Manual: Sinotimer Mc101

: Compatible with K, J, E, and N type thermocouples.

[ POWER ] [ CONTROL OUTPUT ] Terminal 1 & 2 Terminal 4 & 5 (+) 85-265V AC Relay or SSR │ │ ┌───────┴─────────────────────┴───────┐ │ │ │ SINOTIMER MC101 │ │ │ └───────┬─────────────────────┬───────┘ │ │ Terminal 9 (+) Terminal 10 (-) [ THERMOCOUPLE ] [ THERMOCOUPLE ] Power Input Connect live and neutral wires to . Sensor Input

Which exact do you have (SSR or Relay output)?

The timer is not set to AUTO mode, or the day combinations for the ON and OFF settings do not match. sinotimer mc101 manual

This provides a dry relay contact for external buzzers, indicator lights, or safety shutoffs. 3. Button Functions and Interface Navigation

Terminals for your SSR (Solid State Relay) or mechanical relay. 2. Selecting Your Sensor Type

If you’ve recently purchased a Sinotimer MC101 time relay or are struggling to get your existing unit to function correctly, you have likely landed here searching for the . You are not alone. While the MC101 is a powerful, multi-functional digital timer, its instruction booklet is often lost, poorly translated, or lacking in real-world application details. : Compatible with K, J, E, and N type thermocouples

Connect the AC power supply to Terminals 1 and 2 (typically 120V/240V L and N). Sensor Connection:

Connect the two matching color wires (usually red) to Terminals 10 and 11 , and the third wire (usually blue or white) to Terminal 9 . Alarm Output (Terminals 3 and 4)

Under-range display error. Input signal is lower than the low limit ( SLL ). The timer is not set to AUTO mode,

Before installation, verify that the technical specifications of your specific MC101 variant match your electrical system requirements.

The cover is utilitarian: “SINOTIMER MC101 – Multifunctional Timer Relay – User Manual” against a simple white or blue background. The language is predominantly English (as a lingua franca for industrial electronics), though many editions also include Chinese, German, or Spanish sections. The overall tone is technical, concise, and occasionally terse—a style familiar to automation professionals, but potentially challenging for first-time users.

If you provide the (e.g., kiln, oven, smoker) and sensor type , I can help you with: