Applied Electrical Design/ePLAN Electric P8 - Heavyweight Vol1/2 - The Crash Course

  • $69.99

ePLAN Electric P8 - Heavyweight Vol1/2 - The Crash Course

Eplan Electric P8 Crash Course A-Z, to get you going ASAP, while building a real-life example of an automation system 

Disclaimer:

Please note that this is not an official EPLAN course. For official training and certification as well as for the purchase of EPLAN software contact the manufacturer of the software.

Contents

Introduction

How to track my work in ePLAN (mouse clicking and keyboard input action)
  • 2 mins
  • 7.17 MB
Preview
Import Siemens and Phoenix Contact parts/macros without Data Portal
  • 9 mins
  • 34 MB
Preview

First steps in ePLAN

Creating new project, adding pages, learning about ePLAN workspace
  • 8 mins
  • 25.5 MB
Editing plotframe and forms (advanced exercise)
  • 26 mins
  • 110 MB
Preparing project and page structure for the schematics
  • 10 mins
  • 37.5 MB

Creating schematics (working on a real-life example of an automation system)

First schematics in ePLAN - bulding up a first cabinet (power infeed)
  • 9 mins
  • 39.4 MB
Building up a second cabinet (power distribution), black box exercise
  • 22 mins
  • 116 MB
Building up a third cabinet (PLC cabinet), advanced black box exercise
  • 13 mins
  • 89.3 MB
24VDC power distribution, advanced black box, special minus pole terminals
  • 13 mins
  • 99 MB
PLC schematics - rack and modules overview and 24VDC supply for the PLC rack
  • 13 mins
  • 125 MB
PLC macros on multiline pages, PLC addressing exercise
  • 8 mins
  • 92.8 MB
Technology overview (cooling tunnel), practicing drawing plain graphics
  • 11 mins
  • 124 MB
PLC digital I/O signals - motor control circuits
  • 17 mins
  • 97 MB
PLC digital I/O signals - signal exchange with external control system
  • 22 mins
  • 145 MB
PLC analog input signals - transmitter and shielded cables
  • 9 mins
  • 44.1 MB
Preview

Checking project and preparing for a delivery to the customer

ePLANs "Check Project" functionality (advanced exercise)
  • 29 mins
  • 183 MB
Working with project reports - generating, adjusting, updating
  • 10 mins
  • 45.5 MB
Last checks, ePLAN's file exchange - backup zw1, page/window macro, PDF, DXF/DWG
  • 14 mins
  • 66.8 MB

Additional Tip - External Representation

External representation of a device in ePLAN (very important and useful)
  • 4 mins
  • 15.2 MB

What you'll learn

  • To get the most of Eplan Electric P8 by using it the proper way
  • To design a typical real-life example of an industrial automation project - cooling tunnel
  • To create a project, add pages, adjust project and page structures for your own needTo edit plotframe and forms to conform your company's design standards
  •  To create various types of schematics to learn different aspects of creating schematics (going with wires between cabinets, motor power and control circuits, PLC, analog signals, shielded cables, general devices (black boxes)
  • To clean up your ePLAN project from errors and warnings with the help of the "Check Project" functionality
  • To exchange the ePLAN file and parts of schematics with team members and with a customer (Eplan backup file (.zw1), page/window macros, export to PDF and to DXF/DWG)
  • To prepare your ePLAN project for a final delivery to your customer

What students say

"I highly recommend this course. I am a complete beginner with Eplan and I have learned so much already from this course. I was learning from a book initially for 4 weeks but i feel i have made much better progress with this course and in a much faster time."

Anthony Jordan

"Si me sirvio bastante, comprendo mucho mejor el EPlan y me ayudo a migrar algunos diagramas de mi compañia de autocad normal"

Gustavo Carrillo

"working through the basics and giving clear explanations Really Good Course !!!!"

