Industrial Control Panel Faults ΓÇö How to Diagnose Them
Industrial control panels house PLCs, VFDs, relays, motor starters, and power distribution components. When a fault occurs, the panel’s indicator lights, fault displays, and alarm outputs tell you what failed. This guide covers systematic diagnosis of the most common panel faults.
Control Panel Fault Indicators
| Indicator | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Power ON lamp off | No input power to panel ΓÇö check supply breaker |
| Run lamp off (should be on) | Motor or drive not running ΓÇö check fault log |
| Fault lamp on | Active fault ΓÇö check fault display or PLC fault log |
| E-stop lamp on | Emergency stop activated ΓÇö find and release |
| Overload lamp on | Motor thermal overload tripped ΓÇö check motor |
| Comm fault lamp on | Communication error ΓÇö check fieldbus cables |
Most Common Control Panel Faults
Power Supply Faults
Symptom: Panel dead, no indicator lights. Check: Main supply breaker, incoming voltage (all phases), panel main disconnect. Measure voltage at the panel main terminals with a multimeter.
VFD Faults
See brand-specific VFD fault guides. Common: OC (overcurrent), OV (overvoltage), OT (overtemp), GF (ground fault).
Motor Starter / Contactor Faults
Symptom: Motor doesn’t start, contactor doesn’t pull in. Check: Coil voltage (should match rated coil voltage when energized), contact condition, overload relay setting.
PLC Faults
Symptom: Panel powered but no outputs energizing. Check: PLC run LED (should be on), PLC fault LED (should be off), I/O module LEDs. Use programming software to read fault buffer.
E-Stop Circuit Faults
Symptom: E-stop active but all buttons released. Check: Safety relay input status, all E-stop buttons (twist and release), safety door switches, light curtain status.
Systematic Fault Isolation
- Is there power? Measure at the main terminals
- Is the E-stop clear? Release all E-stops, verify safety relay is reset
- Is the PLC in RUN mode? Check PLC status LED and fault buffer
- Is the drive/starter faulted? Check drive display or fault output
- Is the motor overloaded? Check overload relay trip indicator
When to Call a Pro
High-voltage panel work (above 600V), arc flash hazard zones, and live panel troubleshooting require qualified electrical workers with proper PPE and training. Never open a live panel without appropriate arc flash protection.