Learn PLCs free
Intermediate20 min readWater & Wastewater

Wecon Structured Text for Pump Control

Learn Structured Text programming for Pump Control using Wecon Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio. Includes code examples, best practices, and step-by-step implementation guide for Water & Wastewater applications.

πŸ’»
Platform
Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio
πŸ“Š
Complexity
Intermediate
⏱️
Project Duration
2-4 weeks

Troubleshooting Structured Text programs for Pump Control in Wecon's Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio requires systematic diagnostic approaches and deep understanding of common failure modes. This guide equips you with proven troubleshooting techniques specific to Pump Control applications, helping you quickly identify and resolve issues in production environments.

Wecon's <1% global market presence means Wecon Structured Text programs power thousands of Pump Control systems globally. This extensive deployment base has revealed common issues and effective troubleshooting strategies. Understanding these patterns accelerates problem resolution from hours to minutes, minimizing downtime in Water & Wastewater operations.

Common challenges in Pump Control systems include pressure regulation, pump sequencing, and energy optimization. When implemented with Structured Text, additional considerations include steeper learning curve, requiring specific diagnostic approaches. Wecon's diagnostic tools in Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio provide powerful capabilities, but knowing exactly which tools to use for specific symptoms dramatically improves troubleshooting efficiency.

This guide walks through systematic troubleshooting procedures, from initial symptom analysis through root cause identification and permanent correction. You'll learn how to leverage Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio's diagnostic features, interpret system behavior in Pump Control contexts, and apply proven fixes to common Structured Text implementation issues specific to Wecon platforms.

Wecon Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio for Pump Control

Wecon PLC Editor is a free Windows-based IDE for the LX series (LX3V, LX5V, LX5S, LX6S, LX7) that mirrors Mitsubishi FX programming conventions almost completely β€” instruction names, soft-element addressing, and project-file structure are deliberately FX-compatible to ease migration of OEM machine-builders away from FX hardware. PIStudio is the companion HMI tool for Wecon's PI panel range. Both tools are free of license cost, which combined with Mitsubishi-style familiarity has driven Wecon ado...

Platform Strengths for Pump Control:

  • Mitsubishi FX-instruction-compatible β€” direct migration path

  • Free PLC Editor and PIStudio HMI software

  • Combined PLC + HMI bundles at sharp price points

  • Built-in motion, pulse, and PID on compact units


Unique ${brand.software} Features:

  • Free PLC Editor + PIStudio HMI software

  • Mitsubishi-FX-compatible instruction set and soft-element model

  • Combined PLC + HMI bundles available at single SKU

  • Built-in motion / pulse / PID on compact CPUs


Key Capabilities:

The Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio environment excels at Pump Control applications through its mitsubishi fx-instruction-compatible β€” direct migration path. This is particularly valuable when working with the 5 sensor types typically found in Pump Control systems, including Pressure transmitters, Flow meters, Level sensors.

Control Equipment for Pump Control:

  • Centrifugal pumps for high flow applications

  • Positive displacement pumps for metering

  • Submersible pumps for wet well applications

  • Booster pump systems for pressure maintenance


Wecon's controller families for Pump Control include:

  • LX3V: Suitable for intermediate Pump Control applications

  • LX5V: Suitable for intermediate Pump Control applications

  • LX5S: Suitable for intermediate Pump Control applications

  • LX6S: Suitable for intermediate Pump Control applications

Hardware Selection Guidance:

Wecon CPU selection runs from LX3V (entry, FX1N-class), LX5V / LX5S (mid-tier, FX3U-class with extended motion and Ethernet on -E variants), LX6S (extended I/O and faster scan), and LX7 (high-end with EtherCAT and advanced motion). Choice usually mirrors what an FX equivalent would have been β€” LX3V for compact textile / packaging machinery, LX5V for mid-tier OEM equipment, LX7 for multi-axis appli...

Industry Recognition:

Moderate in OEM machinery, packaging, textiles, plastics, and small-scale process equipment. Rare in Tier 1 automotive β€” Wecon is not typically on multinational OEM specs. Seen in Chinese aftermarket fixturing, dunnage racks, conveyor sub-systems, and Tier 3 component-manufacturer support equipment....

Investment Considerations:

With $ pricing, Wecon positions itself in the value segment. For Pump Control projects requiring intermediate skill levels and 2-4 weeks development time, the total investment includes hardware, software licensing, training, and ongoing support.

Understanding Structured Text for Pump Control

Structured Text (ST) is a high-level, text-based programming language defined in IEC 61131-3. It resembles Pascal and provides powerful constructs for complex algorithms, calculations, and data manipulation.

Execution Model:

Code executes sequentially from top to bottom within each program unit. Variables maintain state between scan cycles unless explicitly reset.

Core Advantages for Pump Control:

  • Powerful for complex logic: Critical for Pump Control when handling intermediate control logic

  • Excellent code reusability: Critical for Pump Control when handling intermediate control logic

  • Compact code representation: Critical for Pump Control when handling intermediate control logic

  • Good for algorithms and calculations: Critical for Pump Control when handling intermediate control logic

  • Familiar to software developers: Critical for Pump Control when handling intermediate control logic


Why Structured Text Fits Pump Control:

Pump Control systems in Water & Wastewater typically involve:

  • Sensors: Pressure transmitters for discharge and suction pressure, Flow meters (magnetic, ultrasonic, or vortex), Level transmitters for tank or wet well level

  • Actuators: Variable frequency drives (VFDs) for speed control, Motor starters (DOL or soft start), Control valves for flow regulation

  • Complexity: Intermediate with challenges including Preventing cavitation at low suction pressure


Control Strategies for Pump Control:

  • constant: Maintain fixed speed or output

  • pressure: PID control to maintain discharge pressure setpoint

  • flow: PID control to maintain flow rate setpoint


Programming Fundamentals in Structured Text:

Variables:
- declaration: VAR / VAR_INPUT / VAR_OUTPUT / VAR_IN_OUT / VAR_GLOBAL sections
- initialization: Variables can be initialized at declaration: Counter : INT := 0;
- constants: VAR CONSTANT section for read-only values

Operators:
- arithmetic: + - * / MOD (modulo)
- comparison: = <> < > <= >=
- logical: AND OR XOR NOT

ControlStructures:
- if: IF condition THEN statements; ELSIF condition THEN statements; ELSE statements; END_IF;
- case: CASE selector OF value1: statements; value2: statements; ELSE statements; END_CASE;
- for: FOR index := start TO end BY step DO statements; END_FOR;

Best Practices for Structured Text:

  • Use meaningful variable names with consistent naming conventions

  • Initialize all variables at declaration to prevent undefined behavior

  • Use enumerated types for state machines instead of magic numbers

  • Break complex expressions into intermediate variables for readability

  • Use functions for reusable calculations and function blocks for stateful operations


Common Mistakes to Avoid:

  • Using = instead of := for assignment (= is comparison)

  • Forgetting semicolons at end of statements

  • Integer division truncation - use REAL for decimal results

  • Infinite loops from incorrect WHILE/REPEAT conditions


Typical Applications:

1. PID control: Directly applicable to Pump Control
2. Recipe management: Related control patterns
3. Statistical calculations: Related control patterns
4. Data logging: Related control patterns

Understanding these fundamentals prepares you to implement effective Structured Text solutions for Pump Control using Wecon Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio.

Implementing Pump Control with Structured Text

Pump control systems use PLCs to regulate liquid flow in industrial processes, water treatment, and building services. These systems manage pump operation, protect equipment, optimize energy use, and maintain process parameters.

This walkthrough demonstrates practical implementation using Wecon Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio and Structured Text programming.

System Requirements:

A typical Pump Control implementation includes:

Input Devices (Sensors):
1. Pressure transmitters for discharge and suction pressure: Critical for monitoring system state
2. Flow meters (magnetic, ultrasonic, or vortex): Critical for monitoring system state
3. Level transmitters for tank or wet well level: Critical for monitoring system state
4. Temperature sensors for bearing and motor monitoring: Critical for monitoring system state
5. Vibration sensors for predictive maintenance: Critical for monitoring system state

Output Devices (Actuators):
1. Variable frequency drives (VFDs) for speed control: Primary control output
2. Motor starters (DOL or soft start): Supporting control function
3. Control valves for flow regulation: Supporting control function
4. Isolation valves (actuated for remote operation): Supporting control function
5. Check valves to prevent backflow: Supporting control function

Control Equipment:

  • Centrifugal pumps for high flow applications

  • Positive displacement pumps for metering

  • Submersible pumps for wet well applications

  • Booster pump systems for pressure maintenance


Control Strategies for Pump Control:

  • constant: Maintain fixed speed or output

  • pressure: PID control to maintain discharge pressure setpoint

  • flow: PID control to maintain flow rate setpoint

  • level: Control tank/wet well level within band


Implementation Steps:

Step 1: Characterize pump curve and system curve

In Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio, characterize pump curve and system curve.

Step 2: Size VFD for application (constant torque vs. variable torque)

In Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio, size vfd for application (constant torque vs. variable torque).

Step 3: Implement primary control loop (pressure, flow, or level)

In Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio, implement primary control loop (pressure, flow, or level).

Step 4: Add pump protection logic (minimum flow, temperature, seal)

In Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio, add pump protection logic (minimum flow, temperature, seal).

Step 5: Program lead/lag sequencing with alternation

In Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio, program lead/lag sequencing with alternation.

