Electrical One-Line Diagrams
One-line diagrams are built by placing and linking circuit elements using the One- Line wizards, then creating scripts to provide animation for those wizards whose status can be determined or controlled, such as breakers and switches.
A one-line diagram is drawn by placing GE One-Line wizards into a window. All animated One-Line wizards have at least one discrete tag to indicate the status of the bus feed to the device, while others may have tags for in and out connections and for device status. If you do not require animation, link the wizard’s discrete tags to a constant tag with a value of true.
After configuring Horizontal or Vertical Bus wizards, several objects can be selected and grouped together.
When a one-line diagram is too large to comfortably fit into a single window, place navigation buttons with links to other windows near each bus line that continues to another screen. This allows intuitive navigation up and down a distribution system hierarchy.
To accurately animate your one-line diagram once all the graphics are in place, condition scripts must be written with the logic for the distribution system. See the CIMPLICITY documentation for details of the scripting language. The following example shows a simple double-ended substation with a tie breaker and the scripting that animates it.
An example of the scripting for this one-line diagram is shown in the following pages:
52 ∙ Creating Floor Plans, Elevation Views, and One-Line Diagrams | PMCS Interface Toolkit |