6100E Series User Guide
6100E Series User Guide
6100E Series User Guide
User guide
invensys E U R O T H E R M
E U ROT H E R M
Declaration of Conformity
Manufacturer's name: Manufacturer's address: Product type: Models: Eurotherm Limited Faraday Close, Worthing, West Sussex, BN13 3PL, United Kingdom Paperless graphic recorders 6100A 6180A 6100E Status level A1 and above Status level A1 and above Status level A1 and above.
EN61010-1: 2001 EN61326-1: 1997 Class A (including amendments A1, A2 and A3) EN61326-1: 1997 Industrial locations (including amendments A1, A2 and A3)
Eurotherm Limited hereby declares that the above products conform to the safety and EMC specifications listed. Eurotherm Limited further declares that the above products comply with the EMC Directive 2004/108/EC, and also with the Low Voltage Directive 2006/95/EC. Signed: Dated: Signed for and on behalf of Eurotherm Limited Mark Green (VP (acting) R&D)
IA249986U670 Issue 2 Nov 07 (CN24008)
E U ROT H E R M
Page
INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 INSTALLATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 PROCESS VARIABLE DISPLAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 SETTING UP THE RECORDER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 FILE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 MODBUS TCP SLAVE COMMUNICATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 TRANSMITTER POWER SUPPLY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146
ANNEX A TECHNICAL SPECIFICATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149 ANNEX B REFERENCE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157 ANNEX C WEB SERVER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179 INDEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183
EFFECTiViTY
This manual refers to recorders with software version 4.3. The software version fitted to the recorder can be determined by accessing the About screen, as described in section 4.6.8.
Page
Page
saFETY NoTEs
WARNING Any interruption of the protective conductor inside or outside the apparatus, or disconnection of the protective earth terminal is likely to make the apparatus dangerous under some fault conditions. Intentional interruption is prohibited. Note: in order to comply with the requirements of safety standard BS EN61010, the recorder shall have one of the following as a disconnecting device, fitted within easy reach of the operator, and labelled as the disconnecting device. a. A switch or circuit breaker which complies with the requirements of IEC947-1 and IEC947-3 b. A separable coupler which can be disconnected without the use of a tool c. A separable plug, without a locking device, to mate with a socket outlet in the building. 1. Before any other connection is made, the protective earth terminal shall be connected to a protective conductor. The mains (supply voltage) wiring must be terminated within the connector in such a way that, should it slip in the cable clamp, the Earth wire would be the last wire to become disconnected. In the case of portable equipment, the protective earth terminal must remain connected (even if the recorder is isolated from the mains supply), if any of the I/O circuits are connected to hazardous voltages*. The mains supply fuse within the power supply is not replaceable. If it is suspected that the fuse is faulty, the manufacturers local service centre should be contacted for advice. Whenever it is likely that protection has been impaired, the unit shall be made inoperative, and secured against accidental operation. The manufacturers nearest service centre should be contacted for advice. Any adjustment, maintenance and repair of the opened apparatus under voltage, should be avoided as far as possible and, if inevitable, shall be carried out only by a skilled person who is aware of the hazard involved. Where conductive pollution (e.g. condensation, carbon dust) is likely, adequate air conditioning/filtering/ sealing etc. must be installed in the recorder enclosure. Signal and supply voltage wiring should be kept separate from one another. Where this is impractical, shielded cables should be used for the signal wiring. If the equipment is used in a manner not specified by the manufacturer, the protection provided by the equipment might be impaired.
2. 3. 4. 5.
6. 7. 8.
* A full definition of Hazardous voltages appears under Hazardous live in BS EN61010. Briefly, under normal operating conditions, hazardous voltages are defined as being > 30V RMS (42.2V peak) or > 60V dc.
Refer to the manual for instructions Protective earth This recorder for ac supply only This recorder for dc supply only This recorder for either ac or dc supply Risk of electric shock
UsEr gUiDE
1 iNTroDUCTioN
This document describes the installation, operation and configuration of a paperless graphic recorder.
144 mm
Access Flap
Panel cutout 138mm x 138mm (+1 - 0) or 5.44 x 5.44 inches (+0.04 - 0.00)
Minimum recommended inter-unit spacing
Side clamps x = 15 mm (0.6 inch) y = 10 mm (0.4 in) Top/bottom clamps x = 10 mm (0.4 in) y = 15 mm (0.6 inch)
35 mm
View on underside
a b
Vertical
137 mm
102 mm
106.9 mm
Front view
137 mm
2 .2 ElECTriCal iNsTallaTioN
2 .2 .1 signal wiring
Figures 2.2.1a shows connector locations for the recorder; figure 2.2.1b gives pinouts. CoNNECTor WiriNg DETails Maximum wire size = 4.13mm2 (11 AWG) Minimum wire size = 0.081mm2 (28 AWG) Design torque = 0.35Nm.
Safety Earth (M4) E L Ethernet RJ45 N Mains (supply) connection
Option slot
Input channels 1 to 6
Channel 1 V+ VI
Channel 2 V+ VI
Channel 3 V+ VI
Channel 6 (Option) V+ VI
V+ V-
V+
V-
V+
V-
I
Attenuator assembly
V+
V-
I
Shunt assembly
DC milliamps
-200 to + 200 V dc
V+
V-
V+
V-
V+
V-
RTD
3-wire resistance thermometer
RTD
2-wire resistance thermometer
-30V < Vin < +0.8V = active +2V < Vin < 30V = not active +0.8 < Vin < 2V = not defined
Potentiometer
Potentiometer
V+
Vnc
V+
V-
com
no
9 10 11 12 13
nc
14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22
Relay 2 c
no nc
no nc
+V or ac
Earth
0V or ac
Figure 2.2.2 Low voltage supply pinout (view on fixed connector face)
2 .3 aCCEss FlaP
The access flap is located immediately below the recorder screen. To open the flap, insert one or more fingers under the flap handle, and pull it outwards and down (figure 2.3). Located behind the flap are (from left to right) 1. 2. 3. a stylus (press to eject) a slot for a Compact Flash card a USB port (usbfront).
USBfront
2 .3 .1 stylus
A stylus suitable for use on the touch screen is located in a storage area to the left of the Compact Flash Card slot.
2 .3 .2 Card slot
The slot for the Compact Flash card is located centrally behind the flap. If a card is already fitted, it is removed by a double operation of the eject button. See details in figure 2.3.2 below CaUTioN Removal of the memory device whilst archiving is in progress causes irreparable damage to the filing structure on the device, rendering it unusable. For this reason, archiving should be suspended (section 4.1) (wait for the green section of the disk icon (section 3.1.3) to go white) before the device is removed. It is strongly recommended that the Remove Media facility described in section 3.1.4 (Summary menu) be used to ensure that it is safe to remove the memory device.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 2 .3 .2 CarD sloT (Cont .) lED iNDiCaTors Three LED indicators are located above the card slot as shown in figure 2.3.2b, below.
Card activity LED (yellow) Power/watchdog LED (green) USBFront Power LED (yellow)
Ejector
Card slot
Group 1
Alarm threshold 0.2000 0.4000 0.6000
99%
14:39:26 21-Jan-08
Channel descriptor
0.0000
0.7612 V
0.8000 1.0000
14:39:26 21Jan08
An animated bar appears over the date, when the recorder is busy.
Off channel(s)
Navigation keys
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 3 ProCEss VariaBlE DisPlaY (Cont .) CUrrENT TraCE alarM iCoNs In each of the different types of PV display, each channels faceplate gives the status of the channels alarms. The status of each alarm is shown by one of the icons depicted in table 3, either flashing (if it is active and unacknowledged) or on continuously (if it is active and acknowledged). (See section 3.1.4, below, for a description of how to acknowledge alarms.) Absolute alarm threshold icons and deviation alarm bars appear in any display which includes a scale. For deviation alarms the bar stretches from (Reference - Deviation) to (Reference + Deviation). Note: Trigger alarms do not display threshold marks or bars, or faceplate symbols.
Absolute High Absolute Low Deviation in Deviation out Rate-of-change Rising Rate-of-change Falling Faceplate symbols Table 3 Alarm icons Absolute Absolute Deviation Rate of low high In / Out change
d d
d R d No Horizontal indication scales Vertical No R indication scales For Deviation alarms, R = Reference; d = deviation
Scale symbols
3 .1 sTaTUs Bar
This appears across the top of the display, and contains the items described below.
3 .1 .2 Page name
Initially this shows the current groups descriptor. The name changes according to context for example Operator or Config-Archive
3 .1 .3 alarm indication
This area of the display can contain a number of status icons: Instrument alarm, Channel alarm, Battery change, Disk status, FTP in progress, and so on. Pressing this area of the screen calls the Summary menu - (section 3.1.4) allowing the user to view active instrument alarms, to acknowledge all channel alarms, to display the Alarm Summary or Message Log page. Media removal strategy is also controlled from this pop-up. For channel alarm symbols refer to Current Trace Alarm Icons, above. iNsTrUMENT alarM This indicator appears, flashing, if any of the following errors are active. The instrument alarm summary page, described in Section 3.1.4, allows the user to view such instrument alarms as are active. Message explains archive failure. This message appears if the battery has failed, and the unit has been switched off. Clock failure Internal clock was corrupt at power up, or the time has never been set. Can be caused by battery failure, in which case the battery icon will also be visible. The error is cleared by setting the time and date. Server time forced to 00:00 1/1/1900. Channel error Indicates a hardware failure in the channel circuit or in the internal CJ temperature measurement Channel failure Indicates a hardware failure in the input channel circuit (see note). DHCP Server failure For instruments with IP address lookup set to Get from DHCP Server, this alarm occurs if the recorder cannot obtain an IP address from the server. See section 4.5 for details. FTP Archiving file lost Archive failed. A file which has not been archived, has been detected. FTP Archiving too slow Remote archive is too infrequent. The recorder effectively switches to Automatic (section 4.3.4) to ensure that data is not lost. FTP Primary Server Failure This error is set if the recorder fails, after two attempts, to establish communications with the primary server as defined in Archive Configuration (section 4.3.4). After the second attempt has failed, the Secondary server is tried. FTP Secondary Server Failure This error is set if the recorder fails, after two attempts, to establish communications with the secondary server as defined in Archive Configuration (section 4.3.4). See also FTP Primary Server Failure, above. Insufficient non-volatile memory... There is insufficient memory available for the configuration. Can be caused by use of Rolling Average maths functions. Internal flash: \application\ required repair Error found in the internal file system at power-up, and corrected. Internal flash: \history\ required repair Error found in the internal file system at power-up, and corrected. Internal flash: \screens\ required repair Error found in the internal file system at power-up, and corrected. Internal flash: \user\ required repair Error found in the internal file system at power-up, and corrected. Internal flash: \user\ is full Appears if the User partition is full. To clear, either user screens must be simplified or files must be deleted from \User\, or both. Maths Channel failure Appears if, for example, the divisor of a divide function is zero. Media Archiving file lost Archive failed. A file which has not been archived, has been detected. Media Archiving too slow Archive is too infrequent. The recorder effectively switches to Automatic (section 4.3.4) to ensure that data is not lost. Archive failed -(message) Battery-backed RAM cleared
Note: Unlike other instrument alarms, Channel Failure is not self clearing. Once the cause of the failure is rectified, the recorder must be power cycled in order to clear the alarm. HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08 User guide Page 11
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 3 .1 .3 alarM iNDiCaTioN (iNsTrUMENT alarMs) (Cont .) Network boot failure The recorder is unable to establish connection with the BootP or DHCP server. This might be caused by, for example, cable failure, network hardware failure, etc. Message explains recording failure - due to file error, internal overflow etc. This error is set if the archive storage device is corrupt, wrongly formatted etc. Becomes active only when an Archive is attempted. Archive storage device full. Becomes active only when an Archive is in progress. This error is set if:a) the year received from the server is < 2001 or > 2035 or b) the configured SNTP server cannot be accessed. Set if 5 or more Time change events are caused by the SNTP server within 24 hrs. A Time change event occurs whenever the recorder time is found to be more than 2 seconds different from the server time. The alarm does not appear until 24 hours have elapsed since the first of the five or more Time Change events occurred. USB power fault - too much current being drawn by a USB device (max 500 mA). USB power fault - too much current being drawn by all USB devices (max 1100 mA) Unsupported USB device inserted.
Recording failure - (message) Removable media failure Removable media full SNTP server failure
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 3 .1 .3 alarM iNDiCaTioN (Cont .) ChaNNEl alarM This red bell indicator appears if any channel is in alarm. The symbol is illuminated continuously if all alarms are acknowledged or flashes if any active alarm is unacknowledged. Refer to ALARM ACKNOWLEDGEMENT below, for details of how to acknowledge alarms. ChaNgE BaTTErY This flashing indicator first appears when the battery voltage (checked every 15 minutes) indicates that the battery is approaching the end of its useful life. The indicator continues to flash until the battery is replaced (B2.2 in Annex B). The indicator does not appear if the battery is not fitted. DisK iCoN This shows the free space available on whatever mass storage medium is fitted (if any), and selected for Archive destination (note 1). The disk icon appears soon after the device is inserted (but see note 2). During archiving, the colour of the central area of the disk changes to green (see note 3). No other disk activity (e.g. save/restore configuration) is indicated.
This area of the icon coloured green during any archive activity (not necessarily to the device selected in Archive configuration).
99%
Notes 1. The icon appears only when a memory device is present, AND when that memory device has been selected in the Archive to media selection in archive configuration (section 4.3.4). For example: if a memory stick is inserted in usbfront, but Archive to Media is set to mediacard, then the disk icon ap.pears only if a suitable card is present in the mediacard slot. 2. When a disk is inserted into a USB floppy disk drive which is connected to the recorder, the disk icon appears only after the disk has been accessed, (either by reading from it or writing to it), or after the file system has been opened by touching the file key. (This note does not apply for disks which have been inserted before the disk drive is plugged in.) 3. The central area goes green whenever local archiving is taking place - not only when archiving is taking place to the memory device selected in Archive configuration. FTP iCoN The FTP icon appears to the right of the disc icon position whenever transfer activity is taking place.
3 .1 .4 summary menu
This pop-up display appears if the Alarm Indication area at the top of the display is touched. Figure 3.1.4 shows the display.
Touch Alarm area (e.g. channel alarm symbol) Summary Instrument Alarm Summary Ack all Alarms Alarm Summary Batch Summary Message Log Remove Media
Ok
Figure 3.1.4b Typical Instrument alarm summary display
This contains a list of the currently active instrument alarms. For a list of possible alarms and their definitions, see section 3.1.3, above. aCK all alarMs
Yes confirms all active, unconfirmed alarms. This page can also be displayed by touching an alarm in the alarm summary page, described below.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 3 .1 .4 sUMMarY MENU (Cont .) alarM sUMMarY PagE As shown in figure 3.1.4d, below, the alarm summary page contains the following information for the current group: 1. Alarm identifier. This appears as a point ID, followed by the relevant alarm number in parentheses. For example, Alarm 1 on maths channel 6 would appear as: D6 (1). Maths channels are prefixed by D. Totalisers are prefixed by T and Counters are prefixed by C. Input channels are not prefixed. Alarm threshold for absolute alarms only The current process value for the point An alarm symbol (see Table 3). Alarm symbols flash until acknowledged. Notes: 1. Alarms are always listed in Point/Alarm order with input channels first, followed by derived channels, totalisers and counters, if these options are fitted. 2 When the alarm source returns to its non-alarm state: Unlatched alarms are removed from the list whether or not they have been acknowledged; latched alarms remain displayed until acknowledged. See section 4.3.3 for a description of alarm types and actions. 3. There are no time or history components associated with the Alarm Summary. If Alarm messages have been enabled in the groups configuration (section 4.3.2), then alarm initiation/acknowledgement times and dates can be found from the trend and trend history displays, described in section 3.4 or in Message log described later in this section. 4. If an alarm is active on a channel which is not included in any group, then although the channel alarm symbol will flash, the alarm will not appear in any of the alarm summary pages.
Touch Alarm area (e.g. channel alarm symbol)
2 3 4
Summary
Instrument Alarm Summary Ack all Alarms
Ok
See section 3.2.1 See section 3.2.2
Ack Alarm
Yes
No
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 3 .1 .4 sUMMarY MENU (Cont .) alarM aCKNoWlEDgEMENT Alarms can be acknowledged individually, on a group basis, or globally (all alarms). INDIVIDUAL ALARMS Individual alarms are acknowledged from the alarm summary page by touching the relevant item (highlights yellow), then touching Yes in the resulting pop-up confirmation box. Figure 3.1.3a, above, attempts to show this process. GROUP ALARMS Alarms can be acknowledged on a group basis by calling the alarm summary page, then pressing the Options key (section 3.2), the Ack Group Alarms key and finally, Yes in the resulting pop-up confirmation box. Figure 3.1.4e below, attempts to show this process.
Option Menu
Note
No
ALL ALARMS To acknowledge all active alarms, touch (e.g.) the channel alarm icon at the top of the screen. From the resulting Summary menu, select Ack all Alarms, then finally, touch Yes in the resulting pop-up confirmation box. Note: The options menu is context sensitive, and may, therefore, not appear as illustrated above. BaTCh sUMMarY Not applicable this model of recorder
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 3 .1 .4 sUMMarY MENU (Cont .) MEssagE log Note: Message log can also be selected using the Root menu/Goto View/Message log key. If there are more messages than can be displayed in the height of the screen, a scroll bar appears to allow hidden messages to be displayed. Messages are retrieved from the history files in batches of 100 messages. If there are more than 100 messages, Earlier messages.. appears after the hundredth message. Touching Earlier messages.. calls the option menu, and touching Earlier messages.. in this menu, calls the next batch of 100, and so on. If applicable, operating Later messages.. / Later messages.. calls the previously displayed 100 messages. As can be seen from figure 3.1.4f the list of messages can be filtered both by type and by time. For example, setting the message type to Alarm and the period filter to Last Day excludes all messages except alarm messages which have occurred within the previous 24 hours. (For clarity, the figure shows both filters open. In fact, only one can be open at a time)
Summary
Instrument Alarm Summary Ack all Alarms Alarm Summary Batch summary Message Log Remove Media
Engineer
Group 1 All Messages All History Last Hour Last Day Last 3 Days Last Week
15:24:36 28/01/08
28/08/01 15:24:09 Alarm(s) on 1(1) Alarms 28/01/08 15:23:21 Alarm(s) on 2(1) 28/01/08 15:22:56 Alarm(s) off 2(1)
General 28/01/08 15:22:09 Alarm(s) off 1(1) Power Up
28/01/08 14:48:57 Archiving resumed Last Month Batches 28/01/08 12:38:51 Archiving suspended
Logins All History
MESSAGE TYPE FILTER All Messages System Alarms Power Up General All messages are displayed Only System messages and instrument alarms are listed Only alarm on/off and acknowledgement messages appear. Displays power up messages only including Config Revision and Security revision. See About (section 4.6.8) for more details. Displays operator notes/custom messages etc.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 3 .1 .4 sUMMarY MENU (Cont .) MESSAGE TYPE FILTER (Cont.) Batches Logins Signings Audit trail Reports Not applicable to this recorder model Lists only changes in login. Not applicable to this recorder model Not applicable to this recorder model Not applicable to this recorder model.
