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Black Horse F2201 Safety Controller – Redundant CPU Synchronization Fault (Planar F System)

Troubleshooting

Black Horse F2201 Safety Controller – Redundant CPU Synchronization Fault (Planar F System)

Black Horse F2201 Safety Controller – Redundant CPU Synchronization Fault (Planar F System)

Fault Scenario

During plant startup, the F2201 safety controller entered SAFE mode unexpectedly:

  • RUN LED: OFF

  • SAFE LED: Solid ON

  • Safety outputs immediately de-energized

  • Engineering software showed CPU A/B mismatch

Symptoms indicated redundant CPU desynchronization rather than configuration corruption or hardware failure.


Step 1 – Examine Redundant CPU Status

F2201 controller has:

  • Dual safety CPUs (CPU A and CPU B)

  • Continuous cross-comparison for memory, input, and logic execution

  • Independent watchdogs

Diagnostic display:

CPU Status Last Sync
A RUN OK
B RUN Error

Inference: CPU B failed to synchronize with CPU A → module forced SAFE.


Step 2 – Check Communication Path

  • F2201 internal bus connects CPU A ↔ CPU B

  • Possible causes of mismatch:

  1. Hardware failure on CPU B

  2. Firmware mismatch between A and B

  3. Internal transient (power spike)

  4. Memory corruption in one CPU

  • Firmware versions: identical

  • No memory alarms recorded


Step 3 – Isolate CPU Execution

CPU_DIAGNOSTIC:
1. Enter diagnostic mode.
2. Observe cycle counters on CPU A and CPU B.
3. Compare execution times and internal flags.

Findings:

  • CPU B cycle lagged by ~15 ms during high input activity

  • Cross-comparison registers triggered mismatch → SAFE state


Step 4 – Corrective Action

  1. Power down controller module

  2. Check internal connectors between CPU boards

  3. Reboot CPUs simultaneously

  4. Re-run redundancy synchronization procedure

SYNC_PROCEDURE:
– Access engineering software.
– Select “Force CPU Synchronization”.
– Confirm status: CPU A/B in lockstep.

Result: CPUs synchronized, module allowed RUN transition, outputs re-energized.


Step 5 – Preventive Recommendations

  • Avoid power interruptions during high CPU load

  • Monitor CPU cycle execution times regularly

  • Maintain environmental conditions (temperature, vibration)

  • Document any firmware updates for both CPUs


Engineering Insight

  • Redundant CPUs ensure fail-safe operation: even minor desynchronization forces SAFE mode

  • High-load input bursts or slight timing differences can trigger CPU mismatch

  • Routine synchronization checks prevent unexpected downtime


Conclusion:

If a Black Horse F2201 controller enters SAFE mode with normal inputs and configuration, check redundant CPU synchronization first. Proper reboot, connector inspection, and forced synchronization restore safe operation in Planar F safety systems.

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