Manual
3
EMC INSTALLATION GUIDELINES
Although Red Lion Controls Products are designed with a high degree of 
immunity to Electromagnetic Interference (EMI), proper installation and wiring 
methods must be followed to ensure compatibility in each application. The type 
of the electrical noise, source or coupling method into a unit may be different 
for various installations. Cable length, routing, and shield termination are very 
important and can mean the difference between a successful or troublesome 
installation. Listed are some EMI guidelines for a successful installation in an 
industrial environment.
1. To reduce the chance of noise spikes entering the unit via the power lines, 
connections should be made to a clean source. Connecting to circuits that also 
power loads such as contactors, relays, motors, solenoids etc. should be avoided.
2. The unit should be mounted in a metal enclosure, which is properly connected 
to protective earth.
3. Use shielded (screened) cables for all Signal and Control inputs. The shield 
(screen) pigtail connection should be made as short as possible. The 
connection point for the shield depends somewhat upon the application. 
Listed below are the recommended methods of connecting the shield, in order 
of their effectiveness.
a. Connect the shield to earth ground (protective earth) at one end where the 
unit is mounted.
b. Connect the shield to earth ground at both ends of the cable, usually when 
the noise source frequency is over 1 MHz.
c. Connect the shield to common of the Data Station and leave the other end 
of the shield unconnected and insulated from earth ground.
4. Never run Signal or Control cables in the same conduit or raceway with AC 
power lines, conductors feeding motors, solenoids, SCR controls, and 
heaters, etc. The cables should be run through metal conduit that is properly 
grounded. This is especially useful in applications where cable runs are long 
and portable two-way radios are used in close proximity or if the installation 
is near a commercial radio transmitter. Also, Signal or Control cables within 
an enclosure should be routed as far away as possible from contactors, control 
relays, transformers, and other noisy components. 
5. Long cable runs are more susceptible to EMI pickup than short cable runs. 
Therefore, keep cable runs as short as possible.
6. In extremely high EMI environments, the use of external EMI suppression 
devices is effective. The following EMI suppression devices (or equivalent) 
are recommended:
Ferrite Suppression Cores for signal and control cables:
Fair-Rite part number 0443167251 (RLC part number FCOR0000)
TDK part number ZCAT3035-1330A
Steward part number 28B2029-0A0
Line Filters for input power cables:
Schaffner part number FN2010-1/07 (RLC part number LFIL0000)
Schaffner part number FN670-1.8/07
Corcom part number 1 VR3
Visit RLC's web site at www.redlion.net for more information on EMI 
guidelines, Safety and CE issues as they relate to Red Lion Controls products.
COMMON
+24 VDC
312
---
231
+24
N/C
COMM
WIRING
POWER CONNECTION
PROGRAMMING PORTS
RS232
RTS
COMM
Tx
COMM
CTS
Rx
CBLPROG0
OR
CBLUSB00
RS232/PG
USB/PG








