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Welcome to the official blog of the International Society of Automation (ISA).

This blog covers numerous topics on industrial automation such as operations & management, continuous & batch processing, connectivity, manufacturing & machine control, and Industry 4.0.

The material and information contained on this website is for general information purposes only. ISA blog posts may be authored by ISA staff and guest authors from the automation community. Views and opinions expressed by a guest author are solely their own, and do not necessarily represent those of ISA. Posts made by guest authors have been subject to peer review.

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AutoQuiz: What Does a Solid Line with 3 Marks Represent on a P&ID?

AutoQuiz is edited by Joel Don, ISA's community manager.

Today's automation industry quiz question comes from the ISA Certified Control Systems Technician (CCST) program. Certified Control System Technicians calibrate, document, troubleshoot, and repair/replace instrumentation for systems that measure and control level, temperature, pressure, flow, and other process variables. Click this link for information about the CCST program. This question is from the Level III study guide, Domain 2, Loop checking. (Level III represents a professional who has a 13-year total of education, training, and/or experience.)

AutoQuiz-20160902-pid-three-marks

 

Using ISA symbols on a P&ID (piping and instrument diagram), a solid line with three marks crossed by another hash mark represents:

a) electric binary signal
b) pneumatic binary signal
c) undefined signal
d) capillary tubing
e) none of the above

ISA-5.1-1984 - (Revised 2009) Instrumentation Symbols and Identification provides sufficient information to enable anyone reviewing any document depicting process measurement and control (who has a reasonable amount of process knowledge) to understand the means of measurement and control of the process.

The symbolism and identification methods provided in this standard are applicable to all classes of process measurement and control instrumentation. They can describe discrete instruments and their functions. They can also describe the analogous functions of systems that are variously termed shared display, shared control, distributed control, and computer control.

The best answer is A.

Joel Don
Joel Don
Joel Don is an independent content marketing, social media and public relations consultant. Prior to his work in marketing and PR, Joel served as an editor for regional newspapers and national magazines throughout the U.S. He earned a master's degree from the Medill School at Northwestern University with a focus on science, engineering and biomedical marketing communications, and a bachelor of science degree from UC San Diego.

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