PERIOD FILTER This picklist allows the user to select one of the following to define the period of time that the message list is to encompass: All History, Last Month (28 days), Last Week, Last 3 Days, Last Day or Last Hour. OPTION MENU Touching a message (highlights yellow) calls the Option Menu* as shown in figure 3.1.4g, below.
Engineer
15:24:36 28/01/08
28/08/01 15:24:09 Alarm(s) on 1(1) 28/01/08 15:23:21 Alarm(s) on 2(1) 28/01/08 15:22:09 Alarm(s) off 1(1)
To call the Option Menu, touch the message (highlights yellow) or the Option key
Figure 3.1.4g Message Log options menu
See section 3.5. Operating the Enter History key causes the recorder to display that page of history which includes the highlighted message. See section 3.4.1 for details of trend history. When in Trend history mode, operating the Message Log key calls that message log page which contains those messages which are nearest the trend history cursor time. Full details If the highlighted message is wider than the display, the whole message can be displayed by operating the Full Details key. Refresh/Earlier messages../Later messages.. Refresh places (at the top of the screen), any messages, which have occurred since the Message Log page was last entered, or since the last Refresh. If earlier or later messages have been selected, then Refresh is replaced by Earlier messages.. or Later messages.. as appropriate, and operating the key calls the next or previously displayed group of 100 messages to the display respectively. * See overleaf User guide Page 18 HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 3 .1 .4 sUMMarY MENU (Cont .) Message log option menu (Cont .) * The option menu can also be called by touching the option key. In this case: a. Enter History calls the current Trend History display, as described in section 3.4.1, and b. Because no message is highlighted, the Full Details key is not enabled, Notes: 1 Selecting Enter History whilst either Earlier Messages or Later Messages is highlighted calls the current History page. 2 If the Option Menu has timed out leaving a message highlighted, and the option key is operated, then this is equivalent to reselecting the message. rEMoVE MEDia This key is provided to help ensure that any local memory storage device is removed only when it is safe to do so. Touching the key results in either an OK to remove archive media, or a DO NOT REMOVE Archive Media! message, as appropriate. See figure 3.1.4h Caution Removal of Compact Flash cards whilst archiving is taking place can lead to permanent, irreparable damage to the device, rendering it unusable.
Archive Media
3 .2 NaVigaTioN KEYs
Below the display screen are six printed keys which allow the user to perform various context-related tasks such as changing display mode (section 3.4), accessing the recorder configuration, archiving data etc. In addition to this set of keys, left and right arrow keys and open/close folder keys appear when relevant.
Page up
Page down
Left
Right
Option
Root
Close folder
Open folder
Left cursor
Right cursor
3 .2 .1 Key functions
Page up Page down Left arrow Right arrow Option Root rooT MENU KEYs Home Operator Used, as appropriate, to recall the previous (higher level) display page, to call the previous display mode and to scroll through previous text entries. Where relevant, the function of this key is mimicked by the Close folder key. Used, where appropriate, to call a further (lower level) display page, to call the next display mode and to scroll through previous text entries. Where relevant, the function of this key is mimicked by the Open folder key. Used to navigate backwards through a text string when editing or to select the previous channel whilst in configuration. Where relevant, the function of this key is mimicked by the Left cursor key. Used to navigate forwards through a text string when editing or to select the next channel whilst in configuration. Where relevant, the function of this key is mimicked by the Right cursor key. Calls a pop-up Options menu allowing the user to carry out functions such as entering/ quitting history, turning channel cycling on and off etc. according to context. Calls the Root Menu as described below. To quit the Root menu, touch the root key again. Causes a return to the Home page (vertical trend display) from any page in the recorder. Causes the top level Operator page to appear. The appearance of this display is dictated by the security level that the recorder is set to, and by the access level of the user. As despatched from the factory, the recorder is in logged out mode and the Operator page contains only Archive, Security and System keys. Further details appear in Access to configuration below. Allows the file system in that area of Flash memory that is accessible to the user, and the file system on any bulk storage device fitted, to be viewed. See section 5 for details. This key is provided to help ensure that any local memory storage device is removed only when it is safe to do so. Touching the key results in either an OK to remove archive media, or a DO NOT REMOVE Archive Media! message, as appropriate. For more details see section 3.1.4. Allows the user to select a display mode, as shown in figure 3.2.1. As an alternative, display modes can be scrolled-through using the up and down arrow navigation keys. Goto View also offers an alternative means of entry to the Alarm Summary page described in section 3.1.4, and also allows entry to the Message Log pages, described below. Not used on this recorder model.
Go to View
Goto Group
Root Menu
Home File Goto View Operator
Remove Media
Goto Group
alarM sUMMarY The Root menu/Goto View/Alarm summary key calls the Alarm summary page to the screen. Alternatively, Alarm summary can be selected from the Summary menu. See section 3.1.4 for more details of the alarm summary page. MEssagE log The Root menu/Goto View/Message log key calls the Message Log page for to the screen. Alternatively, Message Log can be selected from the Summary menu. See section 3.1.4 for full details of the message log.
3 .3 FirsT sWiTCh-oN
When power is applied the recorder initialises, and once this process is complete, the home page is displayed. It is unlikely that this will contain any useful information because the input channels will not, as yet, have been configured to suit the type of input signals being applied to them, as described in section 4. Notes: 1 There is no on/off switch associated with the recorder. 2 Date, time and the message Power Up are printed on the chart each time power is applied to the recorder, followed by a similar message giving Config Revision and Security Revision (always zero for this recorder model. 3 A red line is drawn across the width of the chart at power up The recorder has four security levels as follows: Logged out Operator Engineer Service No access to recorder configuration is possible. Only Archive, Login/security and the System About functions can be accessed - via the root menu. As Logged out, but alarms may be acknowledged. Accessed by entering 100 as the password (section 3.3.1, below). Full access to all recorder functions is available. Full access to all recorder functions and to areas of recorder memory for diagnostic purposes. For use only by Service Engineers.
3 .3 .1 access to Configuration
1 2 3 4 5 As shown in figure 3.3.1a, once the recorder has initialised, touch the current access level key Touch the Logged out field and then touch Engineer from the resulting picklist. Touch the blank Password area to call the keyboard display (see figure 3.3.1b). Touch <Numeric><1><0><0><OK> to enter the password 100. The screen reverts to the Home page. Operation of the Root key followed by a touch on the Operator key calls the top level page allowing access to the Archive, Save/Restore, Config, Security, Network and System areas described in section 4 below.
1
Touch current access level key Logged out
Group 1
10:22:04 29/01/08
Login
Select the required access level and enter the password if required.
2
Touch logged out area ...
3 For Engineer level, touch the password area (when it appears) and enter 100. Clicking on OK causes the screen to go to the home page with the new access level displayed in the current access level key.
Note: The login screen, above, can also be called by operating the Root menu, then Operator then Security, then Login. In such a case, the screen reverts to the Operator page rather than returning to the home page once login has been achieved.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 3 .3 .1 aCCEss To CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) TEXT sTriNg ENTrY The keyboard which appears when the password area is touched is the same as that which appears when any non-numeric text string entry is required (e.g. channel descriptor). Figures 3.3.1b and 3.3.1c below are an attempt, within the limitations of the illustrating process, to depict the available keyboards and thus the available character set. Actual entry of the text string is by touching the relevant keys. When editing existing text strings, the existing text string appears highlighted, and will be replaced in its entirety by the first character entered. To avoid this, the left arrow key* can be touched to unhighlight it. The down and up arrow keys can be used to scroll through previously entered text strings. Immediately below the keyboard are six keys with the functions listed below. When active, the background colour changes to yellow for as long as the key is active. Shift* Once the shift key has been pressed, the next-entered letter appears as a capital; subsequent letters are in lower case. Caps* When pressed, all subsequent letters appear as capital letters until the Caps key is operated again BSpc This backspace key deletes character to the left of the cursor. Ovr If selected, the next-entered character replaces (overwrites) the existing character to the right of the cursor position. If not selected, the next-entered character in inserted into the existing text string at the cursor position. Ok Used to save the new text string and to return to the page from which the keyboard was called. Cancel Causes a return to the page from which the keyboard was called without saving the new string. *Notes 1. The character on each display key is always a capital letter, whether or not the actual character being entered is in capitals or lower case. 2. The cursor keys mimic the function of the left and right arrow Navigation keys. 3. As an alternative, text may be entered using a suitable keyboard connected via the USB port behind the access flap.
Cursor keys Text string (all * for password)
**
Q A Z W S X E D C R F V T G B Y H N Symbols U J M I K \ O L . P
Alphabet
Alphabet 2
Numeric
Shift
Shift key
Caps
BSpc
Backspace
Ovr
Ok
Cancel
Caps Lock
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 3 .3 .1 aCCEss To CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) TEXT sTriNg ENTrY (CoNT .)
Text String
Alphabet
Alphabet 2
Numeric
Symbols
Shift
Caps
BSpc
Ovr
Ok
Cancel
Text String
7 4 1 0 8 5 2 E . 9 6 3 ,
Alphabet
Alphabet 2
Numeric
Symbols
Shift
Caps
BSpc
Ovr
Ok
Cancel
Text String
! @ | " _ ' ' + ~
3
$ = #
^ } >
& [ ,
* ] .
( : ?
) ; /
2
<
Alphabet
Alphabet 2
Numeric
Symbols
Shift
Caps
BSpc
Ovr
Ok
Cancel
3 .4 DisPlaY MoDEs
The display modes described below allow the currently displayed groups process values (channels, totalisers etc.- known collectively as points) to be displayed as vertical or horizontal chart traces, as vertical or horizontal bargraphs or as numeric values. The various display modes are cycled-through using the up/down arrow keys, or a specific mode (or view) can be selected from the Root Menu Goto View key. The Home key returns the user to the Vertical Trend display from anywhere in the Operator or Configuration pages in the recorder. TrEND hisTorY Trend history, allows the user to review group history. The maximum amount that can be reviewed depends on a number of factors, including how many points are configured, how rapidly the traces are changing and so on. At a recording rate of 20 mm/hour (see group configuration - section 4.3.2), with all channels configured, a minimum of 30 days worth of traces is available for viewing, provided that the group contents are not re-configured during this period (in which case, the history starts at the end of the re-configuration). The amount of trace visible on the screen depends on the recording rate, the higher the rate, the less trace is visible at any one time. Notes: 1. Trend history mode is available only for groups with Recording Enable enabled (Group configuration - section 4.3.2), and only for vertical, horizontal or circular trend dispplay modes. 2. Trend history mode is vertical for vertical and horizontal for horizontal trend mode. 3. Channel cycling is inhibited in trend history mode. To increment the current channel, touch the faceplate. 4. Group faceplates are not displayed in trend history mode. 5. Operation of the Root/Goto View/Message Log key (section 3.2.1), when in history mode, displays a message log page containing messages which occurred at or near the selected cursor time. To enter trend history mode, the option key can be used (as shown for vertical trend mode in figure 3.4.1b), or the trace area of the screen can be continuously touched until the screen blanks prior to re-drawing. A Preparing History, please wait message appears whilst the re-drawing calculation is taking place. Although tracing stops whilst trace history mode is active, no data is lost. Process Variable values are saved in the recorder memory. Alarms are still scanned-for and any associated action taken. The trend history display is similar to the real-time trend display, but with a dark background and with the addition of a slider control and arrow keys for selecting that part of trend history which is to be displayed. The controls are used as follows: 1. 2. 3. Touching an arrow key causes the trace history to move an incremental amount. Holding an arrow key continuously, causes continuous movement. Touching and dragging the slider, whilst observing the time/date display, allows the user to select the section of history exactly. Touching the slider bar either side of the slider causes a page shift in the relevant direction. The Page up and Page down keys can also be used to provide this function. On first entry to trend history mode, the channel value and the time and date shown in the faceplate are those at the top (vertical trend) or right-hand (horizontal trend) edge of the chart. Touching the screen causes a cursor to appear at point of screen contact. This cursor can be touched and dragged to provide a reference point on the current trace. The displayed value date and time refer to the cursor intersection with the current channel. To return to real-time trending, the Option key is operated, followed by Exit History.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 3 .4 DisPlaY MoDEs (Cont .) TiME ChaNgE rECorDs For vertical and horizontal trend modes a line is drawn across the width of the chart whenever a time discontinuity in the record occurs. These lines disappear if a configuration change is made which causes group history to be lost (such as adding a channel to a group). Red line Blue line Green line A red line is drawn on the trend history chart at power up. A blue line indicates that recording has been disabled/enabled in Group Configuration (section 4.3.2), or by a recording job (section 4.7.9). A green line appears if there has been a time change as a result of a clock job (section 4.7.6), an SNTP synchronisation or by the operator physically changing the recorder time.
Note: Changes from standard time to daylight saving time and back again are not green lined in this way.
Option Menu
Option Key
Home Group faceplates (appear only if Faceplates are selected On from option menu). If there are too many faceplates to fit across the screen, they appear down the right edge instead.
Group 1
10:22:04 29/01/08
Channel descri...
0.7612V
Channel descriptor
0.0000 0.2000 0.4000
Channel 2
0.6000
42.3960 Deg C
0.7612 V
0.8000 1.0000
Faceplate for current channel. Touch and release faceplate to increment channel (or touch pen to select channel). If Channel Cycle On: Current channel increments every 10 seconds.
10:21:37 29/01/08
Option Menu
Note Faceplates On/Off Channel Cycling On Enter History
Trend History mode
Engineer
Group 1 0.7612 V
0.4000 0.6000 0.2000 0.8000
Real time/date Cursor time/date (Touch faceplate to increment channel.) Use arrow key to move minimum amount
Channel descriptor
0.0000
Cursor
Press bar to move one pageful Use arrow key to move minimum amount
Page backwards in time (show older data) Page forwards in time (show newer data)
Option Menu
Note Exit History Message Log
Group 1
0.7612 V
Channel descriptor
Faceplates for current channel. Touch either faceplate to increment channel (or touch required pen icon)
15:21:01 29/01/08
15:23:01 29/01/08
0.000
Message bar
Latest message
If this arrow head is displayed, then touching the message bar dislpays previous messages
One of the channels is defined as being the current or scale channel and this is identified on the chart by its pen icon being diamond shaped rather than triangular as for non-current channels. If a channel is included in the display group, but its status is not good for some reason, then its pen icon is hollow. Each channel in the display group becomes the current channel, in turn, for approximately 10 seconds i.e. the channels are cycled-through, starting with the lowest numbered channel. Once the final channel in the group has been displayed for 10 seconds, the lowest numbered channel is returned to and the sequence repeats. This scrolling process can be stopped using the Channel Cycling key in the Option menu. There are two faceplates associated with this display mode, one above the chart, showing the current channels descriptor and its digital value; the other - to the right of the chart - showing a bargraph representation of the current channels value, together with a scale showing the low and high range values for the channel. Touching either of these faceplates causes the current channel number to increment. To select a particular channel to be the current channel, the relevant pen icon can be touched. In either case, the bargraph and the background colour of the channel descriptor take the colour of the new current channel. Touching the trace for a few seconds, or using the Option key then Enter History calls the Horizontal trend history page. See section 3.4, above for more details. Time and date are printed on the chart immediately to the right of grid lines, and it is to these grid lines that the printed time and date relate.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 3 .4 .2 horiZoNTal TrEND MoDE (Cont .) Below the chart is a message bar, containing the latest message. If there is more than one message, an arrow head icon appears near the right-hand end of the message bar. If this arrow head appears, then touching the message bar calls a pop-up box (figure 3.4.2b) which displays the latest messages. If there are more messages than can be displayed in the box, a slider control appears, which can be used to access previous messages, up to a total of 60 messages. Further messages, cause the oldest messages to be discarded to keep the total to 60. Note: At power-up, only those messages which occurred within the time width of the page are displayed
Engineer
Group 1
0.7612 V
29/01/08 16:14:09 Alarm(s) off 1(1) 29/01/08 16:12:09 Alarms(s) on 1(1) 29/01/08 16:11:21 Alarm(s) on 2(1) 29/01/08 16:10:56 Alarm(s) off 2(1) 29/01/08 16:10:09 Alarm(s) off 1(1) 29/01/08 16:08:09 Alarms(s) on 1(1) 29/01/08 15:53:01 Alarm(s) off 3(4) 29/01/08 15:13:07 Alarm(s) on 3(4) 29/01/08 15:07:01Alarm(s) off 1(1) 29/01/08 15:05:01 Alarms(s) on 1(1) 29/01/08 15:03:21 Alarm(s) on 2(1)
15:21:01 29/01/08
Ok 29/01/08
15:23:01
0.000
The vertical bargraph mode can be called by using the down arrow key. Alternatively, a new display mode can be selected using the Root Menu, Goto View key.
