Studio 5000 Multi Version -

v20 → v21 → v24 → v28 → v30 → v31 → v32 → v33 → v34 → v35. (Yes, skip v13, v16, and v19 unless a machine from 2010 forces your hand.) The "Multi-Version" Pain Points (And Fixes) 1. The Hard Drive Hog A full install of Studio 5000 v35 with all the add-ons (FT View, Linx, Security) takes roughly 15–20 GB . If you install 8 versions, that is nearly 150 GB.

If you have been in the Rockwell Automation world for more than six months, you have heard the dreaded phrase: “This project was created in a newer version of Studio 5000. Please upgrade your software.”

Drop a comment if you still have to support v13. (I’m sorry.) studio 5000 multi version

Use a dedicated VM (VMware or Hyper-V) for Rockwell. Take a snapshot before each new version install. If it breaks, roll back in 2 minutes. 2. The RSLinx Conflict RSLinx Classic is shared across all versions. You only install it once (usually with your oldest version). Newer versions will try to update it. Let them. But if RSLinx stops seeing your USB-to-DF1 adapter after installing v33, repair the oldest version of RSLinx you have. 3. Opening the Wrong Version Double-clicking an .ACD file always opens the last installed version of Studio 5000, not the version it was written in.

Or worse: “Unable to open. Expected revision 30.11, found revision 33.00.” v20 → v21 → v24 → v28 →

Why you need v20 through v35 on the same PC, and how to keep your sanity (and hard drive) intact.

You cannot run a modern plant with one version of Logix Designer. One line might run on a legacy CompactLogix L32E (v20), while the new high-speed line runs on an L83ES (v35). You need them all. If you install 8 versions, that is nearly 150 GB

If you install v35 first and then try to install v20, you will corrupt the common factory libraries. You will end up wiping your VM and starting over.

Here is the hard truth about running on a single engineering workstation. The Golden Rule (Do Not Break This) Version order matters. Install from oldest to newest.

I’ve written it for an automation engineer or maintenance lead who is frustrated by "Version not found" errors. Taming the Beast: A Sane Guide to Managing Multiple Versions of Studio 5000