Commercial Operator Wiring & Controls
Three-button stations, contactors, interlocks, multi-door coordination, and 3-phase operator considerations.
- Wire and test three-button stations and emergency stop circuits
- Explain contactor, transformer, and fusing roles in commercial operators
- Describe interlock systems for multi-door coordination and wicket doors
- Identify three-phase motor wiring and rotation verification methods
Lesson 1
Three-Button Station & Emergency Stop Wiring
Commercial Control Stations
Commercial garage door operators use three-button control stations as the primary user interface. Unlike residential one-touch wall buttons, commercial stations have dedicated buttons for each function:
- OPEN - raises the door; door stops when button is released (momentary) or runs to full open (maintained)
- STOP - halts all door movement immediately
- CLOSE - lowers the door; may require constant pressure for UL 325 compliance
Residential Wall Button
Buttons: 1 (toggle open/close/stop)
Wiring: 2-conductor low-voltage
Logic: Opener determines action
Commercial Three-Button
Buttons: 3 (Open - Stop - Close)
Wiring: Multi-conductor low-voltage
Logic: Each button has a dedicated function
Emergency Stop Wiring
The emergency stop circuit on commercial operators uses normally closed (NC) contacts wired in series. This fail-safe design ensures that:
- Cutting the wire stops the door (open circuit = stop)
- Pressing the E-stop button opens the circuit and stops the door
- Multiple E-stop buttons can be wired in series - pressing any one stops the door
Multiple Station Wiring
Large commercial facilities may have control stations at multiple locations (inside, outside, loading dock office). These stations wire in parallel for Open and Close functions but in series for Stop and E-stop functions. This ensures any station can stop the door regardless of what other stations are doing.
E-Stop Wiring Is Life Safety
Emergency stop circuits are life-safety wiring. Always verify with a meter that the E-stop circuit is normally closed and that pressing any E-stop button opens the circuit. Test every E-stop station individually.
Commercial operators use three-button stations (Open-Stop-Close) with normally closed E-stop circuits wired in series. Multiple stations connect in parallel for Open/Close and in series for Stop/E-stop.