3 .4 .3 Vertical bargraph
Entered from Horizontal Trend mode by means of the down arrow key, or selected from the Root Menu Goto View key, this display mode shows the Process Variable (PV) values as vertical bars with faceplates containing digital values and alarm data. For one or two channels, the faceplates appear above the bars. For more channels, the faceplates appear at the right hand edge of the display Operation of the option key calls the Option menu display for this display page, allowing faceplates to be selected on or off. This feature is available for vertical trend and vertical bargraph displays only. To call the horizontal bargraph display mode, use the down arrow key. Alternatively, a display mode can be selected using the Root Menu, Goto View key. Trend history mode is not available from this display mode. As the number of PVs increases, the bars get narrower. As the bars get narrower, so the scale values become truncated as shown in figure 3.4.3. The bars have a set minimum width, and if the total number of points in the group cannot be displayed within the width of the screen, a horizontal scroll bar appears, allowing hidden bars to be viewed. Similarly, the faceplates reduce in height to a minimum readable height. If there are more point faceplates than can be accommodated within the height of the screen, a vertical scroll bar appears, as shown in the figure, allowing hidden faceplates to be displayed as required.
Engineer
Group 1
11:00:45 30/01/08
Engineer
Group 1 100 150 150 150 Channel 1 0.7612 V Channel 2 42.3960 Channel 3 32.8853 Channel 4 107.5210 Channel 5 107.1660
Deg C
Channel 1
0.7612V
1.0000
Channel 2
1.00
100
11:00:45 30/01/08
42.3960 Deg C
100.0000
Deg C
Deg C
Deg C
0.0000
0.0000
Channel 6 103.9883
Deg C
3 .4 .4 horizontal bargraph
Entered from Vertical bargraph by means of the down arrow key, or selected using the Root Menu Goto View key, this display mode shows the Process Variable (PV) values as horizontal bars with digital values and alarm data displayed, as shown in figure 3.4.4 Note The maximum number of points that can be displayed is 6. If more than six points are enabled scroll bar appears allowing currently hidden channels to be accessed. Trend history mode is not available from this display mode. To call numeric display mode, use the down arrow key. Alternatively, the display mode can be selected using the Root Menu, Goto View key.
Engineer
Group 1
11:00:45 30/01/08
Channel 1
0.0000 1.0000
Channel 2
0.0000 100.0000
Channel 3
0.0000 100.0000
Channel 4
0.0000 150.0000
Channel 5
0.0000 150.0000
Channel 6
0.0000 150.0000
Maths 1
1000.0000 2000.0000 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
3 .4 .5 Numeric display
Entered from Horizontal bargraph mode by means of the down arrow key, or selected using the Root Menu Goto View key, this display mode shows the Process Variable (PV) values as digital values. The format (which is automatically selected) is based on the number of channels in the display group. Figure 3.4.5 shows typical examples of the one and two column versions of this display mode respectively. Within each version, the process variable display areas expand or contract to fill the screen. The display for 5 to 10 points is similar to that shown for More than 10 points, below, but without the scroll bar. Trend history mode is not available from this display mode. Operation of the down arrow key returns to the Vertical Trend Display mode described in section 3.4.1 above. Alternatively, a display mode can be selected using the Root Menu, Goto View key.
Group 1
11:00:45 30/01/08
Engineer
Engineer
Group 1
Channel 1 0.7612 V Channel 3 32.8853 deg c Channel 5 107.1660 deg c Maths 1 1710.03 l/min Maths 3 2031.49 l/min Maths 5 34.24 mins
Channel 2 42.3960 V Channel 4 107.5210 deg c Channel 6 103.9883 deg c Maths 2 903.08 l/min Maths 4 31.39 mins Maths 6 29.74 mins
11:00:45 30/01/08
deg C
deg C
3 .5 oPEraTor NoTEs
Note: Operator notes should not be confused with similar messages, (described in section 4.3.6), which appear as a result of job action. It is possible for the user to enter a note, of up to 120 characters, at any time, from any display page (not from configuration pages). Each note is associated with the current display group and becomes a part of that groups history. The notes appear on vertical and horizontal trend displays only, although they can be entered in any display mode. The note appears on the chart and in the Message Log, preceded by the date, time and login level, as shown in the first example below. 30/01/08 15:46:11 Engineer, New Spray nozzles fitted to Line A, Tube 1.
Date and time Access level Note
To enter a Note: 1. 2. 3. Press the Option key, then the Note key Touch the note area of the resulting pop-up display (see note below). Enter the required text of up to 120 characters (spaces are also counted as characters). Press Ok when finished. 4. View the note and a. press the Ok button to enter the note OR b. re-touch the text area to edit the note OR c. press the Cancel key to quit note entry.
Option Menu
Note Option Key Faceplates On/Off
Note
Operator Note 00:0A:8D:00:20:A0 AM Shift started AM Shift finished PM Shift started PM Shift finished
Operator Notes list. Appears if note areaHistory Enter is touched continuously for 2 seconds (approx). List entries are made in Instrument Configuration (section 4.3.1)
Channel Cycling On
Note: Touching the note area continuously for two seconds or more, causes a list of pre-defined messages to appear. Touching one of these messages selects it as the operator note, which can then be edited in the normal way (if required) before the OK key is operated. There are a maximum of 13 predefined messages, 12 of which are user editable in the Configuration/instrument menu (section 4.3.1), the 13th being the non-editable MAC address of the recorder.
Note: In all the following descriptions, if a change is made to a menu item, then the item text changes to red, until it is applied
4 .1 arChiVE
Note: The archiving functions described below can also be initiated by job action - see section 4.7.11.
4 .1 .1 local archive
Caution Removal of the memory device whilst archiving is in progress causes irreparable damage to the filing structure on the device, rendering it unusable. For this reason, archiving should be suspended before the device is removed. It is strongly recommended that the Remove Media facility described in section 3.1.4 (Summary menu) be used to ensure that it is safe to remove the memory device.
Save/R..
Config
Security
Network
System
Section 4.1.2
Bring Archive Up To Date Archive Last Hour Archive Last Day Archive Last 7 Days Archive Last 31 Days Archive All Suspend Archiving Cancel Archive
Archive Transfer Inactive Media Full 29/02/2008 00:34:57 Media Size 31954944 Free Space 28786688
Bytes Bytes
Local archive allows the user to initiate data transfer to the device defined in the Media picklist if Archive to Media is enabled (Group configuration - section 4.3.2). Archiving is initiated by touching the relevant archive period key (e.g. Last Day). The memory device can be selected as mediacard (the integral Compact Flash or SD card), or a USB port can be selected if, for example, a memory stick is to be the destination device. USBfront is located behind the flap below the screen. USB 1 and USB 2 ports are not available for this recorder model. Archiving starts as soon as the selection is made, and cannot be stopped until completed, unless the Cancel Archive key is operated, in which case the archive will be stopped after a confirmatory message has been responded to. The Cancel/Suspend key is active only for Engineer level logins.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .1 .1 loCal arChiVE (Cont .) BriNg arChiVE UP To DaTE This causes the recorder to archive all history files created since the last manual or automatic (section 4.3.4) archive. arChiVE all This causes the recorder to archive all its history files. If the memory device becomes full before archiving is complete, archiving pauses and a pop-up request appears, asking for a replacement. If this request is not responded to within 10 minutes of its appearance, archiving is aborted. Unattended archiving can be paused by the user (e.g. to change media without losing data) by operating the Suspend Archiving / Resume Archiving button. Any archiving in progress is allowed to complete before the Suspend Archiving request takes effect. Transfer activity is indicated in the Archive transfer window. Below the selection buttons are a number of status windows relating to the selected memory device. Media Full is an estimate, based on the current configuration, of when the memory device will become full. The meanings of the Media Size and Free Space values are self evident. If automatic archiving is active (section 4.3.4), then automatic and manual archives will operate on a first come-first served basis. Some files will be saved twice in such a circumstance, the later archives files overwriting any earlier archives files which have the same name.
Save/R..
Config
Security
Network
System
Bring Archive Up To Date Archive Last Hour Archive Last Day Archive Last 7 Days Archive Last 31 days Archive All Cancel Archive
Archive Transfer
Inactive
Section 4.1.1
When connecting, the User Name is Engineer. the password is 100. The IP address is found by looking in the Network/Address area (section 4.5.1), and the instrument identifier is to be found in the Config,,,/Instrument area (section 4.3.1). Notes: 1. When accessing files using Microsoft Internet Explorer, the address (URL) field can be in one of two forms: a ftp://<instrument IP address>. This allows the user to log in as the anonymous user (if the instrument has any account with Remote user name set to Anonymous and a blank password). b ftp://<user name>:<password>@<instrument IP address> to log in as a specific user. 2. For IE5 users only: Microsoft Internet Explorer displays, by default, history files only. To exit the history folder, either uncheck the Tools/Internet Options/Advanced/Browsing/Enable folder view for FTP sites option, or check the Tools/Internet Options/Advanced/Browsing/Use Web based FTP option.
4 .2 saVE / rEsTorE
As shown in figure 4.2a, touching the Save/R.. key calls the picklist: Save, Restore, New and Text.
Archive
Save/R..
Save Restore New Text File Name config Save As Text Configuration Data Security Data Network Data Screen Data New/Default Configuration Data Security Data Network Data Screen Data Restore File Name config
Config
Security
Network
System
Where a file name is required, then, if the displayed file name is suitable, operation of the Save or Restore, key will initiate the action. If, instead, a file name has to be entered, this is carried out as follows: Touching the filename window causes a pop-up menu to appear, giving a list of Volumes in the Flash memory or on the memory device (if inserted). Figure 4.2b shows an imaginary Volume contents list, displayed by touching the name user, then operating the down arrow or open folder key. (See section 5, below for more details). Once the correct folder is open, either select an existing file, or enter a new filename, by touching the FileName window and entering the name using the pop-up keyboard(s) as described in section 3.3.1 above. Operation of the Save/Restore key initiates the action.
\user\
cal\ config\ Filter1a lib\ sdb\ user\ FileName :
Hide Type
Folder Folder Config Folder Folder Folder 31/01/08 16:19:46 28/12/07 10:27:13 29/12/07 10:22:23 4445 29/01/08 10:23:14 30/01/08 14:01:08 31/01/08 15:41:30
Save Cancel
Date
Bytes
Filter1b
4 .2 .1 save
Touching this item allows the current configuration to be saved in the recorders memory. Files saved in this way are not in a readable format and are used only for archive /security purposes or for transfer to another, similar, recorder. saVE as This selection box allows a configuration to be saved, if required, in a format suitable for importing into previous recorder models. The default is always the current instrument.
4 .2 .2 restore
Touching this item allows the user to select or type-in a previously saved configuration file name, which will then be used as the current configuration. Touching the Restore key completes the operation. Check boxes allow one or both of Configuration Data, and Network data to be chosen for the restore function. Security data and Screen data are not applicable to this recorder model. Note If archiving is in progress when a Restore is requested, the Restore operation will be delayed until the archive is complete (maybe several minutes). If required, the Cancel Archive key (section 4.1 above) can be used to speed up the Restore process, at the cost of losing the archive data.
4 .2 .3 New
Touching this item causes the factory entered default configuration to be loaded for use, or for editing. Operation of the New/Default key completes the operation. Tick boxes allow one or both of Configuration Data, and Network data to be chosen for the restore default function; only those items which are ticked are replaced by default values. Security data and Screen data are not applicable to this recorder model.
4 .2 .4 Text
This is identical to the Save function described above, but the configuration is saved in ASCII format, and can be transferred to a computer and read, printed etc. as required. It is not possible, using this means, to modify the configuration and then re-load it.
4 .3 CoNFig KEY
Touching this key calls the top level configuration pick list: Instrument, Groups, Channels, Archive, Events, Messages, Maths, Totalisers, Counters, Timers. Notes: 1. Figure 4.3b gives an overview of the configuration menus. 2. If an option is not fitted, it does not appear in the above list. When making changes to the configuration the name of each changed parameter is displayed in red (instead of the normal black) until the Apply/Discard key has been operated. For example, in channel configuration, if a thermocouple were to be changed from Type J to Type K, Lin Type would appear in red, until the Apply key is operated. Should an attempt be made to leave configuration with unsaved changes, a warning message appears, (Figure 4.3a) allowing the user to apply the changes, to discard the changes or to return to configuration (Cancel).
Config
Data Has Been Modified Apply Discard Cancel
Save/R..
Instrument
Groups
Channels
Archive
Events
Instrument Name Instrument Normal Display 100 % % Saver Display 50 Save After 30 Minutes Modbus Address1 Modbus Security Disabled = Disabled s Comms Channel Timeout0 0 Preset Hour 12 Preset Minute0 0 Disable Warning Dialogs Show Operator Notes List Apply Discard
Channel Number Value Input Type Lin Type Range Low Range High Range Units Scaled Trend Speed 1,200 Trend Interval 1 Offset Scale Type Filter Break Response from Channel 3
Event Number 1) Event 1 Source 1 Alarm on Group On Group 1) Group 1 Cold Junction Type Off Descriptor TurbineTempA
% %
1,200 1 25.96
mm/ hr s Days
Operator And
Not Source 2
Source 2 Sense Descriptor Event 1 Job Number 1 Category No Action PV Format Max Decimal Digits Colour Alarm Number Enable Job Number Category Apply Discard
Recording Enable Recording Speed Recording Interval Trend History Duration Archive to Media Enable Archive via FTP Enable Alarm Message Ack Message Point Type
Channel
Apply
Discard
Remote
Mb Days
Flash Size 8
Apply
Etc.
Discard
Remote path / r e c o r d e r / G r o u p 1
Primary password * * * * *
Retype password * * * * *
Archive to Media None Media file format Binary On Media Full Overwrite
Media Size 30.4746094 Removable Media Capacity 3 3 . 1 8 Media Full event limit 100 %
Mb Days
Secondary password * * * * *
Apply
Apply
Discard
Archive
Security
Save/R..
Message
The value of {1} = {2} & {3} = {4}, {5}
Messages
Totalisers
Counters
Timers
Options
Fitted channels 6
Maths 6
Totalisers 3
Counters 3
Relay Boards 1
(currently 0)
Scale Low Scale high Zone low Zone high Scale Type PV Format Max Decimal Digits Colour Alarm Number Enable Job Number Category
Relays on Board 1 3
Apply
Discard
Autoconfigure
1 Off 1 No Action
Totaliser Number Enable Value Total of Low cut off High cut off Units Preset Preset now
1 Totaliser 1 0 1 1 100 None Numeric 4 1 0 Off 1 No Action 1
Reset now
Apply Discard
Start now
Scale Low Scale High Zone Low Zone High Scale Type Colour Alarm Number Enable Job Number Category
Timer 1
Any
These fields appear only if 'Self start' is enabled.
Any
Midnight
Any
Any
60
Seconds Seconds
Descriptor Self start Date Month Hour Minute Second Duration Repeat after Job Number Category Discard
No Action
Apply
Period scaler Unit scaler Descriptor Scale Low Scale High Zone Low Zone High Scale Type PV format Max Decimal Digits Colour Alarm Number Enable Job Number Category
Apply
Discard
4 .3 .1 instrument configuration
Instrument Name Normal Display Saver Display Save After Modbus Address Modbus Security Disabled Comms Channel Timeout Preset Hour Preset Minute Disable Warning Dialogs Show Operator Notes List Instrument 100 % % 50 30 Minutes 1 0 0 12 0 0
s
= Disabled
iNsTrUMENT NaME Allows the entry of an alphanumeric name for the recorder, up to 20 characters long. See section 3.3.1 for text entry techniques. NorMal/saVEr DisPlaY Allows normal and saver display brightnesses to be defined. Defaults are Normal = 100%; Saver = 50% saVE aFTEr The number of minutes (between 1 and 99 inclusive), which are to elapse after a screen operation, before the screen brightness changes from normal to saver. Default is 30 minutes. MoDBUs aDDrEss Allows a Modbus address between 1 and 247 to be set up, for use when the instrument is acting as a Modbus slave. MoDBUs sECUriTY DisaBlED When using MODBUS, it is possible, by checking this field to allow a host computer to access the recorder without its first having to supply a valid User name and Password. This box must be checked if this unit is acting as a Modbus slave in order for the unit to be detected. Once communications have been established, Modbus security can be enabled, providing that the Slaves Remote user name and password have been entered at the Master. See also section 6.2.4. CoMMs ChaNNEl TiMEoUT Allows a number of seconds (between 1 and 999) to be entered. If none of the channels set to Comms is communicated with, within this period, an event source (Comms channel timeout) is set, and remains set until the next communication. An entry of 0 disables the time out.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .1 iNsTrUMENT CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) PrEsET hoUr Enter an hours number between 0 and 23 for use with Clock Job - Preset clock. PrEsET MiNUTE Enter a minutes number between 0 and 59 for use with Clock Job - Preset clock. Note: See section 4.7 for a description of recorder jobs, and section 4.5.1 for further details of time synchronisation. DisaBlE WarNiNg Dialogs Checking this box prevents instrument alarm messages from appearing on the screen. shoW oPEraTor NoTEs lisT Enabling this field produces a list of 13 entries which can be used in Operator Notes. The first entry is the MAC address of the recorder and is not editable. The remaining 12 entries (of up to 60 characters each) are freely editable. Any one of these predefined notes can be selected (as described in section 3.5) by touching the Operator Note area continuously for two seconds, then touching the required note from the picklist which appears. Once selected the predefined note can be edited before use, like a normal Operator Note. Such editing does not affect the original note entered here in Instrument Configuration.
4 .3 .2 group configuration
Group configuration allows the user to define the following: a b c d e Group trend speed/interval Group recording speed/interval Group descriptor Group content Chart grid divisions
The production of alarm messages and the saving of group data to Flash memory, to removable memory device and/or to remote computer (FTP transfer) can also be enabled / disabled from this menu.
Trend Units mm/ hr Descriptor Group 1
Select mm/ hr or in/hr
Trend Speed 1,200 Trend Interval 1 Grid Type From Point Recording Enable Recording Speed 1,200 Recording Interval 1 Trend History Duration 2.53 Archive to Media Enable Archive via FTP Enable Alarm Message Ack Message from Channel 3
mm/ hr s
Select None, Linear, Log or 'From Point'
mm/ hr s Days
Editable only if 'Recording Enable' is enabled.
Grid Decades 5
= Enabled
TurbineTempA TurbineTempB
Apply
Etc.
