RunsWithCrouse-Hinds wrote:IIRC, Macomb County was using D4 software on their 2070 controllers...it's possible that D4 could have re-mapped the I/O on the A and B harnesses through their software in order to make it hook up to an existing EPIC panel as well. Other companies could do the same either way -- Econolite does with the ASC/3 line.
Now that I didn't know. I haven't been close enough to see the menu structure on the 2070s. I figured the Intelight's had Max Time and the Siemens' has SE-PAC. Never heard of D4!


I don't understand why some intersections had the controller in the existing Eagle cabinet swapped out, and others were disconnected and the field wiring was spliced over to a large 340 ITS cabinet. The ITS cabinet makes sense because its designed for 2070ATC controllers. Seems like it could be a pain trying to convert a cabinet that has non-NEMA spec connectors and I/O.
Michigan was slow to get into the NEMA market after the mechanical era ended. The EF140 and EPIC140 were designed for the Michigan market to be a menu driven equivalent to mechanical controllers and to allow for the unique specifications (flashing red, end-with-left cycle, single section right turn arrow, etc)