ABB ACS550 EFB1 Fault Code — What It Means
On the ABB ACS550, fault F0031 or EFB1 is a reserved embedded fieldbus protocol fault. ABB states that faults 31 through 33 (EFB1 to EFB3) are protocol-dependent, meaning the exact cause depends on which fieldbus protocol (PROFIBUS, Modbus, DeviceNet, etc.) is configured on your drive. In most field installations, EFB1 appears when the PLC or master controller stops polling the drive within the configured timeout, or when the communication link between the drive and the network master fails. Unlike hardware faults with fixed meanings, EFB1 is a software and network layer fault that requires you to diagnose the fieldbus network, wiring, and master device rather than a single component inside the drive itself.
Common Causes
- Master not polling or network timeout The PLC, scanner, or fieldbus master has stopped communicating with the drive or is not polling within the timeout set in parameter 3019.
- Bad fieldbus wiring or loose connections Intermittent or damaged communication cable, loose terminals at the drive or master, or poor shield and ground termination cause dropouts that trigger the fault.
- Timeout setting too short Parameter 3019 COMM FAULT TIME is set shorter than the actual network polling cycle, causing nuisance faulting even when the network is healthy.
- PLC or master device failure The network master itself is offline, powered down, in fault, or has lost its communication module.
- Protocol or configuration mismatch The drive’s embedded fieldbus configuration does not match the actual protocol running on the network, or node addressing is incorrect.
Step-by-Step Fix
- Identify which embedded fieldbus protocol is configured on your ACS550 by reviewing the drive setup or consulting your commissioning documentation, because ABB states the meaning of EFB1 is protocol dependent.
- Check the master device first. Confirm your PLC, scanner, or fieldbus master is powered, running, not faulted, and actively scanning the network.
- Inspect all fieldbus wiring at the drive terminals and at the master for loose connections, damaged cable, worn conductors, and proper shield termination and grounding.
- Verify communication settings such as baud rate, node address, and protocol match between the drive and the master controller.
- Increase parameter 3019 COMM FAULT TIME if the network is healthy but the drive faults due to timeout. Adjust the value to exceed your network’s actual polling cycle time.
- Clear the fault and monitor communications under load and over several cycles to confirm the repair is stable and the master is polling reliably.
- If intermittent faulting persists, check for vibration-related loose terminals, cable wear in flex areas, and grounding or shielding issues that ABB identifies as common intermittent communication causes.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Fieldbus communication cable | Amazon | Replace if damaged, worn, or shield integrity is compromised. Match the cable type and specification to your installed protocol. |
| Shielded cable terminals and connectors | Amazon | Replace corroded, loose, or damaged terminals at the drive and master ends. |
| PLC communication module or scanner card | Amazon | Replace if the master-side interface is proven faulty and cannot poll the network. |
| Drive control board (communication interface) | Amazon | Replace only if all external network causes are eliminated and the drive’s fieldbus interface path is confirmed defective. |
When to Call a Pro
Call a qualified electrician, controls technician, or ABB service partner if you are not trained in fieldbus network troubleshooting, if you cannot safely access the PLC or master controller, or if the fault persists after you have verified wiring, settings, and the master device. Fieldbus diagnostics often require network analyzers, protocol-specific software, and detailed knowledge of industrial communication standards. If the drive control board itself is suspect, a professional can perform isolation tests and coordinate factory replacement to avoid incorrect part swaps.