QualifiedMedium risk

Travel limit stops a direction too early

The drive stops short in one direction — a travel limit is operating before the load reaches the proper end position, cutting the movement off early.

Safety first

Travel limits protect against overtravel and crushing. Don't adjust or bypass a limit to gain travel until you're sure it's safe and correct. Keep clear of the moving load.

Isolate, lock out / tag out, and prove dead before working unless a live test is specifically required, authorised, and carried out under proper supervision. Always follow local regulations, your site procedures, and the equipment manufacturer's documentation.

Full detail — causes, the why, and common mistakes.

Likely causes

Ranked from most to least likely.

  1. 1

    Limit switch out of position / drifted

    Most likely

    The limit or its actuator/cam has shifted, so it operates before the true end of travel.

  2. 2

    Bent actuator or worn cam

    #2

    A bent lever or worn cam triggers the switch earlier than intended.

  3. 3

    Wrong limit operating (slowdown vs stop)

    #3

    A slowdown or intermediate limit is being read as the stop limit.

  4. 4

    Intermittent limit contact

    Least likely

    A flaky limit contact false-triggers early.

Reports are saved on this device to reflect what you actually find.

Testing sequence

Work through one test at a time. Expected reading and what each result means.

Test 1 of 3
1

Run toward the limit and watch exactly where/when it operates relative to the intended stop.

Expected reading

Limit operates at the correct end position.

If it passes

It stops in the right place — the early stop is elsewhere.

If it fails

It operates early — check the switch position and actuator.

View all expected readings at once
1. Run toward the limit and watch exactly where/when it operates relative to the intended stop.
Limit operates at the correct end position.
2. Isolate and inspect the limit's mounting, actuator/cam, and confirm it's the correct (stop) limit.
Correctly positioned, undamaged actuator on the right limit.
3. Operate the limit by hand and check its contact switches cleanly (no early/false make).
Clean, repeatable switching at the right point.

Fault-finding flowchart

The same logic as a decision tree.

  1. 1
    start

    Stops too early one direction

    → step 2
  2. 2
    decision

    Does the limit operate at the correct end position?

    Yes→ step 3No→ step 4
  3. 3
    result

    Limit is fine — the early stop is from another cause.

  4. 4
    decision

    Is the limit correctly positioned, undamaged, and the right (stop) limit?

    Yes→ step 5No→ step 6
  5. 5
    decision

    Does the contact switch cleanly by hand?

    Yes→ step 7No→ step 8
  6. 6
    result

    Drifted/bent/wrong limit — correct it (safely).

  7. 7
    result

    Re-verify the position setup.

  8. 8
    result

    Intermittent/false-triggering — replace the limit.

Common mistakes apprentices make

  • Moving a limit to gain travel without checking it's safe to do so.
  • Confusing a slowdown limit with the stop limit.
  • Not spotting a bent actuator triggering early.
  • Ignoring an intermittent contact that false-trips.

When to stop & escalate

On hoists, doors, and anything that can overtravel, limit positions are safety-critical — confirm against the machine's safe limits before adjusting. Replace, don't bodge, a faulty limit.

If you're past your competence, authorisation, or the safe limits of the job — stop and hand it on. There's no fault worth getting hurt over.

Related faults

Learn the theory

How the gear and circuits behind this fault actually work.