4–20 mA Signal – Complete Field Guide

Category: Field Instrumentation · Analog Signals · Control Systems

What Is a 4–20 mA Signal?

The 4–20 mA signal is the global standard analog transmission method used in industrial instrumentation.

Instead of transmitting voltage, the system transmits current. Current is highly immune to cable resistance, voltage drop, and electrical noise, making it ideal for long-distance plant wiring.

If your plant has transmitters, it runs on 4–20 mA loops.

Why 4 mA Instead of 0 mA?

The system uses 4 mA as the minimum value to allow fault detection. This design philosophy is known as the Live Zero concept.

Basic 4–20 mA Loop Wiring

Power Supply Transmitter 4–20 mA Output PLC / DCS

The current flows through all devices in series. Any break in the loop immediately stops current flow.

Types of 4–20 mA Loops

1. Loop-Powered (2-Wire)

2. 4-Wire (Externally Powered)

Scaling Concept

The PLC converts current into engineering units using linear scaling.

Formula:

% of Range = (Measured mA − 4) ÷ 16 × 100

Incorrect scaling causes mismatch between field and control room readings.

NAMUR Fault Indication

For full fault logic explanation see: Live Zero & NAMUR NE43 Detailed Guide

Common Field Problems

Basic Troubleshooting Logic

  1. Measure loop current in series
  2. Verify power supply voltage
  3. Check transmitter output locally
  4. Inspect wiring continuity
  5. Confirm PLC scaling configuration

Always isolate field, wiring, and control system step-by-step.

Explore Detailed 4–20 mA Topics

Related Blog Articles

Why 4–20 mA Uses Live Zero Instead of 0 mA?

Understand the engineering logic behind live zero and built-in fault detection.

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5 Common 4–20 mA Mistakes in Field Work

Real-world mistakes observed during commissioning and maintenance.