List of all available points (input channels, maths channels, totalisers etc.).
Discard
TrEND UNiTs Allows mm/hr or inches per hour to be selected for the chart speed. Automatically converts the trend speed field below. DEsCriPTor Allows the group name to be edited. See section 3.3.1 for text entry techniques. TrEND sPEED/TrEND iNTErVal Allows the chart speed to be selected either as mm or in per hour, or as an interval. Entering a value in one field automatically converts the value in the other field. A trend interval of N seconds is equivalent to 1200/N mm/hr chart speed; a chart speed of P mm/hr is equivalent to a trend interval of 1200/P seconds.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .2 groUP CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) griD TYPE Grid type allows the chart grid type to be defined for the group being configured. This is not necessarily related to channel scale (section 4.3.3), unless From point is selected, when the grid matches the scale of the selected point. NONE No chart grid is traced. LINEAR The chart grid is linear, with the major and minor divisions defined by the fields Grid Divisions - Major and Minor, which appear if Linear is selected as grid type. Figure 4.3.2b below, defines major and minor divisions. LOG The chart grid is logarithmic, with the number of decades being selected in the Grid Decades field which appears if Log is selected as Grid Type. Figure 4.3.2b gives an example. Note: Minor divisions within each decade are shown only if Number of decades 5. FROM POINT This allows the chart grid to be aligned with the scale of a particular point, selected in the from field which appears if From Point is selected as Grid Type
Five major divisions
Linear scale
Log scale
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .2 groUP CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) rECorDiNg ENaBlE This tick box allows the logging of the groups data to the flash memory to be enabled/disabled. When disabled: a b c The recording speed/interval fields are not editable, and Trend History duration is set to zero. Display trends are present on the chart, but are not preserved when changing Views. It is not possible to enter trace history if Recording Enable is not selected. Notes 1 A blue line is drawn across the chart, when recording is re-enabled to indicate a time change in the trace. 2 If a Recording enable job (section 4.7.9) is set to act on a particular group, then the group will be recorded only whilst the job is active, and only if Recording is enabled for the group. rECorDiNg sPEED/rECorDiNg iNTErVal If recording is enabled, these fields are as for trend speed/interval but define the rate at which data is saved to Flash memory. This value also affects how much trace history appears per screen in trend history mode (section 3.4.1). If recording is not enabled, these fields are greyed and not editable. Note: If a large number of points is configured in the group, the total amount of data generated per iteration may exceed the amount that can be written to the internal FLASH memory in the time available. Such a situation may also arise if many messages are being generated. The recorder responds by reducing the recording speed, and a message Recording failed - internal overflow. Slowing recording interval of fastest group(s) appears, to draw the users attention to the situation. TrEND hisTorY DUraTioN Gives an estimated time to fill the groups trend history area of the Flash memory. The calculation is based on the archive rate, the compression ratio, the flash size and on the exact nature of the data. (Rapidly changing values use more space than static/slowly changing values.) If the group is empty, or if Recording is not enabled, the Trend History Duration is displayed as 0 Days. arChiVE To MEDia ENaBlE/arChiVE Via FTP ENaBlE If recording is enabled, these tick boxes allow the archiving of this groups data to removable mass storage media and/or to a remote host (FTP) to be enabled or disabled. If recording is disabled, these fields cannot be edited. alarM MEssagE This box allows the printing of alarm on and off messages on the chart to be enabled or disabled as required. Alarm messages appear on the trend display and in Review in the form HH:MM:SS Alarm ON n/m and HH: MM:SS Alarm OFF n/m, where n is the relevant channel number and m is the alarm number (1 or 2). aCK MEssagE This tick box allows the printing of alarm acknowledgement messages on the chart to be enabled or disabled as required. Acknowledge messages appear on the trend display and in PC Review in the form HH:MM:SS. ALARM ACKNOWLEDGE Alarms are acknowledged as described in section 3.1.4. User guide Page 48 HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .2 groUP CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) PoiNT TYPE/sElECTioN The Point Type box, together with the Selection box immediately below, offers a quick way of editing the contents of the group, as follows: 1. 2. 3. 4. Select the type of point (Channel, Maths, Totaliser or Counter) to be edited from the Point Type drop down menu. Enter the numbers of all the points of the selected type to be added or deleted, in the Selection box. See notes below for further details. Click on Enable to add the selected points to the group contents, or on Disable to remove them. Repeat for other point types, as required. Notes: 1. The status of all points not included in the selection box, remains unchanged. 2. Point numbers are entered individually, or as one or more ranges, separated by commas (if applicable). For example, an entry of 1-3,6,9-11 would cause points 1, 2, 3, 6, 9, 10 and 11 to be added or removed from the group contents. Only numeric characters, commas and hyphens (minus signs) are accepted. If any other character (including space(s)) is included in the list, the edit will fail, with a message Invalid Selection appearing when the Enable or Disable key is operated.. 3. Ranges must be complete: 1- is not acceptable. 4. The group may contain any or all points. 5. If a point number is entered which is greater than the number of that point type fitted, then the selection is ignored. For example, if totalisers 1-3 are selected for deletion, and only 2 are enabled, then the range will be accepted, and totalisers 1 to 2 deleted from the groups contents. Alternatively, the groups contents can be edited using the tick-boxes, to include the ticked items in, or to exclude non-ticked items from, the group, as required.
4 .3 .3 Channel/alarm configuration
Figure 4.3.3a below, shows a typical configuration menu for an input channel. (For maths channels see section 4.3.7.) The actual fields that appear depend on what input type is selected, what linearisation type is selected, and so on.
Channel Number 1) Channel 1 Value 6.6893 Lin Type Type K
These fields vary according to Input Type selection Select channel number
14/09/05 15:10:53
Off, T/C, mV,V, mA, RTD, Ohms, Digital, Slave Comms or Test Select Linearisation type (e.g.Type K)
Range High 100 Range Units C Scale Low 0 Scale High 1 Offset 0 Units V Scaled
V V V
Scale Type Linear Scale Divisions - Minor 1 Filter None Break Response None Cold Junction Type Internal Scale Divisions - Major 5
Select: None, Linear or Log (Log available only if 'Scaled' is ticked.) These fields vary with the type of scale selected Select: None, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64,128 or 256 seconds Select: None, High or Low Select: Off, Internal, External, Remote.
Descriptor Channel 1 A/B Switching Spanned Span High 1 Zone High 100 Pv Format Numeric Max Decimal Digits 4 Colour 0
Select Alarm number Allows Span A high/low, Span B high/low, Zone A high/low, Zone B high/low and Colour A/B values to be entered for use by Trend jobs.
V V
% %
Select Numeric or Scientific
Alarm Number 1
Enable Unlatched Type Absolute High Setpoint Source Constant Hysteresis 0 Dwell 0 s
Select Job number
Threshold 0
V V
Apply
Discard
Notes 1. Numeric values (e.g. input low) can be up to 10 characters including decimal point. 2. Refer to section 3.3.1 for numeric and text entry techniques. User guide Page 50 HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .3 ChaNNEl/alarM CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) Example: A type J thermocouple is used to measure a temperature range of 100 to 200 degrees Celsius. This thermocouple output is transmitted to the recorder by a 4 to 20 mA transmitter, for display as an efficiency value between 0 and 100%. In such a case, the following values would be set up: Input type = Input low = Input high = Shunt = Lin Type = Range Low = Range High = Range Units = Scaled = Scale low = Scale high = Scale units = milliamp 4.0 20.0 250 Ohms Type J 100 200 C 0.0 100 %
Note: The following description shows all possible fields. The recorder itself edits the list and shows only those fields appropriate to the setup so far. For example, the Shunt field appears only for mA input type. ChaNNEl NUMBEr The current channel and its descriptor are displayed. Touching the window area allows another channel to be selected for configuration. Alternatively, the right and left arrow keys at the bottom of the screen can be used to increment and decrement, respectively, the channel number. ValUE Shows the current value of the channel, together with either Unadjusted or the date and time of channel adjustment (section 4.6.4). iNPUT TYPE Select thermocouple, millivolt, Volt, milliamp, RTD, Ohms, Digital (not channel 1, 7 etc.), Slave Comms or Test as input type. Slave Comms must be selected if the channel is to be written-to via Modbus. Master Comms must be selected if this channel is to read from another instrument. liN TYPE The following linearisation tables are available as standard: Linear, square root, x3/2, x5/2, Thermocouple types B, C, D, E, G2, J, K, L, N, R, S, T, U, NiMo/NiCo, Platinel, Ni/NiMo, Pt20%Rh/Pt40%Rh Resistance thermometer (RTD) types Cu10, Pt100, Pt100A, JPT100, Pt1000, Ni100,Ni120, Cu53. For input ranges, accuracies etc. associated with the above thermocouple/RTD tables, see Annex A. iNPUT loW Enter the lowest value to be applied to the input terminals (e.g. 4.00). iNPUT high Enter the highest value to be applied across the input terminals (e.g. 20.00).
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .3 ChaNNEl/alarM CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) shUNT Allows a shunt resistor value to be entered for input type = mA. Commonly used values are 100 ohms and 250 ohms. Note that shunt resistors are connected to the input connector. The recorder cannot detect whether a shunt is fitted, or if one is, what value it has. Therefore it is the responsibility of the user to ensure that the ohmic value of any shunt fitted matches the shunt value entered in this field. raNgE loW Enter the lowest value of the required linearisation range (e.g. 100) raNgE high Enter the highest value of the required linearisation range (e.g. 200) raNgE UNiTs Selectable from degrees Celsius, degrees Fahrenheit, Kelvin or Rankine. sCalED This box allows the user to select low and high values and units for a scale. This box must be ticked if logarithmic scales are to be used. SCALE LOW Enter the scale value to correspond with input range low (e.g. 0). SCALE HIGH Enter the scale value to correspond with input range high (e.g. 100). SCALE UNITS Enter up to five characters of unit descriptor (e.g.%). oFFsET Allows a fixed value to be added to or subtracted from the process variable. Recorder accuracy figures no longer apply if an offset is included.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .3 ChaNNEl/alarM CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) sCalE TYPE This field allows None, Linear or Log to be selected as scale type. For linear scales, the number of major/ minor scale divisions can be selected. This does not affect the chart grid divisions, which is set up as a part of Group configuration (section 4.3.2). Figures 4.3.3b1 and 4.3.3b2 show various examples. NONE Channels with Scale Type selected to None, appear with no scale information in any display mode. LINEAR Channels with Scale Type = Linear, appear with scale information in all display modes (except numeric). The number of major and minor divisions can be selected from subsequent fields. Examples are shown in figure 4.3.3b1. SCALE DIVISIONS - MAJOR Appears for Linear Scale types only. Setting major divisions to 1, means that the scale consists only of zero and full scale. Setting Major divisions to 2, means that the scale has divisions at zero, 50% and full scale, and so on. Intermediate scale values appear at major divisions if there is sufficient space. Default = 10 for large frame recorders or 5 for small frame units. SCALE DIVISIONS - MINOR Appears for Linear Scale types only. With minor divisions set to 1 (default), the scale major divisions are not divided i.e. no minor division tick marks appear . Setting Minor divisions to 2, means that each major scale division is divided into two, and so on. See figure 4.3.3b1 for an example showing five minor divisions. LOG For some input type selections, this appears only if Scaled is ticked. Channels with Scale Type = Log, appear with logarithmic scales. These scales have major divisions at each decade boundary, and (space permitting), minor divisions for mantissa values 2 to 9. Examples are shown in figure 4.3.3b1. Because of the nature of logarithms, neither negative values nor the value 0 can be used as scale zero. Linear inputs are traced as exponental curves (figure 4.3.3b2). LOG/LINEAR For some input type selections, this appears only if Scaled is ticked. Channels with Scale Type = Log/Linear, appear with logarithmic scales. These scales have major divisions at each decade boundary, and (space permitting), minor divisions for mantissa values 2 to 9. Examples are shown in figure 4.3.3b1. Because of the nature of logarithms, neither negative values nor the value 0 can be used as scale zero. Linear inputs are traced as straight lines (figure 4.3.3b2).
38.3309v
40.0000
50.0000
38.3309v
40.0000
50.0000
5 minor divisions
Channel 2
1.0000E1
1.0000E2
1.0000E3
3.8347E2v
1.0000E4
Channel 2
10.0000
100.0000
1000.0000
383.4732v
10000.0000
0.0000
20.0000
40.0000
60.0000
100.0000
10:44:18 06/02/08
10:42:58 06/02/08
10:41:38 06/02/08
10:40:18 06/02/08
0.0000
Channel 2
20.0000
40.0000
60.0000
41.6667V
80.0000
100.0000
10:44:18 06/02/08
10:42:58 06/02/08
10:41:38 06/02/08
10:40:18 06/02/08
1.0000
Channel 2
10.0000
41.6667V
100.0000
10:44:18 06/02/08
10:42:58 06/02/08
10:41:38 06/02/08
10:40:18 06/02/08
1.0000
Channel 2
10.0000
6.4158V
100.0000
10:44:18 06/02/08
10:42:58 06/02/08
10:41:38 06/02/08
10:40:18 06/02/08
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .3 ChaNNEl/alarM CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) FilTEr For noisy slowly changing signals, damping can be used to filter noise so that the underlying trend can be seen more clearly. None, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128 or 256 seconds can be selected. It is not recommended that damping be used on quickly changing signals. BrEaK rEsPoNsE For thermocouples and other low level inputs (i.e. input voltages less than 150 mV), the recorder can be made to respond in one of the following ways, if a break in the input circuit is detected. None High Low trace drifts with the input wiring acting as an aerial. trace placed at full scale. trace placed at scale zero.
95% 3x Damping Recorder response
Input
ColD JUNCTioN CoMPENsaTioN (CJC) For input type = thermocouple, None, Internal, External or Remote can be selected for cold junction compensation. INTERNAL Internal CJC is by means of an RTD connected across pins 11 and 12 of the input board connector. EXTERNAL If the cold junction is maintained (by the user) at a known, fixed temperature, external should be selected. An extra numeric entry box appears to allow the user to enter the temperature at which the cold junction is maintained. REMOTE Remote is selected if the cold junction temperature is to be Break Response None measured by an external device connected to the instruCold Junction Type Remote ment. An extra picklist appears which allows the user to Remote CJ Temp from Channel 3 C select any input or maths channel to act as the cold juncDescriptor Channel 1 tion temperature source channel. The temperature units displayed here, are those of the channel being configured, not those of the CJ source channel. The CJ source channel must be configured appropriately for the external device, and must provide a value which is consistent with the configured channels units. DEsCriPTor Allows a text string of up to 30 characters (including spaces) to be entered for the channel descriptor (e.g. Turbine 2 tempA).
Break Response Cold Junction Type External CJ Temp Descriptor None External 0 Channel 1
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .3 ChaNNEl/alarM CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) sPaNNED This box, when selected, allows span low and high values to be entered. For example, in an input range of 0 to 600 deg C, it may be that the temperature range between 500 and 600 degrees is of most interest. In such a case, setting span low to 500 and span high to 600 will cause the recorder to display only that part of the input range, and this will fill the zone width which is selected next, effectively magnifying the area of interest. ZoNE This allows the portion of the chart which the channel occupies to be defined in terms of percent, where the left edge of the chart is 0% and the right hand edge is 100%. For example, setting a low value of 50 and a high value of 100 causes the channel trace to be confined to the right hand half of the chart. PV ForMaT This allows the PV value, alarm setpoints, hysteresis values etc. to be displayed as normal numeric values (Numeric) or in Scientific format (Scientific). When Scientific is selected, values are displayed and entered as a decimal number between 1 and 10 (the mantissa), followed by a multiplier (the exponent). E.G. to enter a value of 1244.5678, the value entered would be 1.2445678E3, where 3 represents the number of places that the decimal point has been shifted to the left in order to convert the value to a number between 1 and 10. To enter a value of 0.0004196, the entry would be 4.196E-4. Notes 1. Strictly this is a number less than 10, as 10 would be 1.0E1. 2. There must be at least one number after the decimal point. MaXiMUM DECiMal DigiTs This defines the number of decimal places in the process value. Settable between zero and nine. Leading and trailing zeros are not displayed. Values too long for the available displaying width are truncated as described in section 3. ColoUr Allows the trace colour to be selected from a colour chart. Each of the 56 available colours is displayed with a number, and it is this number which is entered. The background colour to the selection box changes to the selected colour. alarM NUMBEr Allows an alarm to be selected for configuration.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .3 ChaNNEl/alarM CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) ENaBlE Allows the alarm to be defined as Off, Unlatched, Latched or Trigger. Off Unlatched Alarm is disabled and the remainder of the alarm configuration is hidden. Unlatched alarms become active when the trigger source becomes active and remain active until the source returns to a non-active state. The indicator is on (flashing before acknowledgment - steady after acknowledgement) until the alarm clears. Alarm messages are printed if enabled in group configuration. Latched alarms become active when the trigger source becomes active and remain active until the alarm is acknowledged AND the trigger source has returned to a non-active state. The indicator is on (flashing before acknowledgment - steady after acknowledgement) until the alarm has been acknowledged AND the trigger source has returned to a non-active state. Alarm messages are printed if enabled in group configuration. Continuous jobs remain active only whilst the alarm trigger source is active. I.E. the job finishes when the alarm clears, whether acknowledged or not. When triggered all associated jobs are initiated, and continuous jobs remain active until the alarm clears. There is no alarm indication, and no messages are printed.
Latched
Trigger
TYPE This field appears only when the alarm Enable is not selected Off. Each alarm can be defined as absolute high, absolute low, deviation-in, deviation-out, rate-of-change rise or rate-of-change fall. As shown in figure 4.3.3d, an absolute high alarm becomes active when the channel value exceeds the threshold value. The alarm remains active until the channel value falls below (Threshold minus hysteresis). If a dwell value is defined, the alarm does not become effective until this dwell time has been exceeded. Absolute Low As shown in figure 4.3.3d, an absolute low alarm becomes active when the channel value falls below the threshold value. The alarm remains active until the channel value exceeds (Threshold + hysteresis). If a dwell value is defined, the alarm does not become effective until this dwell time has been exceeded. Deviation in As shown in figure 4.3.3e, a deviation-in alarm becomes active whenever the channel value enters the band: Reference Deviation. It remains active until the channel value leaves the band: Reference (Deviation+ Hysteresis). If a dwell value is defined, the alarm does not become effective until this dwell time has been exceeded. Deviation out As shown in figure 4.3.3e, a deviation-out alarm is active whenever the channel value leaves the band Reference Deviation. It remains active until the channel value enters the band: Reference (Deviation - Hysteresis). If a dwell value is defined, the alarm does not become effective until this dwell time has been exceeded. Rate of change As shown in figure 4.3.3f, rate of change alarms become active whenever the signal value changes by more than a specified amount within a specified period. If a dwell value is defined, the alarm does not become effective until this dwell time has been exceeded. An averaging period can be set to remove the effects of sudden, but short-lived changes, such as noise spikes on the signal. Note: Alarm icons appear at the display, as described in section 3. sETPoiNT soUrCE Allows the user to choose either a fixed, user-defined value (constant) or the value of another point (input channel, maths channel, totaliser etc.) to be chosen as the trigger point. In the latter it is possible, for example, to trigger an alarm, when one channels value rises above, falls below etc. the value of a second channel. Absolute High
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .3 ChaNNEl/alarM CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) ParaMETErs Figures 4.3.3d, e and f illustrate the following terms for the different alarm types. Threshold For Absolute alarms, this defines the value (in engineering units) at which an alarm is triggered. The alarm also returns to its non-active state at this value (unless a hysteresis value has been set). If a dwell value is set, the alarm does not become active until this dwell time has elapsed. Defines a deadband (in engineering units) to eliminate spurious triggering if the signal value is hovering around the trigger point. The deadband lies: Below Absolute High thresholds Above Absolute Low thresholds Outside the deviation band for Deviation-in alarms Inside the deviation band for Deviation-out alarms. Allows a dwell period to be entered in seconds. The alarm does not take effect until this period has expired. If an alarm clears before the dwell period has expired, the alarm is ignored. For Deviation alarms, this is the central value of the deviation band. For Deviation alarms, this value defines the width of the deviation band, each side of the reference value. I.E. the total width of the deviation band is 2 x Deviation value. For Rate-of-change alarms, this value defines the minimum amount by which the signal value would have to change, within the Change Time period (below), in order for the alarm to become active. For Rate-of-change alarms, this selects the time period (Per second, Per minute, Per hour) within which the change in signal value must exceed the Amount value (entered in the preceding field) in order for the alarm to become active. See Rate-of-Change example below for more details. For rate-of-change alarms, this allows an average period to be entered for signal smoothing.
Hysteresis
Threshold = 100 units; Hysteresis = 5 units With the above settings, an absolute high alarm would become active if its input were to rise above 100 and would remain active until its value fell to below 95 units. An absolute low alarm would become active if its input fell below 100 units, and would remain active until its input rose above 105 units. Deviation alarms behave in a similar manner. raTE-oF ChaNgE alarM EXaMPlE Rate-of-change alarms allow the user to enter an amount (say 3 degrees) and a time period (say 1 minute), and if the process value changes by the specified amount or more, within the specified time period (more than 3 degrees in a minute in this example), then the alarm becomes active. The recorder uses its iteration rate of 125 msec (1/8th second) as the time base for it calculations. For our example, 3 degrees per minute equates to 3/60 degrees per second or 3/(60 x 8) = 0.00625 degrees per iteration. If a change greater than this is detected, then the alarm becomes active. In order to reduce sensitivity, an averaging period can be configured. This means that an average of all the 1/8th second samples is taken over the specified period, and the alarm becomes active only if the average value exceeds the specified rate of change. Configuring a dwell time can also reduce jitter because, if during the specified dwell time, any one sample is non active, then the elapsed dwell time is reset to zero. The alarm becomes active only after the dwell time has elapsed i.e. only if the rate of change has been exceeded for every software cycle throughout the specified dwell time. User guide Page 58 HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08
Hysteresis Threshold
Hysteresis: no Dwell: 0 secs Hysteresis: no Dwell: D secs Hysteresis: yes Dwell: 0 Secs Hysteresis: yes Dwell: D Secs
D D D D D D D D
Hysteresis: no Dwell: 0 secs Hysteresis: no Dwell: D secs Hysteresis: yes Dwell: 0 Secs Hysteresis: yes Dwell: D Secs
D D D D D D D D
Hysteresis: no Dwell: 0 secs Hysteresis: no Dwell: D secs Hysteresis: yes Dwell: 0 Secs Hysteresis: yes Dwell: D Secs
D D D D D D D D
Fall symbol
Amount
Rate-of-change fall active 'Change Time' units (seconds, minutes or hours) Present time
A rate-of-change alarm is active if the channel value changes by more than 1 amount unit in less than 1 time unit. Dwell delays the alarm-on time. Averaging removes the effects of spurious 'spikes'.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .3 ChaNNEl/alarM CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) JoB NUMBEr Select the required job number. CaTEgorY Select the required job to be carried out when the channel is in alarm (e.g. Drive relay) See section 4.7 for a description of job categories. WhilE/oN Allows the action of the alarm job to be chosen as a. b. while active, while inactive or while unacknowledged for continuous jobs (e.g. drive relay), or, on going active, on going inactive or on acknowledgement for one-shot jobs (e.g. increment counter).
Figure 4.3.3g, below, shows the various actions graphically. For While unacknowledged and on acknowledgement settings, two cases are shown, one where the alarm goes inactive before acknowledgement; the other where the alarm is acknowledged whilst the alarm is still active. The coloured (shaded) areas show the duration for which continuous jobs run; the down arrows show trigger points for one-shot jobs. See section 3.1.4 for details on how to acknowledge alarms.
Active Active
Alarm trigger
Inactive
Alarm trigger
Inactive
While active
On going active
While inactive
Acknowledge
On going inactive
Acknowledge
alarM MEssagEs Alarm on/off and alarm acknowledge message printing on the chart can be enabled/disabled as a part of Group configuration described in section 4.3.2. See section 3.1.4 for details on how to acknowledge alarms.
4 .3 .4 archive configuration
Notes: 1. For the sake of brevity, the phrase memory device is used for whatever mass-storage medium is fitted to the recorder (integral or via a USB port). 2. CSV format files are not as secure as Packed Binary format files. This allows an archive strategy to be set up for saving data to a local memory device or to a remote PC. The local strategy includes archive period, memory device full operation, compression factor and an estimate of the maximum-time-to-next-archive to avoid data being overwritten in memory (Duration). The recorder uses a dedicated area of its Flash memory as an archive data buffer, which means that data is written to the memory device or remote PC only when required, rather than continuously. In order to carry out a successful remote archive, details of the remote host must be entered both in this Archive section of the Config menu, and in Network configuration (section 4.5).
Flash Size 8 Shortest Trend History G r o u p 1 Duration 2 . 5 3 Show Local settings Media mediacard Archive to Media Automatic Archiving Hourly
Compression Normal
Mb Days
Select Local or Remote settings Select Media card or USB port Select archive frequency Appears only for 'Automatic' (after Apply) Select Binary and/or CSV Select: Overwrite or Stop
Mb Days
Discard
Mb Days
Select archive interval Select Binary and/or CSV
Show Remote settings Archive to Remote None Ftp File format Binary
Remote path / r e c o r d e r / G r o u p 1
Primary remote host 0.0.0.0 Primary login name a n o n y m o u s Primary password * * * * * Retype password * * * * *
Secondary remote host 0.0.0.0 Secondary login name a n o n y m o u s Secondary password * * * * * Retype password * * * * * Apply Discard
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .4 arChiVE CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) CoMPrEssioN Select Normal or High compression. Normal compresses the data but still provides an exact copy. High compresses more, but channel values are saved only to 1 part in 108 resolution. This field does not appear if CSV is selected as file format (see below). Flash siZE Allows the size of the internal flash memory to be viewed by the user. shorTEsT TrEND hisTorY / DUraTioN Providing the archive period is less than the value displayed in the Duration window, no data will be lost from the group. If the archive period is greater than this value, then some data will have been overwritten and therefore lost. Note: Trend history duration depends on many factors, as described in Group Configuration (section 4.3.2) above. CsV ChECK BoXEs, DaTE/TiME ForMaT These appear only if the Media File Format or FTP file format are set to either CSV or Binary and CSV. Refer to CSV Files at the end of this subsection (4.3.4). shoW This allows the fields which are to appear below Show to be applicable to the local memory device (Local Settings), or to the setting up of a remote host path for archiving purposes (Remote settings). The following descriptions contain all the fields which may appear in either menu. MEDia For Local setting only This allows mediacard or usbfront to be selected as the local archive destination. (usb1 and usb2 are not available with this recorder model). The USB port supports both floppy disk drives and memory sticks. arChiVE To MEDia For Local setting only: None Hourly Daily Weekly Monthly Automatic
If the recorder has been powered Archive must be initiated by the operator (section 4.1) down prior to archive time, the Archive occurs on the hour every hour archive takes place the next time the Archive occurs at 00:00* hrs each day unit is powered up. Archive occurs at 00:00* hrs every Monday Archive occurs at 00:00* hrs on the 1st of each month The recorder selects the least frequent archive period (Hourly, Daily, Weekly, Monthly), which is guaranteed not to lose data as a result of either the internal Flash, or the local memory device, running out of space (calculated assuming that the memory device is initially empty). When Automatic is selected, a further, non-editable menu item appears, showing which of the archive frequencies has been selected.
*Note: Archive times are not adjusted for Daylight Saving hour changes. Thus if the archive is set to daily, weekly or monthly then, during Summer Time, the archive will occur an hour late (i.e. at 01:00 hrs. instead of midnight).
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .4 arChiVE CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) MEDia FilE ForMaT/FTP FilE ForMaT Allows Binary (.uhh) files, CSV (.csv) files or Binary and CSV to be chosen for FTP transfer. For further details of CVS archiving, see description at the end of this subsection (4.3.4). oN MEDia FUll For Local setting only: Overwrite Stop Oldest data is replaced with latest data when storage medium is full. Archiving stops when the storage medium is full.
Note: When in Overwrite mode, the recorder will overwrite only those files which it has itself created. Thus, if a storage medium is inserted which contains history files from another recorder, these cannot be overwritten. The file names are of the form UUU....UUUIIIIIIFFGGSSSSSS, where IIIIII represent the lowest three bytes of MAC address of the recorder which created the file (see section 4.5.1). It is not possible for the user to delete files created by another instrument (i.e. one with a different MAC address). MEDia siZE For Local setting only, this displays the capacity of the memory device. rEMoVaBlE MEDia CaPaCiTY For Local setting only, this gives an estimated time to fill the archive medium, based on the archive rate, the compression ratio, the storage medium size and on the exact nature of the data. (Rapidly changing values use more space than static/slowly changing values.) When archiving to Floppy disks (via USB port), this field remains empty until after the first archive has taken place. MEDia FUll EVENT liMiT For Local setting only, this allows the user to specify a percentage-full value for the storage medium, at which the event source Archive media % full is triggered. The event remains active until the storage medium is replaced, or has data removed from it to make more room available. arChiVE To rEMoTE For Remote setting only: None Hourly Daily Weekly Monthly Automatic Archive to host is initiated by the operator (section 4.1.2) Archive to host occurs on the hour every hour Archive to host occurs at 00:00* hrs each day Archive to host occurs at 00:00* hrs every Monday Archive to host occurs at 00:00* hrs on the 1st of each month The recorder selects the slowest out of Hourly, Daily, Weekly or Monthly, which is guaranteed not to lose data (depends on the size of the Trend History Buffer).
*Note: Archive times are not adjusted for Daylight Saving hour changes. Thus if the archive is set to daily, weekly or monthly then, during Summer Time, the archive will occur an hour late (i.e. at 01:00 hrs. instead of midnight). rEMoTE PaTh For Remote setting only, this specifies the route to a folder or directory on the remote host, set up as a part of that hosts FTP configuration. The path name may be up to 103 characters in length.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .4 arChiVE CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) PriMarY rEMoTE hosT For Remote setting only: If a Domain Name Server (DNS) is specified in the Network key Name page (figure 4.5.2), then the Primary Remote Host is the server name. If DNS is not selected, then the Primary Remote Host is the IP address of the remote host, set up in the hosts Control Panel\Network. PriMarY logiN NaME/PassWorD For Remote setting only: Login name and password of the remote host account assigned either by the Network administrator, or in the Guest account of the remote hosts FTP Server or User Manager configuration. The password, which must be of between eight and 20 characters, must be entered twice to ensure integrity. sECoNDarY rEMoTE hosT/logiN/PassWorD For Remote setting only: As for primary versions, but for a secondary host. The secondary route is used only if the primary route fails. CsV FilEs This allows archive files to be transferred in comma-separated-values (CSV) format, to a memory device or, via FTP, to a remote host computer.
Flash Size 8 Shortest Trend History G r o u p 1 Duration 2 . 5 3 CSV include Values CSV include Messages CSV include Header details CSV include Column headings CSV Date/Time format Text CSV use Tab delimiter Show Local settings Archive to Media None Media file format Binary and CSV On Media Full Overwrite Disk Archive Capacity 3 3 . 1 8 Media Full event limit 100 % Apply Media Size 30.4746094 Compression Normal
Binary format only
Mb Days
Mb Days
Discard
MEDIA FILE FORMAT For Local Settings only, this allows Binary, CSV or both to be selected for file type when archiving. Binary is the proprietary format used by the instrument and it requires other software (e.g. Review Software) to interpret the data, before it can be presented in spreadsheets, shown as if on a chart etc. Binary files have the extension .uhh. CSV format is a standard open-file format for numeric data. A simple ASCII-based format, it is readable by a wide range of PC applications as well as being suitable for direct import into many commercial databases. CSV files have the extension .csv. Note: CSV is ASCII based, and cannot interpret Unicode characters. Some characters available to the user will therefore be displayed incorrectly in CSV files. User guide Page 64 HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .4 arChiVE CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) MEDia FilE ForMaT (CoNT .) If CSV or Binary and CSV is selected, a number of extra check boxes appear. Figure 4.3.4c above, shows a typical menu page. Figure 4.3.4d below, shows the effects of enabling the CSV check boxes, with the exception of CSV use Tab delimiter the use of which is as follows: CSV USE TAB DELIMITER Despite its name, CSV does not always use commas as separators. For example, in some countries, the decimal point is represented by a full stop (period), whilst in other areas, a comma is used. In order to avoid confusion between the comma as a decimal point and the comma as a separator, a different separator is used, usually the semicolon. The instrument automatically chooses a separator suitable for use with the Locale selected in System Configuration (section 4.6.2). CSV Use Tab delimiter allows the user to override this choice, and force the instrument to use tabs as separators. This can be particularly useful when moving the data from one locale to another. CSV DATE/TIME FORMAT Allows Text or Spreadsheet numeric to be selected. Text causes a time/date to appear in the spreadsheet. Spreadsheet numeric displays the number of days since December 30th 1899. The decimal part of the value represents the latest 6 hours, so DDD---DDD.25 represents 0600 hrs, DDD---DDD.5 represents noon etc. Numeric format is more easily interpretable by some spreadsheets than Text format is.
Click/drag separator to edit field width A1 A B = Instrument C D E F G H I J K L M N O
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34
Distil temp Serial Number 9921 4.0 Instrument Name= Software Version Mac Address Country= GB 00:AB:8D:80:26:C0 Language= en Group Name Tank Temps 40 -C Tank1 Temp1 Low= 0 High= Tank1 Temp2 Low= 40 -C 0 High= 40 Deg C Tank1 Temp3 Low= 0 High= Tank2 Temp1 Low= 40 Deg C 0 High= Tank2 Temp2 Low= 40 Deg C 0 High= 40 Deg C 0 High= Tank2 Temp3 Low= +20 Deg C -20 High= Difference Low= Date/Time Tank1 Temp1 Difference Tank1 Temp1 Tank1 Temp1 Tank2 Temp1 Tank2 Temp2 Tank2 Temp3 Deg C -C -C Deg C Deg C Deg C Deg C 6.61 09.39.0 23.49 23.74 24.01 31.2334 29.7693 30.0983 6.13 09.44.0 23.53 23.70 23.88 30.6458 29.0673 29.9083 5.91 09.49.0 23.57 23.68 23.91 30.0945 28.8936 29.9083 6.47 09.54.0 23.50 23.69 23.99 31.1437 29.4387 30.0235 09.54.0 05/02/08 14:09:54 Alarm off End of Archive
Timezone GMT =
Right click, then: Format cells... Select 'Time' as number category Select time/date 'Type' as required
Include messages
Ready
FTP FILE FORMAT The above description for Media file format also applies to Remote setting. HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08 User guide Page 65
4 .3 .5 Event configuration
A number of internal triggers are available for use in initiating Events which then run job lists. Events can have up to two sources each, but can themselves be used as sources allowing a large number of inputs to be used. Input sources can be logically combined, and can be inverted if required.
