In the field of industrial safety control, ABB Jokab Safety's Pluto series safety PLCs have become the core of many mechanical equipment safety systems due to their unique dynamic signal technology, modular design, and safety levels up to PL e/SIL 3. From the standalone S20/S46 to the A20/B16/B20/B46 models that support Pluto bus networks, Pluto greatly reduces wiring workload with its flexible I/O configuration and serial sensor capability. However, as equipment ages or systems upgrade, engineers often face challenges such as on-site fault diagnosis, unit replacement, and configuration migration. This article is based on official technical data and systematically elaborates on the hardware characteristics, dynamic/static signal wiring points, Pluto Manager programming skills, typical fault code interpretation, and complete replacement process of Pluto series controllers, helping maintenance personnel quickly recover and optimize safety systems.
Overview and Selection Points of Pluto Series Models
Pluto safety PLCs are divided into two categories: standalone communication type and Pluto bus type. The former is suitable for independent small security systems, while the latter can network up to 32 Pluto units to achieve distributed security control.
1.1 No bus model
Model I/O Total Safe Input IQ (Input/Non Safe Output) Analog Input Safe Relay Output Safe Transistor Output
S20 20 8 8 1 (I5, 0-27V) 2 (Q0,Q1) 2 (Q2,Q3)
S46 46 24 16 3 (I5, 0-27V) 4 (Q0,Q1,Q4,Q5) 2 (Q2,Q3)
1.2 Model with bus
Model I/O Total Safety Input IQ Analog Input Safety Relay Output Safety Transistor Output Current Monitoring
A20 20 8 1 2 2 2 channels (IQ16, IQ17)
B16 16 8 1 0 0 0 None
B20 20 8 1 2 2 None
B46 46 24 16 3 4 2 None
Key selection tips:
When networking or multi Pluto collaborative control is required, a bus model must be selected (the model suffix is not specially marked, but it needs to be confirmed that Pluto bus is supported).
If only current monitoring is required (such as silent lights), A20 is the only model that provides current monitoring (IQ16, IQ17, range 0-1.0 A ± 10%).
B16 has no secure output and only provides input and IQ, suitable for pure input monitoring scenarios.
All models of IQ terminals can be individually configured as safe inputs or non safe outputs (such as indicator lights, status signals), and can even be used as both inputs and outputs (such as reset buttons with lights), significantly saving I/O points.
Core Technology: Dynamic Signal and Series Sensor
Pluto's most distinctive technology is Dynamic Signal. Unlike traditional static 24V signals, dynamic signals are a square wave (alternating high and low, about 200 times/second) generated by Pluto and transmitted step by step through safety sensors. After passing through a properly functioning sensor, the signal is reversed once. When the signal returns to Pluto, the controller determines whether the line is short circuited, open circuited, or crossed by comparing the waveforms sent and received.
2.1 Dynamic Signal Types
Pluto can generate three independent dynamic pulses: A pulse, B pulse, and C pulse. Short circuits can be detected between different types of pulses. Each input terminal can be configured in Pluto Manager to receive the desired signal type (A/B/C and whether it is inverted).
Advantage:
A single channel can achieve PL e/Category 4 (traditional static signals require dual channels).
Up to 10 Eden non-contact sensors, SPOT light curtains, or Tina adapters can be connected in series to the same input terminal while maintaining the highest level of safety.
Greatly saves I/O points, for example, only 1 input is needed for 10 safety gates.
2.2 Static signals and OSSD
Static signal (+24V): suitable for traditional mechanical switches. To achieve Category 4, two inputs (dual channel) must be used.
OSSD signal: from devices with built-in fault monitoring such as light curtains. Pluto can receive OSSD output, but it should be noted that two OSSD signals cannot be connected to the IQ terminal at the same time, and should be connected to a dedicated I input.
2.3 Three state characteristics of IQ terminals
The IQ terminal is a major innovation of Pluto. Each IQ terminal can be independently configured in Pluto Manager as follows:
Secure input (dynamic or static)
Non safety output (+24V PNP, maximum 800 mA)
Simultaneous input and output: A typical application is a reset button (input) with an indicator light (output), occupying only one terminal.
Note: When IQ is used as a safe input, its characteristics are exactly the same as I input, and it supports dynamic signal concatenation.

Practical Hardware Installation and Wiring
3.1 Mechanical Installation
All Pluto units are installed on 35 mm DIN rails (compliant with IEC 60715).
Maintain a minimum gap of 5mm between units to ensure heat dissipation.
The terminal block can be plugged and unplugged, and the unit can be replaced without disconnecting the wires.
Environmental temperature: -10 ° C to+50 ° C for operation, -25 ° C to+55 ° C for storage and transportation.
3.2 Power Supply and Grounding