It is your obligation to comply with the terms of any End-User License Agreement or similar document related to obtaining or installing firmware. will not obtain or supply firmware on your behalf. also makes no representations as to your right to install any such firmware on the product. also makes no representations as to your ability or right to download or otherwise obtain firmware for the product from Rockwell, its distributors, or any other source. While many Allen-Bradley PLC products will have firmware already installed, makes no representation as to whether a PLC product will or will not have firmware and, if it does have firmware, whether the firmware is the revision level that you need for your application. Because is not an authorized distributor of this product, the Original Manufacturer’s warranty does not apply. The product may have older date codes or be an older series than that available direct from the factory or authorized dealers. is not an authorized surplus dealer or affiliate for the Manufacturer of this product. Rockwell Disclaimer: The product is used surplus. This website is not sanctioned or approved by any manufacturer or tradename listed. Designated trademarks, brand names and brands appearing herein are the property of their respective owners. Products sold by come with ’s 1-year, 2-year, or 3-year warranty and do not come with the original manufacturer’s warranty. is not an authorized distributor, affiliate, or representative for the brands we carry. Is it possible to put a connector on the enclosure for these replacements? Depending on how much your downtime cost you per hour it could be justified by the time saving alone of connecting one connector instead of multiple wires. I personally still wouldn't use a screw clamp for your application. Of course my first question would be why are you looking at fixing a connection problem that is caused by the removal and insertion of wires instead of fixing the problem that is causing you to have to remove and insert the wires, ie sensor failure.but you didn't ask that question. In a perfect world you could just train everyone to use them properly and the problem would be solved but old habits die hard and some guys just don't work well under pressure. The more urgent fixing the breakdown is, the harder they seem to pull which causes damage, especially the the lightweight guillotine style clamps like you see on instrumentation. Also when people are in a hurry they will pull on the wire, then release the clamp. You press the clamp lightly and the block opens, but they people think you need to put an extra 25lbs of force on it to open it up that extra 1/64" which crushes the spring in it to the point of damage. One big problem I still see with some of them is that there is nothing to stop you from pressing the clamp open too far. The early ones required special installation tools, maintenance personnel couldn't figure out how to remove the wires and would break them in the process, I've even seen them wire nuted around because the guy couldn't figure out how to work them, etc, but they have come a long ways. I even went out of my way to special order parts without spring clamps. Blank, custom, and standard markers are available.I resisted the change to spring terminals for a long time.
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