Event Number 1) Event 1 Source 1 Alarm on Group On Group 1) Group 1 Source 2 Point Alarm On Math 1 Alarm 2
Select Required event Select source 1 Make source 1 sub selection (if any) Select source 2 Make source 2 sub selection (if any) Make sub-sub selection (if any) Select source inversion or not
Source 2 Sense Descriptor Event 1 Select job number Job Number 1 Category No Action Select Job Category Apply Discard
Select logic combination: Only, AND, And OR, NAND, NOR, XOR. Select source inversion or not Not Source 2
EVENT NUMBEr Allows the required event to be selected for configuration. soUrCE TYPEs Off Global alarm Global Unackd alarm Comms channel timeout
The event is disabled The event is active whilst any one or more alarms is active. The event is active as long as there is an unacknowledged alarm present. The event is set if no communication has been made with Comms channels within the Comms channel timeout period set in Instrument configuration (section 4.3.1). The source is reset when the next communication occurs. Timer active The event is triggered when a specified timer (section 4.3.10) becomes active. Event Allows another event to be specified as a source. Point alarm Triggered by the specified alarm on the specified point. Unackd point alarm Triggered by the specified alarm on the specified point. Remains active until the alarm is acknowledged (section 3.1.4). Alarm on Group Triggered if any alarm in the specified group becomes active. Unackd Alarm on Group Triggered if any alarm in the specified group becomes active. The event remains active until the alarm is acknowledged. Instrument alarm This source triggers an event if any of the following becomes active: Any, Input channel failure, Removable media failure, Removable media full, No removable media fitted, FTP primary server failure, FTP secondary server failure, Maths channel failure, Clock failure, Unrecognised PCCard, Recording failure - overflow, Network not found, SNTP server failure, Time synchronisation failure, Battery backed RAM cleared. See section 3.1.3 for Instrument alarm details. The event remains active until the instrument alarm clears. Power up A transient event is triggered at power up. (Continued)
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .5 EVENT CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) EVENT soUrCEs (CoNT .) Maths channel partial failure For recorders fitted with Maths channels (section 4.3.7), this event is set if, say, one of the inputs to a group averaging function becomes invalid. In such a case, the average will be calculated on the remaining input values, but the result may not be as accurate as expected. This event is set when the battery is reaching the end of its useful life. The event remains active until the battery is replaced (see Annex B for details). Triggered when the archive medium has reached the % fullness defined in Archive configuration (section 4.3.4). Transient event at the point of an invalid password entry attempt This event becomes active whenever a user with the specified Event Permission logs in. The event remains active until all local and remote users have logged out. .
Battery Low Archive media % full Invalid Password Entry User Logged In soUrCE 1 sENsE
Allows source 1 to be used in its normal sense (Select Source 1) or inverted (Select Not Source 1). Example: Source 1 is alarm 1 on channel 3 With Source 1 Sense = Source 1, the event is active whenever channel 3 alarm 1 is active. With Source 1 Sense = Not Source 1, the event is active whenever the alarm is not active oPEraTor This allows a logical combination of input sources to be used to trigger an event. The selections and their definitions are shown in table 4.3.5, below.
Operator
Only AND OR NAND NOR XOR
soUrCE 2 sENsE Allows source 2 to be used in its normal sense (Select Source 2) or inverted (Select Not Source 2). Example: Source 2 is Global Unackd alarm With Source 2 Sense = Source 2, the event is active whilst there is any unacknowledged alarm. With Source 2 Sense = Not Source 2, the event is active only if there are no unacknowledged alarms.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .5 EVENT CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) DEsCriPTor Allows a text string to be entered as the event title. See section 3.3.1 for text entry techniques. JoB NUMBEr Select the required job number for this event. CaTEgorY Select the required job to be carried out when the channel is in alarm (e.g. Drive relay) See section 4.7 for a description of job categories. WhilE/oN Allows the action of the alarm job to be chosen as a. while active, while inactive or while unacknowledged for continuous jobs (e.g. drive relay), or, b. on going active, on going inactive or on acknowledgement for one-shot jobs (e.g. increment counter). See also figure 4.3.3g and associated text. EVENT EXaMPlE An event is to be active whenever Channel 1 Alarm 1 is active whilst Channel 3 alarm 2 is not active. Source 1 = Point alarm (On = Channel 1; Alarm = 1) Source 2 = Point alarm (On = Channel 3; Alarm = 2) Source 1 Sense = Source 1 Operator = And Source 2 Sense = Not Source 2 It is possible to achieve the same result by inverting both Source senses and using the Nor operator.
4 .3 .6 Messages
This feature allows messages to be sent, by job action (section 4.7), to the display or to the group. The messages are of the form: Date, Time, Message. The message can be just text (up to 80 characters), or it can include up to nine embedded items which are typed into the message as {1} to {9}. The embedded values represented by {1} to {9} are selected from picklists. If a Group-destination message contains more characters than can be displayed on the screen, the right-hand part of the message is invisible to the user. The message appears in full in the message log (section 3.1.4) and when Review Software is used. Display-destination messages are always fully visible. MEssagE ENTrY The message configuration page is shown below in figure 4.3.6 The page is accessed from the Root menu/Operator/Config menu.
Message Number 1) The value of Message The value of {1} = {2} & {3}
= {4}, {5}
Replace {1} with Source Descriptor Replace {2} with Source Value
Apply Discard
CoNFigUraBlE ParaMETErs Message Number Select the required message from the picklist. Message Enter the message by using the pop-up keyboards (section 3.3.1) Replace {n} with A picklist allowing the user to select data to be embedded in the message: source Descriptor: The descriptor of the source which triggers the job message. source Value: The instantaneous value of the source at trigger time. source alarm Data: Details (see table 4.3.6) of the source alarm at message trigger time. specified Descriptor, specified Value, specified alarm data: Produces a further field {n} source, described below. instrument Name: Allows the Instrument Name (as entered in Configuration/Instrument - section 4.3.1) to be included in the message. instrument Number: Causes the instrument number (Network/Address - Section 4.5.1) to be embedded. Config revision: Embeds the Config File Version number (System/About - section 4.6.8) in the message local User: Embeds the currently logged-in user (e.g. Engineer, Richardne etc.
Alarm Type Absolute Deviation Embedded details Enable, Type (high or low), Threshold, Status Enable, Type (in or out), Reference, Deviation, Status
Rate of change Enable, Type (rise or fall), Amount, Change time, Status
Note: If any of Source Descriptor, Source Value or Source Alarm Data are embedded in a message which is triggered by a job which cannot be associated with a specific source (e.g. event, timer), then the embedded value is: ?????. HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08 User guide Page 69
{n} source
This field appears only if the previous field (Replace {n} with) is selected as Specified Descriptor, Specified Value or Specified alarm data. The associated picklist(s) allow a specific point, and a specific alarm (if appropriate) to be selected. It is thus possible to configure, say alarm 1 on channel 2, to produce a message giving the descriptor and/or value of, say, totaliser 1.
Notes: 1. n = 1 to 9 2. The example below is intended to clarify message entry techniques. EXaMPlE To configure Message 2 to read The value of Chan two = (Value channel 2) & Tot one = (Value totaliser 1) Before configuring the message: In channel configuration: Set channel 2 descriptor to: Chan two Set Channel 2 alarm job to: Category: Message Send message(s) to: All Groups First message: 2) Message 2 Last Message: 2) Message 2 On: Active In Totaliser configuration: Set Totaliser 1 descriptor to: Tot one In Messages configuration: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Select Message 2. Access the Symbols keyboard (section 3.3.1) and enter, without spaces, {}={}&{}={} Access the Numeric keyboard and insert 1, 2, 3, 4 within the braces to give: {1}={2}&{3}={4} Access the Alphabet keyboard, and insert text and spaces: The value of {1} = {2} & {3} = {4} Set Replace {1} to Source Descriptor Set Replace {2} to Source Value Set Replace {3} to Specified Descriptor Set {3} source to Tot one Set Replace {4} to Specified Value Set {4} source to Tot one
The result of this is that, should the channel 2 alarm go active, the following message would be sent to all groups, appear on the chart and become part of all groups histories: 06/02/08 14:30:21 The value of Chan two = 6.0C & Tot one = 3383.8073 Units
Note: If necessary, the message can be shortened (e.g. use Ch2 instead of Chan two), or it can be viewed in full, either in Message log, (section 3.1.4) or by using Review Software, if available.
4 .3 .7 Maths configuration
CoNFigUraTioN This feature allows a range of mathematical functions to be performed. Figure 4.3.7a shows a typical configuration page - the selected maths function determines which configuration fields actually appear.
Maths Number Value Function Add to Units Descriptor
1) Total Flow 76.54 Add Channel 1 Channel 2 l/min 0 60 0 100 None Numeric 2 1 1 No Action 26 Off 1) Total flow l/min l/min % % l/min
Scale Low Scale high Zone low Zone high Scale Type PV Format Max Decimal Digits Colour Alarm Number Enable Job Number Category
Apply Discard
Figure 4.3.7a Maths configuration menu (typical - varies from function to function)
Maths number Allows the user to select the required maths channel for configuration. The maximum number of maths channels is selected in the Virtual channels section of the Configuration/Options display, described in section 4.3.11. Value This field shows the current value of the selected maths channel. If the channel has not yet been configured, the value reads Off. Reset Now This button appears only after a resettable function has been selected. Operation of the button sets the maths value to zero.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .7 MaThs CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) Function This picklist allows the relevant maths function to be selected. In the following description, the word channel is used as an umbrella term for input channels, maths channels, totalisers etc. Off Constant Add Subtract Multiply Divide Group average* Allows the function to be disabled. Once Apply has been actioned, all configuration for this Maths number is lost. Allows a maths channel to be set to a constant value. Allows any channel or a constant value to be added to any other. Allows any channel or a constant value to be subtracted from any other. Allows any channel or a constant value to be multiplied by any other. Allows any channel or a constant value to be divided by any other. Should the value of the divisor pass through zero, Maths Channel N error and Maths Channel Failure messages appear. The instantaneous value of all the channels in the source group added together and divided by the number of channels in the group. For example, in a group of four channels whose instantaneous values are 4, 8, 2 and 6, the group average is (4 + 8 + 2 + 6) / 4 = 5. The relevant source group is selected by picklist. Should a channel return a non-valid value, it is excluded from the calculation, and the result of the function is the average of the remaining channels. The lowest value of any of the channels in the source group. For example, in a group of four channels whose instantaneous values are 4, 8, 2 and 6, the group minimum is 2. The required source group is selected by picklist. Should a channel return a non-valid value, it is excluded from the calculation, and the result of the function is the minimum of the remaining channels. The highest value of any of the channels in the source group. For example, in a group of four channels whose instantaneous values are 4, 8, 2 and 6, the group maximum is 8. The required source group is selected by picklist. Should a channel return a non-valid value, it is excluded from the calculation, and the result of the function is the maximum of the remaining channels.
Group minimum*
Group maximum*
*Note: If a maths channel with a Group function is contained within its own source group, then it will act on itself as well as on the other group contents, thus changing the calculation. For example, if the Group were to contain channel 1, channel 2 and maths channel 1, where maths channel 1 had the function Group Maximum for Group 1, then the Group Maximum would become a latching function, showing the highest value ever reached by channel 1, channel 2 or maths channel 1 since the group was configured. Slave Comms Rolling Average Channel Maximum Channel Minimum Channel Average Allows a process value for the maths channel to be communicated over the Modbus link This takes the average value of a single channel over a specified number of readings taken at a specified interval. The function value is retained during power off. Maths function value is the minimum value the input point has reached since last reset. When reset, the value is reset to the current input value. Maths function value is the minimum value the input point has reached since last reset. When reset, the value is reset to the current input value. Takes the average value of the selected channel over a specified time period. The time period must be a multiple of 125 msecs. For example, a period of 0.2 seconds would be rejected, but a period of 0.25 seconds would be accepted.
Scale Low / Scale High The zero and full scale values for the maths function, as displayed.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .7 MaThs CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) PV FORMAT Numeric Elapsed time Provides a decimal value for the maths channel. Shows the maths channel value in HH:MM:SS (hours minutes, seconds) format. Normally used only for time functions. For other functions, elapsed time counts in milliseconds e.g. a PV of 10000 would be displayed as 00:00:10; a PV of 60000 would be displayed as 00:01:00 Values are displayed and entered as a decimal number between 1.0 and 10 (the mantissa), followed by a multiplier (the exponent). E.G. to enter a value of 1244.5678, the value entered would be 1.2445678E3, where 3 represents the number of places that the decimal point must be shifted to the left in order to convert the value to a number between 1 and 10. To enter a value of 0.0004196, the entry would be 4.196E-4. For timestamp functions, displays the timestamp as time or date as selected, instead of a number of milliseconds, as would be displayed in numeric format.
Scientific
Time/date Notes
1. Strictly this is a number less than 10, as 10 would be 1.0E1. 2. There must be at least one number after the decimal point. REMAINING CONFIGURATION ITEMS The remaining configuration items are identical with the relevant items in Input Channel configuration (section 4.3.3).
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .7 MaThs CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) GROUP MINIMUM FUNCTION DETAILS The following description assumes a group name of Furnace 1, which contains four channels with descriptors Temp 1, Temp 2, Temp 3 and Temp 4 The output of the Group Minimum function is the current lowest value of any of the points in the source group. The required source group is selected by picklist. Should a point return a non-valid value, it is excluded from the calculation, and the result of the function is the minimum of the remaining points. DESCRIPTORS As a part of the Group Minimum function configuration, it is possible to select one of two types of descriptor: User Defined and Minimum Channel. Figure 4.3.7b, below shows the relevant area of the configuration page.
Maths Number 1) Furnace 1 min temp Value Value Function Group Minimum Source 1) Furnace 1 Units Descriptor type User defined descriptor Descriptor Furnace 1 min temp Maths Number 1) Group 1 minimum Value 234.67 Function Group Minimum Source 1) Furnace 1 Units Descriptor type Minimum Channel Descriptor User entered descriptor Descriptor Temp 1 Descriptor of channel with lowest current value
User Defined Descriptor. This allows a descriptor to be entered in the normal way. For example Furnace 1 min temp. This descriptor is copied to the Maths Number field at the top of the display page. Minimum Channel Descriptor This selection causes the descriptor of the point with the instantaneous current lowest value in the group, to become the (non-editable) maths channel descriptor. For example if the four channels in the group (Temp 1 to Temp 4) have the instantaneous values 800, 950, 790 and 873 respectively, then the Descriptor will be Temp 3 . Should Temp 3 rise above 800, whilst all the others remain static, then the Descriptor would become Temp 1. The Maths Number field which normally copies the maths channel descriptor, contains instead the text: 1) Group 1 minimum. A typical application of the Minimum channel descriptor would be to include the descriptor in a message sent to the chart on a regular basis by a Timer function. Section 4.3.6 describes the entry of the messages, and section 4.3.10 describes the setting up of timers. (Continued)
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .7 MaThs CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) groUP MiNiMUM FUNCTioN DETails (CoNT .) A typical message entry would be: Message: Replace {1} with: {1} source: Replace {2} with: {2} source: Lowest temperature is {1} at chan {2} Specified Value Group 1 minimum Specified Descriptor Group 1 Minimum
resulting in a message such as: 05/02/08 13:37:06 Lowest temperature is 790.00 Units at chan Temp 3.
where Units is the text entered in the Group Minimum maths channel configuration, not that for the input channel, although typically, they would be the same. Note: The Group configuration checkboxes for maths channels with Minimum Channel Descriptor selected, are greyed thus preventing such channels from being used as inputs to their own source group. See section 4.3.2 for Group configuration details. rolliNg aVEragE FUNCTioN DETails This calculates the average value of the last R samples of a channel, taken at N second intervals, where R and N can be defined by the user. At initiation, up to the time of the first sample reading, the displayed value is the average of the channel sampled every iteration (i.e. at 8 Hz.). The number of readings over which the average can be taken is limited by the amount of free RAM instantaneously available, and is thus dependent on the overall configuration of the recorder. An instrument alarm is generated if there is insufficient free RAM available - see section 3.1.3 for details.
Maths Number 1) Math 1 Value OFF
Reset now
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .7 MaThs CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) MoDBUs aDDrEssiNg For units fitted with the Modbus TCP comms option, the following table gives hex addresses for maths channel 1. Generally: Maths channel N parameter address = maths channel 1 parameter address + 162 (N-1) (decimal). For full details of the Modbus TCP implementation, see section 6. MATHS CHANNEL CONFIGURATION DATA CHANNEL 1
Parameter Name
Ch1 Span high Ch1 Span low Ch1 Zone high Ch1 Zone low Ch1 PV type
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone high value (two decimal places) Zone low value (two decimal places) Input type 1 = Analogue input 3 = Totaliser 2 = Maths 4 = Counter Number of decimal places (0 to 9) (used by all scaled parameters except where stated) Channel colour (0 to 55) (See Annex B for RGB definitions) Units string (up to five characters) Open Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Closed Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Channel descriptor (up to 20 characters) Number of alarms on this channel 0 = Numeric 1 = Digital strings
Type
Scaled Scaled Scaled Scaled Enum
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
Ch1 Decimal places Ch1 Colour Ch1 Units Spare Ch1 Open string Spare Ch1 Close string Spare Ch1 Descriptor Spare Ch1 No of alarms Ch1 PV format
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
2FF6 (12278) 2FF7 (12279) 2FF8 (12280) 2FFB (12283) 2FFD (12285) 3001 (12289) 3005 (12293) 3009 (12297) 300D (12301) 3017 (12311) 3021 (12321) 3022 (12322)
1 1 3 2 4 4 4 4 10 10 1 1
Ch1 Alarm 1 setpoint Spare Ch1 Alarm 2 enable Ch1 Alarm 2 type Ch1 Alarm 2 setpoint Spare Ch1 Alarm 3 enable Ch1 Alarm 3 type Ch1 Alarm 3 setpoint Spare Ch1 Alarm 4 enable Ch1 Alarm 4 type Ch1 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Alarm 1 enable 0 = Off 2 = Latched 1 = Unlatched 3 = Trigger Alarm 1 type 0 = Absolute low 1 = Absolute high 2 = Deviation in 3 = Deviation out 4 = Rate of change rise 5 = Rate of change fall Trigger setpoint (see note) Alarm 2 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 2 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (see note) Alarm 3 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 3 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (see note) Alarm 4 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 4 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (see note)
Enum
Read only
60 1
Enum
Read only
3060 (12384)
Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled
Read/Write 3061 (12385) 3062 (12386) Read only 306C (12396) Read only 306D (12397) Read/Write 306E (12398) 306F (12399) Read only 3079 (12409) Read only 307A (12410) Read/Write 307B (12411) 307C (12412) Read only 3086 (12422) Read only 3087 (12423) Read/Write 3088 (12424) 3089 (12425)
1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10
Note: If the setpoint source (section 4.3.3) is set to anything other than Constant the value returned will be the previously configured constant value.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .7 MaThs CoNFigUraTioN (Cont .) MATHS CHANNEL RUN-TIME DATA This table show addresses for maths channel 1 run-time data. Generally: channel N address = channel 1 address + 3(N-1) (decimal) CHANNEL 1
Parameter Name
Ch1 value Ch1 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Scaled Enum
Access
Ch1 Alarms
Uint16
A2BC (41660) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
IEEE 32-BIT CHANNEL CONFIGURATION DATA The following table shows addresses for the specified 32-bit floating-point values, for Maths channel 1. Generally, Parameter address for channel N = Parameter address for channel 1 + 36(N-1) (decimal). CHANNEL 1
Parameter Name
Ch1 span high Ch1 span low Ch1 Zone high Ch1 Zone low Ch1 Alarm 1 setpoint Ch1 Alarm 2 setpoint Ch 1 Alarm 3 setpoint Ch 1 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Description
Upper span value (Display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone upper value (% of chart width) Zone lower value (% of chart width) Trigger setpoint for alarm 1 (see note) Trigger setpoint for alarm 2 (see note) Trigger setpoint for alarm 3 (see note) Trigger setpoint for alarm 4 (see note)
Type
Float Float Float Float Float Float Float Float
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .7 MaThs oPTioN (Cont .) IEEE Area Maths Channel run-time data The following table gives addresses for the specified 32-bit floating-point values, for maths channel 1. Generally, Parameter address for channel N = Parameter address for channel 1 + 4(N-1) (decimal). CHANNEL 1
Parameter Name
Channel 1 value Channel 1 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0= No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Float Enum
Access
Channel 1 Alarms
Uint16
F9F2 (63986) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
4 .3 .8 Totalisers
iNTroDUCTioN Each totaliser allows the user to maintain a running total of any input channel, or of any maths channel. Using the maths functions, it is possible to totalise combinations of input channels, so the value of two channels added together, or the difference between two channels could be totalised if required. The totaliser equation is :
tot t = tot t1 + mat PSF USF
where
totaliser value this sample* totaliser value last sample* value of totalised channel this sample* Period Scaling Factor (See Period scaler description below) Units Scaling Factor (See Unit scaler description below)
*Note: Time between samples = Recording interval set in Group configuration. See Update information in Annex A for details. CoNFigUraTioN Figure 4.3.8, below, shows a typical (enabled) totaliser configuration page Totaliser Number Enable Value Total of Low Cutoff High Cutoff Units Preset Allows any of the available totalisers to be selected from the picklist, for configuration. Allows the user to enable/disable the totaliser. Shows the (dynamic) current value of the selected totaliser. Allows an input channel or a maths channel to be selected as the source to be totalised. The value of the source channel (in engineering units) below which it is not to be totalised. The value of the source channel (in engineering units) above which it is not to be totalised. The totalised units (e.g. m3) Allows the entry of a 10-character positive, or nine-character negative value from which the totaliser is to start counting. Direction of counting is defined by the sign of the Unit scaler viz: + = increment; - = decrement. Operation of this key initiates the totaliser preset.
