Distributed Control Systems (dcs): Complete Masterclass

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Distributed Control Systems (dcs): Complete Masterclass
Published 6/2026
MP4 | Video: h264, 1920x1080 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Language: English | Duration: 2h 33m | Size: 3.34 GB​
DCS architecture, PID & advanced control | ISA-18.2 alarms & ISA-101 HMI | build to commissioning
What you'll learn
Explain DCS architecture - controllers, I/O, redundancy and networks - and where a DCS fits versus PLC and SCADA
Specify DCS I/O, signal conditioning and marshalling for a control system design
Orient quickly across Honeywell, Emerson, ABB and Yokogawa platforms
Configure PID loops and select the correct controller modes and tuning approach
Build advanced control strategies - cascade, ratio, feedforward and override
Configure control modules and function blocks and structure the DCS database
Design high-performance HMI graphics to ISA-101 for situation awareness
Rationalise and manage alarms to ISA-18.2 and EEMUA 191
Plan a DCS engineering workflow from database build and bulk engineering through FAT
Run loop checks, SAT and commissioning activities on a DCS
Manage DCS operations - backups, patching and lifecycle - through the plant's life
Design and document an applied DCS control strategy as a section project
Requirements
A background in C&I, control, automation or electrical engineering is assumed
Familiarity with P&IDs, control loops and basic process plant equipment
This is a practitioner-level course, not a first introduction to control
No specific DCS software or vendor licence is required to follow the material
A willingness to think through a control strategy from sensor to final element
Description
This course contains the use of artificial intelligence.
The DCS is the operational heart of every continuous process plant - and the engineer who understands it at a practitioner level, not just as a black box, is the one who gets the project over the line.
This course teaches the DCS the way it is engineered and operated on live plants. It covers architecture and I/O, the major platforms, control strategies from PID through advanced schemes, HMI and alarm management, and the engineering workflow from database build to commissioning.
The work is anchored in the standards that govern modern control rooms: ISA-18.2 and EEMUA 191 for alarm management and rationalisation, and ISA-101 for high-performance HMI graphics and situation awareness. These are explained and applied, not name-dropped.
It opens with what a DCS is and where it sits - DCS versus PLC versus SCADA - then moves into architecture: controllers, I/O, redundancy, and the networks that tie them together.
The hardware and I/O lesson covers signal conditioning and marshalling, and the platforms lesson gives an honest orientation to Honeywell Experion, Emerson DeltaV, ABB 800xA, and Yokogawa Centum so the concepts transfer across whichever system you work on.
Control strategy is covered across two lessons: PID, loop tuning and controller modes first, then the advanced schemes - cascade, ratio, feedforward and override - that real processes actually need.
Function block configuration shows how control modules and the database are built, and the HMI lesson applies ISA-101 - grey backgrounds, situation awareness, and high-performance graphics that reduce operator error.
Alarm management is treated as its own discipline: ISA-18.2 and EEMUA 191, rationalisation, and the metrics that distinguish a manageable alarm system from an unworkable one.
The course is built by a practising engineer with 15+ years specifying and commissioning DCS on oil and gas and energy projects - including database build, bulk engineering, FAT, loop checks and SAT. The workflow, commissioning, and operations lessons reflect what actually happens from database to live plant, including backups, patching and lifecycle.
If you work with a DCS - and you want to engineer it rather than just operate around one - start with the architecture lessons and work through to the control strategy section project.
Who this course is for
C&I, control and automation engineers who specify, configure or commission a DCS
Control room operators and DCS technicians who want to engineer the system, not just run it
Commissioning, maintenance and operations staff supporting DCS loop checks, SAT and day-to-day running
System integrators and vendor engineers working on Honeywell, Emerson, ABB or Yokogawa platforms
Process, electrical and project engineers reviewing DCS architecture, alarms and HMI design
Technical sales and application staff at DCS and control system vendors
Graduates, apprentices and career changers entering process control who need practitioner-level grounding

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