In the quiet, dust-mottled corner of a forgotten textile mill, Arthur found the box. It was a relic of the late '90s industrial boom: the XMTG-2000 Digital Temperature Controller Beside it lay its manual, a stapled PDF printout titled "XMTG-2000 Operation Manual Top"
| Parameter | Range / Details | |-----------|----------------| | | ±0.5% of full scale ±1 digit | | Sampling Rate | 2–4 times per second (varies by model revision) | | Output Types | Relay (3A/250V), SSR (12V/30mA), 4-20mA linear, or Triac | | Input Types | K, J, T, E, N, S, R, B, Pt100, Cu50, 0-10V, 0-20mA, 4-20mA | | Control Modes | ON/OFF, P, PI, PD, PID | | Alarm Outputs | Up to 2 independent alarms (AL1, AL2) | | Power Supply | 100-240VAC (50/60Hz) or 24VAC/VDC for low-voltage versions | xmtg2000 temperature controller manual pdf top
Without the PDF, a simple "temperature overshoot" could lead to hours of guesswork. The manual provides: In the quiet, dust-mottled corner of a forgotten
Using the Top Manual PDF, here is the standard workflow for a heating application: Power Supply : Typically operates on 85–264V AC, 50/60Hz
: Features either Relay (up to 10A) or SSR (Solid State Relay) voltage pulse outputs. Power Supply : Typically operates on 85–264V AC, 50/60Hz. Setup and Programming