Max Heyes

"Very good course. Not needed to have any previous knowledge of ePLAN, as long as you keep it up and pay attention to the videos. Due to the fast-paced creation of the example, I would recommend to watch the whole course one time, without trying to replicate what Ivan is doing, but rather focusing on trying to understand what he is doing, and then play the videos at low speed and try to do the same as what is happening in the videos. Very good course if you have an understanding of electric devices and have an idea of what each device is for. Although the videos are a bit fast-paced, Ivan replies very quickly when you send him a message, and clarifies your doubts in a specific way. I would only ask for a bit more explanation of what is being done in each step, and what for (I know this is an ePLAN course and not an Electrical Engineering course, but just saying the purpose of what you do during each video would help in understanding easier what's going on). Very good, would recommend :)"

Alfonso Valdivia Bernal

Course description

Instructor's recommendation: If you are a total beginner in EPLAN or you would just want to see the key features of this program then I recommend you check the course: "ePLAN Electric P8 - The Essentials - For Beginners". This one is going to get you going and speed up your learning progress in the Eplan Heavyweight courses.

Important: Lecture 2 shows you how to download and import parts from Siemens and Phoenix Contact without access to Data Portal.

*** UPDATES ***
- September 09, 2019 - Captions in English (EDITED, not auto-generated).

Dear Student,
welcome to my first course in the series about EPLAN Electric P8.

In this course I have covered the essential topics / sections in EPLAN to get you going as soon as possible and to prepare you for the real-life scenarios in the electrical design.

That is why I decided to work on a real-life example of a project in the field of Industrial Automation. Simple but effective concept. Typical industrial automation systems consist of many different segments. Here are some of them:
  • typically more than one electrical cabinet (that's why we work with 3 cabinets in our EPLAN project for our exercise)
  • power distribution (in our EPLAN project some motors (fans) and a general device that needs 400VAC power supply)
  • PLC cabinet (CAB3 in our EPLAN Project) - we work with Siemens S7-1500 PLC
  • control and exchange signals (to control our motors and to exchange signals with a higher-level control system)
  • analog input signals (in our case temperature measurement with transmitter in head of the instrument - typical industrial application)
  • Technology overview (also in our EPLAN project, to get better understanding of what we are designing)
Moreover, throughout the lessons we cover EPLAN specific topics. Here are some of them:
  • Creating new EPLAN project
  • Editing plot frame and forms (advanced)
  • EPLAN's "Check Project" Functionality (advanced)
  • Rounding up our EPLAN project by adding various reports to the project (Title page, table of contents, terminals diagrams, cable overview)
  • Learning how to exchange EPLAN project, pages and parts of schematics (in different formats, such as EPLAN files, DWG/DXF, PDF) with our customer and our team members
I have decided not to talk to much during the lessons (the concept applied only in this course), but instead occasionally share with you some short real-life stories, additional tips and tricks and little assignments you could do on your own while working your way through lessons. I believe that you should take time, dive into the lessons, follow them with good concentration and try to repeat all the things I do, on your own. Harder path, but pays off better.

As mentioned, by the end of this course you will be able to create any type of schematics in EPLAN. The proper way.

 And by generating reports, checking your project for errors, being able to exchange various type of files with your team member and with a customer you will be able to create a well-rounded electrical project created in Eplan Electric P8.

I have been working in this software for almost a decade now and not once considered trying out software in the same category (Computer Aided Engineering).

It is today's standard on the CAE market so if you invest some quality time and effort, it will pay off.

It has done a lot for me over the years. Just by knowing how to properly work in EPLAN I always was able to acquire new job, clients, projects, anywhere in the world!

I hope you will find my course interesting and valuable and I wish you a lot of fun and a great success in mastering Eplan Electric P8.

See you in the lectures!

Your Instructor for Electrical Design,

Ivan

Your Instructor - Ivan Vidovic

# Over 10,000 students online learn with Ivan #

Hey there! My name is Ivan and I am an electrical engineer. I lead a team of highly skilled hardware design engineers. We work on projects for top industrial customers in Germany and in the USA, e.g. FedEx, Amazon, Audi, VW, BMW, Daimler, Ford, GM.
This website is where I host over 45 hours of video lectures spread across 20+ courses that demonstrate how professionals design industrial automation systems. So, without  further ado, go ahead and explore what I have to offer to you!

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