Preset now
Units (totaliser )
Select channel etc. to be totalised
Scale Low Scale High Zone Low Zone High Scale Type PV format Max Decimal Digits Colour Alarm Number Enable Job Number Category
Numeric
Off No Action
Apply
Discard
Period Scaler
Unit Scaler
Scale Low/High
The totaliser equation works in seconds. If the totalised channel units are other than per second a period scaler other than the default (1) must be entered. For example, if the input channel is in litres per hour, then the period scaler would have to be the number of seconds in an hour (3600). If, for example, the input channel is in litres per hour, the totalised value will be in litres, unless the unit scaler is set to a value other than 1. If it is more convenient, the totalised value can be in thousands of litres by setting the unit scaler to 1000. Setting the unit scaler negative causes the totaliser to decrement rather than increment. The zero and full scale values for the totaliser, as traced on the screen.
The remaining configuration items are identical with the corresponding items in Input Channel configuration (section 4.3.3), except that Log/Linear scale type is not available. For job information, see section 4.7.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .8 (Cont .) ToTalisEr MoDBUs aDDrEssiNg For units fitted with the Modbus TCP comms option, the following table gives addresses for totaliser 1 configuration data Generally: Totaliser N parameter address = totaliser 1 parameter address + 162 (N-1) (decimal). For full details of the Modbus TCP implementation, see section 6. TOTALISER CONFIGURATION DATA TOTALISER 1
Parameter Name
Span high Span low Zone high Zone low PV type
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone high value (two decimal places) Zone low value (two decimal places) Input type 1 = Analogue input 3 = Totaliser 2 = Maths 4 = Counter Number of decimal places (0 to 9) (used by all scaled parameters except where stated) Channel colour (0 to 55) (See Annex B for RGB definitions) Units string (up to five characters) Open Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Closed Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Channel descriptor (up to 20 characters) Number of alarms on this channel 0 = Numeric 1 = Digital strings
Type
Scaled Scaled Scaled Scaled Enum
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
Decimal places Colour Units Spare Open string Spare Close string Spare Descriptor Spare No of alarms PV format
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
6F3E (28478) 6F3F (28479) 6F40 (28480) 6F43 (28483) 6F45 (28485) 6F49 (28489) 6F4D (28493) 6F51 (28497) 6F55 (28501) 6F5F (28511) 6F69 (28521) 6F6A (28522)
1 1 3 2 4 4 4 4 10 10 1 1
Alarm 1 type
Alarm 1 setpoint Spare Alarm 2 enable Alarm 2 type Alarm 2 setpoint Spare Alarm 3 enable Alarm 3 type Alarm 3 setpoint Spare Alarm 4 enable Alarm 4 type Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Alarm 1 enable 0 = Off 2 = Latched 1 = Unlatched 3 = Trigger Alarm 1 type 0 = Absolute low 1 = Absolute high 2 = Deviation in 3 = Deviation out 4 = Rate of change rise 5 = Rate of change fall Trigger setpoint (see note) Alarm 2 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 2 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (see note) Alarm 3 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 3 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (see note) Alarm 4 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 4 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (see note)
Enum
Read only
60 1
Enum
Read only
6FA8 (28584)
Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled
Read/Write 6FA9 (28585) 6FAA (28586) Read only 6FB4 (28596) Read only 6FB5 (28597) Read/Write 6FB6 (28598) 6FB7 (28599) Read only 6FC1 (28609) Read only 6FC2 (28610) Read/Write 6FC3 (28611) 6FC4 (28612) Read only 6FCE (28622) Read only 6FCF (28623) Read/Write 6FD0 (28624) 6FD1 (28625)
1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10
Note: If the setpoint source (section 4.3.3) is set to anything other than Constant the value returned will be the previously configured constant value.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .8 (Cont .) ToTalisEr MoDBUs aDDrEssiNg RUN-TIME DATA This table shows addresses for totaliser 1. Generally: totaliser N address = totaliser 1 address + 3(N-1) (decimal) TOTALISER 1
Parameter Name
Value Status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Scaled Enum
Access
Alarms
Uint16
A3E8 (41960) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
IEEE 32-BIT CONFIGURATION DATA The following table gives addresses for the specified 32-bit floating-point values, for Totaliser 1. Generally, Parameter address for totaliser N = Parameter address for totaliser 1 + 36(N-1) (decimal). TOTALISER 1
Parameter Name
Span high Span low Zone high Zone low Alarm 1 setpoint Alarm 2 setpoint Alarm 3 setpoint Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Description
Upper span value (Display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone upper value (% of chart width) Zone lower value (% of chart width) Trigger setpoint for alarm 1 (see note) Trigger setpoint for alarm 2 (see note) Trigger setpoint for alarm 3 (see note) Trigger setpoint for alarm 4 (see note)
Type
Float Float Float Float Float Float Float Float
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write
Note: If the setpoint source (section 4.3.3) is set to anything other than Constant the value returned will be the previously configured constant value.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .8 (Cont .) ToTalisEr MoDBUs aDDrEssiNg IEEE AREA TOTALISER RUN-TIME DATA The following table gives addresses for the specified 32-bit floating-point values, for totaliser 1. Generally, Parameter address for totaliser N = Parameter address for totaliser 1 + 4(N-1) (decimal). TOTALISER 1
Parameter Name
Totaliser 1 value Totaliser 1 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Float Enum
Access
Totaliser 1 Alarms
Uint16
FB82 (64386) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
4 .3 .9 Counters
iNTroDUCTioN The virtual channels option introduces a user-configurable number of counters, which can be preset, disabled, incremented or decremented by Job action. If access is permitted, the user can preset the counter to a selected value, as and when required, from the configuration page. See section 4.7 for Job details and section 4.3.11 for a description of virtual channels. CoNFigUraTioN Figure 4.3.9 shows a typical (enabled) counter configuration page. The page is accessed from the Root menu/ Operator/Config menu.
Counter number Enable Value Units Preset
1) Counter 1 OFF Units 0 Units Units
Select counter number
Preset now Scale Low Scale High Zone Low Zone High Scale Type Colour Alarm Number Enable Job Number Category Descriptor Counter 1
0 1 0 100 0 None 1 1 Units Units % %
Select None or Linear Select Alarm number Select Job number
Off No Action
Apply
Discard
CONFIGURABLE PARAMETERS Counter number Enable Value Units Preset Scale low/high Allows any of the available counters to be selected for configuration Allows the user to start/stop counting by enabling/disabling the counter. Shows the current dynamic value of the counter Allows a text string of up to 5 characters to be entered as a units description Allows a counter value to be entered for manual or job action preset. The values to appear at the scale end points.
The remaining configuration items are as described for input channels in section 4.3.3, except that Log/Linear scales are not available. Note: An absolute high alarm (for example) with a threshold of 10, will not be triggered until the value exceeds 10 (i.e. counter value = 11). In order to trip the alarm at 10, a threshold lower than 10 must be entered (e.g. threshold = 9.5). A similar situation exists for absolute low and deviation alarms.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .9 CoUNTErs (Cont .) CoUNTEr MoDBUs aDDrEssiNg For units fitted with the Modbus TCP comms option, the table below gives addresses for counter 1 configuration data. Generally: Counter N parameter address = counter 1 parameter address + 162 (N-1) (decimal). For full details of the Modbus implementation, see section 6. COUNTER CONFIGURATION DATA COUNTER 1
Parameter Name
Span high Span low Zone high Zone low PV type
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone high value (two decimal places) Zone low value (two decimal places) Input type 1 = Analogue input 3 = Totaliser 2 = Maths 4 = Counter Number of decimal places (0 to 9) (used by all scaled parameters except where stated) Channel colour (0 to 55) (See Annex B for RGB definitions) Units string (up to five characters) Open Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Closed Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Channel descriptor (up to 20 characters) Number of alarms on this channel 0 = Numeric 1 = Digital strings
Type
Scaled Scaled Scaled Scaled Enum
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
Decimal places Colour Units Spare Open string Spare Close string Spare Descriptor Spare No of alarms PV format
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
8EE2 (36578) 8EE3 (36579) 8EE4 (36580) 8EE7 (36583) 8EE9 (36585) 8EED (36589) 8EF1(36593) 8EF5 (36597) 8EF9 (36601) 8F03 (36611) 8F0D (36621) 8F0E (36622)
1 1 3 2 4 4 4 4 10 10 1 1
Alarm 1 type
Alarm 1 setpoint Spare Alarm 2 enable Alarm 2 type Alarm 2 setpoint Spare Alarm 3 enable Alarm 3 type Alarm 3 setpoint Spare Alarm 4 enable Alarm 4 type Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Alarm 1 enable 0 = Off 2 = Latched 1 = Unlatched 3 = Trigger Alarm 1 type 0 = Absolute low 1 = Absolute high 2 = Deviation in 3 = Deviation out 4 = Rate of change rise 5 = Rate of change fall Trigger setpoint (see note) Alarm 2 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 2 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (see note) Alarm 3 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 3 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (see note) Alarm 4 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 4 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (see note)
Enum
Read only
60 1
Enum
Read only
8F4C (36684)
Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled
Read/Write 8F4D (36685) 8F4E (36686) Read only 8F58 (36696) Read only 8F59 (36697) Read/Write 8F5A (36698) 8F5B (36699) Read only 8F65 (36709) Read only 8F66 (36710) Read/Write 8F67 (36711) 8F68 (36712) Read only 8F72 (36722) Read only 8F73 (36723) Read/Write 8F74 (36724) 8F75 (36725)
1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .9 CoUNTErs (Cont .) RUN-TIME DATA This table shows addresses for counter 1. Generally: Counter N address = counter 1 address + 3(N-1) (decimal) COUNTER 1
Parameter Name
Value Status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Scaled Enum
Access
Alarms
Uint16
A47E (42110) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
IEEE 32-BIT CONFIGURATION DATA The following table gives addresses for the specified 32-bit floating-point values, for Counter 1. Generally, Parameter address for counter N = Parameter address for counter 1 + 36(N-1) (decimal). COUNTER 1
Parameter Name
Span high Span low Zone high Zone low Alarm 1 setpoint Alarm 2 setpoint Alarm 3 setpoint Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Description
Upper span value (Display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone upper value (% of chart width) Zone lower value (% of chart width) Trigger setpoint for alarm 1 (see note) Trigger setpoint for alarm 2 (see note) Trigger setpoint for alarm 3 (see note) Trigger setpoint for alarm 4 (see note)
Type
Float Float Float Float Float Float Float Float
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write
Note: If the setpoint source (section 4.3.3) is set to anything other than Constant the value returned will be the previously configured constant value.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .9 CoUNTErs (Cont .) IEEE AREA COUNTER RUN-TIME DATA The following table gives addresses for the specified 32-bit floating-point values, for counter 1. Generally, Parameter address for counter N = Parameter address for counter 1 + 4(N-1) (decimal). COUNTER 1
Parameter Name
Counter 1 value Counter 1 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Float Enum
Access
Counter 1 Alarms
Uint16
FC4A (64586) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
4 .3 .10 Timers
iNTroDUCTioN This feature supplies 6 count-down timers which can be used for general timing purposes. The timers can be either one-shot or repeating, and can be initiated in the following ways: 1. 2. 3. 4. directly by the operator from the configuration page, by job action (see section 4.7), at a predefined time/date, every time period, where the time period can be configured to be anything from 1 second to 1 year. For example, setting seconds to 30 and leaving all other fields Any, the timer will start every minute on the half minute. Setting seconds to 30 and minutes to 0 would cause the timer to start at 30 seconds past each hour. Note: Times are not adjusted for Daylight Saving changes. Thus if the timer is set to trigger on a daily, weekly, etc, basis, then, during Summer Time, the trigger will occur an hour late (i.e. at 01:00 hrs. instead of at midnight). The full range of jobs is available as described in section 4.7. Timer Active is defined as an internal event trigger (section 4.3.5). CoNFigUraTioN Figure 4.3.10 shows a typical timer configuration display. The page is accessed from the Root menu/Operator/Config menu.
Timer number 1) Timer 1 Enable Remaining 00:00:00 Repeat in 00:00:00
Select timer
No Action
Seconds Seconds
Apply
Discard
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .3 .10 TiMErs (Cont .) Configurable parameters Timer number Enable Remaining Repeat in Reset now Start now Descriptor Self Start Allows a specific timer to be selected for configuration Allows the user to enable/disable the selected timer This is a dynamic display showing the time remaining in hours:minutes:seconds format. For repeat timers, shows the time remaining before the repeat is initiated. Display is 00:00:00 whilst timer is counting down. Allows a running timer to be reset to 00:00:00. Allows the operator to initiate the timer. Allows a descriptor to be entered for the timer. If enabled, this causes date and time selection fields to appear as shown in figure 4.3.10 above. Date: allows a day number to be selected from a picklist of 1 to N and Any, where N is the maximum number of days in the selected month. Month: allows a month number to be entered from a picklist of 1 to 12 and Any. Hour: allows an hour number to be selected from a picklist of 1 to 23, Midnight and Any. Minute: allows a minutes number to be entered from a picklist of 0 to 59 and Any. Seconds: allows a seconds value to be entered from a picklist of 0 to 59 and Any. Allows the user to enter a count-down time period in seconds. Allows the user to enter a repeat rate. It should be noted that the repeat value includes the duration time. For example, to time down from 50 seconds, every minute, a Duration value of 50 seconds should be entered, with a Repeat after value of 60 seconds (not 10 seconds).
Note: If Month = Any, and Day = 31, then the timer will not be triggered in February, April, June, September or November. Similarly, if Day = 30, the timer will not be triggered in February, and so on. Job configuration is as described in section 4.7. sElF-sTarT EXaMPlE To preset Totaliser number 1 to zero, daily, at midnight: In totaliser configuration, enter 0 as the Preset value for Totaliser 1. In timer configuration, select: 1. 2. 3 4 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. Timer number Enable Self start Date Month Hour Minute Second Duration Repeat after Job number Job category Action Totaliser On Timer 1 enabled enabled Any Any Midnight 0 0 0.125 0 1 Totaliser Preset Totaliser 1 Active
4 .3 .11 options
Fitted channels 6 Virtual channels 12/36 Maths 6 Totalisers 3 Counters 3 Six Channel 6100E Enabled Relay Boards 1 Relays on Board 1 3 Apply Discard Autoconfigure
(currently 0)
Touching this key calls a display showing the current recorder hardware/software setup, for example the number of input channels fitted, and if an output relay boards is fitted, Subsequently, should further options be fitted this page shows the difference between the hardware actually fitted and the hardware the recorder software is configured for (currently ...). Whenever there is a difference, the Autoconfigure key can be pressed to alert the recorder to the fact that extra options have been added (or taken away). If no changes have occurred since last switch-on, then the (currently ...) fields and the Autoconfigure key do not appear. VirTUal ChaNNEls Virtual channels are Maths channels, Totalisers and Counters. The total number of virtual channels is as specified at time of order. The user can select any combination of maths channels, totalisers and counters, so long as the total does not exceed the number of virtual channels available. If it does, a warning is given when the Apply button is operated, and the edit is ignored
4 .4 sECUriTY
Touching this key allows the operator to select Login (described in section 3.3.1)
4 .5 NETWorK KEY
Note: This manual does not describe network setup in detail, as each network is different. In most cases, the help of the network administrator or supervisor will be required, for example, in the allocation of valid addresses and passwords. Touching the Network key calls a selection box to the display, allowing Address or Name to be selected for configuration.
4 .5 .1 address
Figure 4.5.1 shows the address menu fields.
Archive
Save/R..
