HMI
Operator Screens Should Follow the Process
Operator screens should explain the plant status without forcing the operator to search for context.
Screen structure
- Start with process flow, not only equipment lists.
- Place alarms and permissives near the equipment they affect.
- Show mode, status and next action clearly.
- Protect manual controls with clear permissions.
Operator value
- Faster diagnosis during faults.
- Less confusion between local and automatic operation.
Practical review checklist
- Confirm the note against the actual process sequence, not only the electrical drawing.
- Check that the operator screen, alarm text and field device tag use the same naming logic.
- Verify that manual operation, automatic operation and maintenance access are all covered.
- Record any commissioning observation that changes a setpoint, interlock or operator instruction.
- Keep the final note short enough for the operation team to use during startup and troubleshooting.
How ECCT applies this on projects
ECCT uses this type of engineering note as a bridge between panel wiring, PLC logic, HMI screens and site commissioning. The goal is to make every control decision traceable from the process requirement to the operator action.
- Panel details are reviewed together with I/O and field signal requirements.
- PLC/HMI behavior is checked against real startup, shutdown and fault scenarios.
- Commissioning notes are kept as a practical handover reference, not only as internal engineering comments.
Need this applied to a real project?
ECCT can review the control scope, panel details or commissioning sequence.