Step 6: Implement soft start/stop ramps for smooth operation

In Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio, implement soft start/stop ramps for smooth operation.


Wecon Function Design:

Reusable logic is most often P-label subroutines. Parameterised function blocks are available on newer CPUs but adoption is uneven; copy-paste reuse remains the dominant pattern in the field.

Common Challenges and Solutions:

1. Preventing cavitation at low suction pressure

  • Solution: Structured Text addresses this through Powerful for complex logic.


2. Managing minimum flow requirements

  • Solution: Structured Text addresses this through Excellent code reusability.


3. Coordinating VFD speed with system pressure

  • Solution: Structured Text addresses this through Compact code representation.


4. Handling pump cycling with varying demand

  • Solution: Structured Text addresses this through Good for algorithms and calculations.


Safety Considerations:

  • Dry run protection using flow or level monitoring

  • Overtemperature protection for motor and bearings

  • Overload protection through current monitoring

  • Vibration trips for mechanical failure detection

  • Emergency stop with proper system depressurization


Performance Metrics:

  • Scan Time: Optimize for 5 inputs and 5 outputs

  • Memory Usage: Efficient data structures for LX3V capabilities

  • Response Time: Meeting Water & Wastewater requirements for Pump Control

Wecon Diagnostic Tools:

PLC Editor online monitoring with rung-state highlighting,Soft-element watch table,Built-in offline simulator,M8000-range system flags for hardware diagnostics,PIStudio communication analyzer for HMI-side issues,Modbus RTU / TCP test utilities (third-party),Distributor loaner CPUs and test rigs,Wecon community forum threads for protocol-specific issues

Wecon's Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio provides tools for performance monitoring and optimization, essential for achieving the 2-4 weeks development timeline while maintaining code quality.

Wecon Structured Text Example for Pump Control

Complete working example demonstrating Structured Text implementation for Pump Control using Wecon Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio. Follows Wecon naming conventions. Tested on LX3V hardware.

(* Wecon Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio - Pump Control Control *)
(* Structured Text Implementation for Water & Wastewater *)
(* Engineers code Wecon in FX-style raw-address conventions β€” X0, Y0, M10 *)

PROGRAM PRG_PUMP_CONTROL_Control

VAR
    (* State Machine Variables *)
    eState : E_PUMP_CONTROL_States := IDLE;
    bEnable : BOOL := FALSE;
    bFaultActive : BOOL := FALSE;

    (* Timers *)
    tonDebounce : TON;
    tonProcessTimeout : TON;
    tonFeedbackCheck : TON;

    (* Counters *)
    ctuCycleCounter : CTU;

    (* Process Variables *)
    rPressuretransmitters : REAL := 0.0;
    rCentrifugalpumps : REAL := 0.0;
    rSetpoint : REAL := 100.0;
END_VAR

VAR CONSTANT
    (* Water & Wastewater Process Parameters *)
    C_DEBOUNCE_TIME : TIME := T#500MS;
    C_PROCESS_TIMEOUT : TIME := T#30S;
    C_BATCH_SIZE : INT := 50;
END_VAR

(* Input Conditioning *)
tonDebounce(IN := bStartButton, PT := C_DEBOUNCE_TIME);
bEnable := tonDebounce.Q AND NOT bEmergencyStop AND bSafetyOK;

(* Main State Machine - Pattern: State machines use either FX-style SFC s *)
CASE eState OF
    IDLE:
        rCentrifugalpumps := 0.0;
        ctuCycleCounter(RESET := TRUE);
        IF bEnable AND rPressuretransmitters > 0.0 THEN
            eState := STARTING;
        END_IF;

    STARTING:
        (* Ramp up output - Gradual start *)
        rCentrifugalpumps := MIN(rCentrifugalpumps + 5.0, rSetpoint);
        IF rCentrifugalpumps >= rSetpoint THEN
            eState := RUNNING;
        END_IF;

    RUNNING:
        (* Pump Control active - Pump control systems use PLCs to regulate liquid f *)
        tonProcessTimeout(IN := TRUE, PT := C_PROCESS_TIMEOUT);
        ctuCycleCounter(CU := bCyclePulse, PV := C_BATCH_SIZE);

        IF ctuCycleCounter.Q THEN
            eState := COMPLETE;
        ELSIF tonProcessTimeout.Q THEN
            bFaultActive := TRUE;
            eState := FAULT;
        END_IF;

    COMPLETE:
        rCentrifugalpumps := 0.0;
        (* Log production data - Logging is HMI-tier rather than PLC-tier. PIStudio's data-logger feature writes CSV files to SD card or USB at configurable intervals, polled from D-register sample tags. Cloud upload is supported on newer PI panels via MQTT to brand-agnostic brokers. *)
        eState := IDLE;

