In industrial automation sites, human-machine interface (HMI) is the core bridge between operators and control systems. A stable, functionally clear, and easily integrated HMI often determines the debugging efficiency and operational reliability of the entire production line. The BKDR-16 model in the UniOP series, with its compact 5.6-inch monochrome LCD display, rich physical buttons, and multiple communication interfaces, occupies a place in multiple segmented industrial fields such as small complete sets of equipment, old production line renovation, and low-cost monitoring stations. Despite the comprehensive evolution of LCD display technology towards color and high resolution, the monochrome industrial grade HMI represented by BKDR-16 still retains unique value in strong light visibility, extreme temperature adaptability, and low-power scenarios. This article will deeply analyze the various parameters, functional logic, and typical applications of BKDR-16 from the perspective of engineering and technical personnel, and based on on-site experience, deduce its common failure modes and replacement upgrade paths, providing a practical technical reference for engineers who are currently using or planning to maintain the equipment.
Product positioning and overall architecture
BKDR-16 is a compact human-machine interface product in the UniOP family, with a clear design goal of providing complete process monitoring, alarm management, data recording, and network interaction capabilities with limited hardware resources. From the overall dimensions, the mechanical opening size of the equipment panel is approximately 195.00 mm × 147.00 mm (tolerance ± 0.50 mm), and the total size including the rear wiring terminals in the depth direction is controlled at around 205 mm. This external specification enables it to adapt to the installation windows of most standard industrial control cabinets, especially suitable for replacing old monochrome touch screens or text displays from brands such as Mitsubishi, Omron, or Delta.
In terms of power supply, BKDR-16 adopts the most mainstream 24V DC power supply in industrial sites, with a typical power consumption of less than 10W. It can be directly powered by the PLC's sensor power supply or independent switch power supply, without the need for additional 220V isolation transformers. This is extremely user-friendly for distributed I/O sites or mobile operation panels.
In terms of memory architecture, the device is equipped with a 512KB Flash EPROM onboard, of which 64KB is fixedly reserved for the communication protocol stack. The actual program storage space available to users is about 448KB, and it supports expansion up to 1MB. This capacity is sufficient to accommodate dozens of screens, thousands of alarm messages, and complex macro scripts in the era of text and graphics mixed interfaces. It should be noted that the program storage area and the recipe data area are independent of each other, and the recipe dedicated 16KB space uses non-volatile storage. Even if the main program is refreshed, the recipe parameters will not be lost - this feature is crucial in batch production equipment.
Display and Interaction: Advantages and Limitations of Physical Buttons
The BKDR-16 is equipped with a 5.6-inch monochrome LCD with a graphics resolution of 320 × 240 pixels. This resolution may seem low under current standards, but it is sufficient for displaying numbers, bar charts, trend curves, and status text in industrial settings. Monochrome display (usually yellow green background with black text or white background with gray scale) has an advantage that color screens cannot compare to: in strong sunlight or high brightness ambient light, the readability is much higher than that of ordinary TFT LCD. Many outdoor devices, such as hydraulic fracturing trucks, drilling rig control rooms, and port lifting equipment, still tend to choose monochrome or high brightness reflective screens, and BKDR-16 precisely meets such needs.
In terms of interaction, BKDR-16 does not use a touch screen, but provides a complete physical keyboard - a total of 37 keys, including 14 independent function keys and a complete numeric keypad. This design may seem "retro", but it actually has clear advantages in specific scenarios:
Clear operational feedback: The travel and tactile sensation of mechanical buttons can prevent accidental contact, especially suitable for situations where operators wear thick gloves (such as cold storage and casting workshops).
Function keys can be customized: 14 function keys can be assigned through engineering configuration software for screen jumping, bit setting, numerical input, or macro triggering, without relying on screen menu layer by layer switching.
High efficiency of numerical input: The independent numeric keyboard combined with the Shift key can quickly input set values, which is more in line with muscle memory operation logic than the virtual keyboard on the touch screen.