So I reverse engineered a load management terminal and have two separate questions, so I intend to have two separate threads as the two don't relate to each other much.
Anyway, this board set is used in three different pieces of equipment - a load management unit (base unit), distribution control unit (base unit + different firmware + daughterboard - no change to the power side), and field configuration unit (modified unit to make it 'portable').
The schematic below is how the power side of the unit would be connected for the load management / distribution control modes. The incoming 240V 3-wire power would be connected at E22 (Hot 1), E21 (neutral / center tap), and E24 (Hot 2).
Panel B carries the transmitter circuitry, with the drive and relay control signals coming from the logic circuitry. Panel D is the main power supply, analog interface, and incoming signal pickup (this was part of a system that communicated over the power lines via modulated carrier wave injected into the 60Hz mains).
I just want to be sure. This should be the ONLY part of the circuitry that has mains voltage +/- 170V DC, right? There shouldn't be any kind of shock hazard on the primary of T1 or the secondaries of T3 and T4, right?
The Drive signal is a TTL-level digital signal, Xmt_Rly is a TTL-level signal fed through a ULN2003A buffer, T3 is the main power transformer with two separate +12V supplies and +5V supply, and Signal is a low-level analog signal fed to the front-end receive amplifier circuitry.
I'll get into why I asked in my next post on this thread where I show the modifications that were done to make this a 'portable' unit, and which made it impossible for me to analyze that unit.