    FAULT:
        rCentrifugalpumps := 0.0;
        (* Alarms are M-flag banks latched on fault detection. Active-alarm rollup is ORed into a single HMI alarm-banner tag. Historical alarm logging is offloaded to PIStudio's built-in alarm-history feature, which writes to internal flash or external SD card depending on HMI model. *)
        IF bFaultReset AND NOT bEmergencyStop THEN
            bFaultActive := FALSE;
            eState := IDLE;
        END_IF;
END_CASE;

(* Safety Override - Always executes *)
IF bEmergencyStop OR NOT bSafetyOK THEN
    rCentrifugalpumps := 0.0;
    eState := FAULT;
    bFaultActive := TRUE;
END_IF;

END_PROGRAM

Code Explanation:

  • 1.Enumerated state machine (State machines use either FX-style SFC steps (S0..S511) for clean sequencers or D-register state integers compared per rung. SFC dominates packaging-machine code; integer-state dominates fault-recovery and recipe-routing logic.) for clear Pump Control sequence control
  • 2.Constants define Water & Wastewater-specific parameters: cycle time 30s, batch size
  • 3.Input conditioning with debounce timer prevents false triggers in industrial environment
  • 4.STARTING state implements soft-start ramp - prevents mechanical shock
  • 5.Process timeout detection identifies stuck conditions - critical for reliability
  • 6.Safety override section executes regardless of state - Wecon best practice for intermediate systems

Best Practices

  • βœ“Follow Wecon naming conventions: Engineers code Wecon in FX-style raw-address conventions β€” X0, Y0, M100, D100, T
  • βœ“Wecon function design: Reusable logic is most often P-label subroutines. Parameterised function blocks
  • βœ“Data organization: No structured-DB equivalent. Persistent data lives in the D / HD register banks
  • βœ“Structured Text: Use meaningful variable names with consistent naming conventions
  • βœ“Structured Text: Initialize all variables at declaration to prevent undefined behavior
  • βœ“Structured Text: Use enumerated types for state machines instead of magic numbers
  • βœ“Pump Control: Use PID with derivative on PV for pressure control
  • βœ“Pump Control: Implement soft start ramps even with VFD (200-500ms)
  • βœ“Pump Control: Add flow proving before considering pump operational
  • βœ“Debug with Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio: Use the offline simulator to validate logic before downloading
  • βœ“Safety: Dry run protection using flow or level monitoring
  • βœ“Use Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio simulation tools to test Pump Control logic before deployment

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

  • ⚠Structured Text: Using = instead of := for assignment (= is comparison)
  • ⚠Structured Text: Forgetting semicolons at end of statements
  • ⚠Structured Text: Integer division truncation - use REAL for decimal results
  • ⚠Wecon common error: Battery-low alarm on legacy LX3V causing D-range loss
  • ⚠Pump Control: Preventing cavitation at low suction pressure
  • ⚠Pump Control: Managing minimum flow requirements
  • ⚠Neglecting to validate Pressure transmitters for discharge and suction pressure leads to control errors
  • ⚠Insufficient comments make Structured Text programs unmaintainable over time

Related Certifications

πŸ†Wecon distributor-led training
πŸ†Project-based engineer certificates
πŸ†Advanced Wecon Programming Certification

Mastering Structured Text for Pump Control applications using Wecon Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio requires understanding both the platform's capabilities and the specific demands of Water & Wastewater. This guide has provided comprehensive coverage of implementation strategies, working code examples, best practices, and common pitfalls to help you succeed with intermediate Pump Control projects.

Wecon's <1% global market share and moderate in oem machinery, packaging, textiles, plastics, and small-scale process equipment demonstrate the platform's capability for demanding applications. The platform excels in Water & Wastewater applications where Pump Control reliability is critical.

By following the practices outlined in this guideβ€”from proper program structure and Structured Text best practices to Wecon-specific optimizationsβ€”you can deliver reliable Pump Control systems that meet Water & Wastewater requirements.

Next Steps for Professional Development:

1. Certification: Pursue Wecon distributor-led training to validate your Wecon expertise
2. Advanced Training: Consider Project-based engineer certificates for specialized Water & Wastewater applications
3. Hands-on Practice: Build Pump Control projects using LX3V hardware
4. Stay Current: Follow Wecon PLC Editor / PIStudio updates and new Structured Text features

Structured Text Foundation:

Structured Text (ST) is a high-level, text-based programming language defined in IEC 61131-3. It resembles Pascal and provides powerful constructs for...

The 2-4 weeks typical timeline for Pump Control projects will decrease as you gain experience with these patterns and techniques. Remember: Use PID with derivative on PV for pressure control

For further learning, explore related topics including Recipe management, Wastewater treatment, and Wecon platform-specific features for Pump Control optimization.