. If redundancy and security are required simultaneously, PM857, PM863, PM865, and PM867 can be selected.
2.3 Typical selection errors and corrections
Error 1: Choose PM860A (without redundancy support) in situations where redundancy is required.
Correction: Select PM858, PM862, or PM866A.
Error 2: The safety circuit uses a non safety grade CPU (such as PM862).
Correction: It is necessary to select a model with the "High Integrity Controller" logo and cooperate with the SM811/SM812 monitoring module.
Error 3: Ignoring application memory requirements, resulting in runtime memory overflow.
Correction: Estimate program code, DB block, and communication buffer size. PM851A/PM856A is only 2.3 MB available, suitable for simple logic; If it exceeds 10 MB, please select PM862 or above.
Detailed explanation of redundant system configuration and switching mechanism
3.1 Two levels of redundant support
AC 800M provides two dimensions of CPU redundancy and communication redundancy:
CPU redundancy: The primary and backup CPUs with the same status are synchronized through RCU Link cables (TB851/TB855/TB856). When there is a fault, the backup switching time is ≤ 10 ms.
CEX bus module redundancy: For example, CI854B (PROFIBUS DP-V1 main station) supports dual module redundancy, and the backup module seamlessly takes over when the main module fails.
3.2 CEX bus and Modulabus limitations for redundant systems
In redundant mode, the CEX bus can mount up to 12 communication modules, but only fiber I/O clusters are supported on the Modulabus and electrical I/O clusters are not allowed. Specifically:
Non redundant CPU: up to 1 electrical cluster+7 fiber optic clusters.
Redundant CPU: 0 electrical clusters+7 fiber clusters (applicable to PM857/PM858/PM861A/PM862/PM863/PM864A/PM865/PM866A/PM867/PM891).