Config
Security
240
Network
System
Instrument number
Address Name
MAC address IP address lookup BootP timeout IP address Subnet mask Default gateway SNTP server enable SNTP client enable SNTP server EuroPRP server enable
Select 'specify an IP address', 'Get from BootP Server' or 'Get from DHCP Server'
Fig 4.5.2
149.121.128.179
Apply
Discard
iNsTrUMENT NUMBEr/MaC aDDrEss Unique numbers set up during manufacture to identify the recorder to a remote host, or to the recorder manufacturer/distributor, in case of query. iP aDDrEss looKUP This field allows an address to be entered for the recorder. This can be done either by manually entering an address (IP address field - below), or a network service BootP or DHCP can be used to assign an IP address to the recorder. BooTP TiMEoUT This 28 second period is the maximum time the recorder will wait, at power-up, for a response from the BootP server. If no response is received within this time, the IP address, Subnet mask and Default gateway are all set to, or remain at 0.0.0.0
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .5 .1 NETWorK aDDrEss (Cont .) iP aDDrEss Allows manual entry of the recorders internet protocol (IP) address only if Specify an IP address is selected in the IP address lookup picklist above. Notes: 1. DHCP attempts to connect to the network continuously, until successful. Only when successful will the network settings be updated and appear at the address page. This can take up to 13 seconds after power up. 2. It takes 2 to 3 minutes for a DHCP failure to be reported, so an instrument alarm would not be generated for 2 to 3 minutes after power up, should the connection fail to be established. sUBNET MasK This field is editable only if Specify an IP address is selected in the IP address lookup picklist above. The subnet mask is the network address plus the bits in the host address reserved for sub-network identification. By convention, all the network address bits are set to 1. The subnet mask is used to identify the subnet to which an IP address belongs by performing a bitwise AND on the mask and the IP address. DEFaUlT gaTEWaY To deliver traffic from one subnet to another, devices called routers or gateways are placed between segments. The default gateway address informs each network device where to send data if the target station does not reside on the same subnet as the source. sNTP sErVEr ENaBlE This tick box allows the recorder to act as an SNTP time server. sNTP CliENT ENaBlE This tickbox allows time synchronisation from a Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP) server to be enabled and disabled. When enabled, the instrument time is updated every 15 minutes.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .5 .1 NETWorK aDDrEss (Cont .) sNTP sErVEr If Obtain from BootP server or Obtain from DHCP server is selected as the IP address look-up (see above), then this address appears automatically. Otherwise this area allows an IP address to be entered for the SNTP server. Notes: 1 SNTP is a protocol that allows clients on a TCP/IP network to set their times to that of a server - port number 123. The recorder can act both as a client and as a server; when acting as a server, the resolution is 1 msec. 2. SNTP time is based on elapsed seconds since 00:00 hrs on 1st January 1900. The time is not affected by time zones or daylight saving adjustments. 3. If the instrument time differs from the SNTP time by less than 2 seconds, the instrument time is updated gradually (1 msec 8 times a second) to prevent time change events being recorded. If the difference is greater than 2 seconds, this is defined as a time change event, the results of which are that the recorder time is immediately updated, and a green line is drawn across the chart (vertical trend/history only) to indicate the time change. 4. If more than 5 time change events occur within 24 hours, a Time Synchronisation failure instrument alarm is set 24 hours after the first event. Once synchronisation is re-established, the alarm self-clears within 24 hours. 5. An SNTP server failure instrument alarm is flagged if the configured server cannot be accessed, or if the year received from the server is less than 2001 or more than 2035. 6. When the instrument is acting as a server and a Clock Failure instrument alarm is active, the server time is set to 1/1/1900 which is ignored by clients. 7. Servers such as Microsoft TimeServ cannot be used with this series of instruments because they are not SNTP servers.
EUroPrP sErVEr ENaBlE Enabling this item causes the instruent to declare itself (i.e. to become visible to a network scanning tool running on a PC), thus allowing the pc user to identify all such instruments on a network.
4 .5 .2 Name
Figure 4.5.2 shows the Name fields
Archive
Save/R..
Config
Security
Network
System
Apply
Discard
loCal hosT English language name for the recorder. Non-editable - assigned to the IP Address DoMaiN The name of the Group or area of networked units which contains the recorder. Non editable. DOMAIN NAME SERVICE (DNS) Enables the mapping of host names to IP addresses and vice-versa. PriMarY/sECoNDarY DNs sErVEr IP addresses supplied by IT department or the Domain manager or Supervisor. Notes: 1. Any one or more of the above items may be overwritten if IP address lookup is set to Obtain from BootP Server or Obtain from DHCP server as described under Address above. 2. If Domain Name Server is enabled, but either no DNS server is connected to the network or neither the DNS Primary nor secondary server can be found, it can take up to four minutes for the system to timeout. During this period, the recorders user interface (touchscreen) will not respond.
4 .6 sYsTEM
Clock
Clock Locale
Section 4.6.3
Archive
Save/R.. Security
Apply
Discard
Upgrade
Upgrade Input Adjust Ethernet Diagnostics Copy Job Search About
Section 4.6.6
Section 4.6.2
Locale
Include job data
Apply
Discard
Copy Now
Language English Country United Kingdom Time Zone GMT Use Summertime (DST)
Section 4.6.7
Job Search
Section All Sections Job Category Totaliser Job Action Preset
Start at 01:00:00
Section 4.6.5
on the Last Host 149.121.131.78 Ping Status Host Reachable Ping Now
Sunday
Ethernet Diagnostics
Sunday
About
Search Now
Section 4.6.8
Apply
Section 4.6.4
Input adjust
Local Modbus Client 1 Offline Remote Modbus Client 1 Offline Remote Modbus Client 2 Offline Remote Modbus Client 3 Offline
Initiate adjustment procedure Remove previous adjustments
First Channel 1 Select Channels Adjust Channels Remove Adjust Fast Settle
Last Channel 6
Instrument Variant: Config Revision: Last Updated: At Version: Created On: Security Revision:
6100E 310908 07 February 2008 10:00:08 4.3 6100E 0 Comprising Product Software Version: 4.3 History File Version: 2.0 BootRom Version: 1.5 Board Version 3
1) Channel 1 5.0001
Support File
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .6 sYsTEM (Cont .) Touching the System key calls the pick list: Clock, Locale, Upgrade, Input adjust, Ethernet diagnostics, Copy, Job search, About. Figure 4.6a above, gives an overview of the System Menus.
4 .6 .1 Clock
Selecting clock causes the recorders date and time to be displayed. To edit the date, touch the current date area, to call the keyboard and enter the new numbers. The date is edited in a similar way. The settings apply as soon as the Apply settings button is touched. See also SNTP details in section 4.5.1.
4 .6 .2 locale
This allows the setting of the following items: Language Choose the required language from the picklist Country Displays a pick list of countries associated with the selected language Time zone* Select required time zone from picklist. Use Summertime (DST)* Select box if daylight saving is to be used, If Use Summertime (DST) is selected, the times and dates for the start and end of summertime can be entered using picklists - see figure 4.6a. Notes 1 Date format DD/MM/YY or MM/DD/YY is defined by the language and country selected. Time format (e.g. 12/24 hr. clock) is defined by the country selected. 2. For more information, see B7 (Annex B) and/or http://www.timeanddate.com loNg DaTE ForMaT Table 4.6.2 shows some examples of the Standard and Long Format date layouts which are available according to Language and Country selections.
Country (Language) Argentina Australia Bolivia Canada (Eng) Canada (Fra) France Germany Holland Italy Portugal South Africa Spain Switzerland (Fra) Switzerland (Ger) Switzerland (Ita) United Kingdom United States Uruguay Date display Standard Long Format 01/05/06 1/05/06 01-05-06 01/05/06 06-05-01 01/05/06 01.05.06 1-5-06 01/05/06 01-05-2006 06/05/01 1/05/06 01.05.06 01.05.06 01.05.06 01/05/06 5/1/06 01/05/06 01/05/2006 1/05/2006 01-05-2006 1-May-06 06-05-01 1 mai 06 01.05.2006 1-mei-06 1-Mag-06 1/Mai/06 2006/05/01 01-may-06 1 mai 06 01.05.2006 1-mag-06 01-May-06 01-May-06 01/05/2006
4 .6 .3 Upgrade
This allows new options to be enabled by the entering of a Key Code.
Instrument Number This number must be quoted when ordering upgrades. It is unique to the instrument and is not user editable. Key Code If the relevant key code is known, it can be entered manually using this field Key Code File If Key Code File is selected, the first line of the file must be the Key Code. To select the file for reading, the Key Code File field is touched, to display the file list - if necessary, refer to section 5, below, for more details.
4 .6 .4 input adjust
Notes 1. Input adjust cannot be applied to input channels with input type of Digital, Test or comms. 2. The instrument must be powered for a sufficient time (e.g. 30 mins) for it to reach thermal equilibrium before an input adjust is performed.
This facility allows the user to compensate for tolerance errors etc. The technique used is to select those channels to which adjust is to be applied, then for each channel to: a b. apply a known low level signal (at or close to the low input range value) to the relevant input. When the recorder reading is steady, press Apply. apply a known high level signal (at, or close to, the high input range value) to the relevant input. When the recorder reading is steady, press Apply.
Figure 4.6.4a shows the initial display which appears when Input adjust is first selected from the SYSTEM menu. Channels 1 to 6 are selected by default.
First Channel 1 Last Channel 6
Select first channel for adjust Select final channel for adjust
Select Channels Adjust Channels Remove Adjust Fast Settle 1) Channel 1 5.0001 2) Channel 2 5.0001 3) Channel 3 5.0001 29/07/08 12:11:55 29/07/08 12:11:55 29/07/08 12:11:55 29/07/08 12:11:55 Unadjusted
Initiate adjustment procedure Remove previous adjustments
First channel Last channel Select Channels Adjust channels Remove Adjust Fast Settle 1) Channel 1 etc.
Allows the user to select the lowest channel number of all the channels to be adjusted. Allows the user to select the highest channel number of all the channels to be adjusted. Presents a list of all the channels from the First channel to the Last channel inclusive, each of which can be removed from the adjustment list by unticking its check box. The channels displayed in the status page reflect this selection. Initiates the adjustment procedure to all the channels from the First channel to the Last channel inclusive, unless the effectivity is modified using the Select Channels key. Returns the selected channels to factory calibration Switches off the input filter for 1 second, to allow quicker response. Adjust channels values are displayed as RANGING for the 1 second duration. A list of channels required to be susceptible to the adjustment procedure, together with their current values and their adjustment status (i.e. Unadjusted or, the time/date of the previous adjustment (if any)).
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .6 .4 iNPUT aDJUsT (Cont .) aDJUsT ProCEDUrE Operation of the Adjust Channels key calls the low-end adjust page, as shown in figure 4.6.4b.
Fast settle
Specify the sensor low point and connect the corresponding input. Low Point 0 When the values below have settled select Apply. 1) Channel 1 -0.0026 2) Channel 2 -0.0001 3) Channel 3 -0.0002 4) Channel 4 -0.0002 6) Channel 6 0.0000 Apply Unadjusted Unadjusted Unadjusted Unadjusted Unadjusted
Discard
Reduces the time taken for the readings to stabilise Usually 0, but a different value can be entered here, if required.
Apply the Low point value to the relevant input channels, and wait some minutes for the recorder readings to become stable. When the readings are stable, press the Apply key, to call the High-end page depicted in figure 4.6.4c, below.
Fast settle
Specify the sensor low point and connect the corresponding input. High Point 5 When the values below have settled select Apply. 1) Channel 1 4.9993 2) Channel 2 4.9972 3) Channel 3 5.0010 4) Channel 4 4.9994 6) Channel 6 5.0110 Apply Unadjusted Unadjusted Unadjusted Unadjusted Unadjusted
Discard
Reduces the time taken for the readings to stabilise Default value displayed, but a different value can be entered here, if required.
Apply the High point value to the relevant input channels, and wait some minutes for the recorder readings to become stable. When the readings are stable, press the Apply key, to return to the status page. Note: Adjusting a channel invalidates the accuracy values given in the specification in Annex A for that channel.
4 .6 .5 Ethernet Diagnostics
This screen (figure 4.6.5) allows the user to test the status of the connection with a host computer, and if Modbus comms is enabled, the connections with local and remote Modbus slaves.
Host 149.121.131.78 Ping Status Host Reachable Ping Now Local Modbus Client 1 127.0.0.1 Remote Modbus Client 1 149.121.130.242 Remote Modbus Client 2 Offline Remote Modbus Client 3 Offline Local Modbus Client 2 Offline
Allows the IP address, or DNS Name of the host to be Pinged. Indicates the latest status returned - see table 4.6.5, below for details. Operating this button causes an Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) command to be sent to the host. If the host receives the message, it returns a message to the sender within a few seconds. Local Modbus Client Appears only if the Master Comms option is enabled. Indicates that the local Modbus Master is connected. Remote Modbus Client Appears only if the Master Comms option is enabled. Displays the IP address of connected Modbus TCP/IP clients. Otherwise Offline is displayed.
Displayed Status Waiting In Progress Host Reachable Ping (Error in value) Request Timed Out Host Unreachable Unknown error Interpretation The default status displayed on power up. Displayed whilst waiting for a response from the host A device was found at the specified address. Host refused to allow socket connection on the defined Ping Port. Unable to reach a host at the specified network address. Unable to reach a host at the specified network address. An unknown internal error has occurred. Table 4.6.5 Ping Status
4 .6 .6 Copy
This facility allows the user to copy a point or group configuration from one point, etc. to one or more others. The user may choose whether or not to include alarm and (if applicable) job data when copying point configurations. Descriptors and colour selections are not copied. Figure 4.6.6 shows a typical configuration page for copying the configuration of channel 1 (Furnace Temp1) to channels 2 to 5 inclusive.
Source Type Channel Copy From 1) Furnace Temp 1 Copy To 2) Channel 2 5) Channel 5 Include alarm data Include job data Copy Now
When Copy Now is operated, a confirmatory dialogue box opens, to allow the user to check the source and destination entries.
Copying
OK
Cancel
CoNFigUraBlE ParaMETErs Source Type Picklist allows selection of Group, Channel, Event, Message, Maths Channel, Totaliser, Counter, or Timer as the type of source to be copied. Copy From Allows the user to select a specific point, group etc. to be copied Copy To Allows the first destination point to be selected, for the source to be copied to. Allows the final destination point to be selected for the source to be copied to. Include alarm data This field appears only for source types which support alarms. If this box is selected, then alarm data is included in the copy process. Include job data This field appears only for source types which support jobs. If this box is selected, then jobs data is included in the copy. For source types that support both alarms and jobs, it is not possible to include job data, without including alarm data as well. Note: Group copy not applicable to this recorder model
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .6 .6 CoPY (Cont .) Once the copy is complete, the user should enter the configuration area of the items that have been copied, and edit/apply the changes etc. CoPY rUlEs 1. The first channel on any input card may not be a digital input type. 2. If a destination channel was a digital input, AND the source channel is an analogue input AND include alarm data is not selected, the destination channel alarm settings will be set as: Enable = Off; Type = Absolute high; Threshold = 0.0; Dwell = 0.0. 3. If a destination channel was an analogue input, AND the source channel is a digital input AND include alarm data is not selected, the destination channel alarm settings will be set as: Enable = Off; Type = Digital; Threshold = Closed; Dwell = 0.0. 4. Descriptors and Colours are never copied.
4 .6 .7 Job search
With multiple job sources, it can sometimes be difficult to discover what the trigger for a particular job is, particularly if the recorder has been configured by more than one operator. The Job Search facility allows the user to define a job type, and the recorder then produces a list of relevant triggers. Figure 4.6.7 shows a typical search page, which will produce a list of all triggers for Preset Totaliser jobs.
Section All Sections Job Category Totaliser Job Action Preset Search Now
Allows the user to select a point type for the search. For example, selecting Maths, causes the search to be restricted to Maths channels. All Sections causes all enabled point types to be included in the search. Allows a job category (e.g. Totaliser) to be selected for the search. This depends on the job category. For example, for Totalisers, Preset, Disable, Preset Group or Disable Group to be selected. Section 4.7 gives details of all job types and their associated actions. Operation of this button initiates the search, after confirmation.
The search results in one of two displays, one No Match was found if no jobs are found which match the search criteria, or a list of triggers is produced. A typical example is given in figure 4.6.7b.
Channels (1), Alarm (1), Job (3) Channels (3), Alarm (3), Job (1) Channels (6), Alarm (4), Job (1) Maths (1), Alarm (2), Job (3)
Search Results
Ok
Figure 4.6.7b Search results (typical)
4 .6 .8 about
Selecting About from the System key menu gives details of the version numbers of different aspects of the recorder, and details of the amount of memory fitted. Figure 4.6.8 shows a typical About display page.
Instrument Variant: 6100E Config Revision: 310908
Comprising Product Software Version: 4.3 History File Version: 2.0 BootRom Version: 1.5
Security Revision: 0
Last Updated: 07 February 2008 10:00:08 At Version: 4.3 Created On: 6100E
Board Version 3 Fitted Memory History: 8.00MB SRAM: 256kB DRAM: 64MB Support File
iNsTrUMENT VariaNT Displays the instrument type. CoNFig rEVisioN Whenever a change to the Configuration of the recorder is applied the Config Revision is incremented. For these purposes, Configuration is defined as including all items within the menu structures of the Config and Network keys, and includes User Screens. Config Revision is printed on the chart at power up, Notes: 1. Config Revision can be used as an input to one or more maths channels. If such a maths channel is included in one or more groups, the revision number can be determined for any time/date, when Trend History mode is invoked for the group(s) in question. See section 4.3.7 for maths function details. 2. Config Revision can be embedded in one or more messages, as described in section 4.3.6. lasT UPDaTED The time and date at which the configuration was last edited. aT VErsioN The version number at the time of the last configuration update. CrEaTED oN Shows the type of instrument that the configuration was created on. Normally, this is the same as Instrument Variant, and will be different only if the configuration has been downloaded from a different instrument model.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 4 .6 .8 aBoUT (Cont .) sUPPorT FilE If the unit is not performing as it should (e.g. it resets itself unexpectedly), the Support File key allows the user to save critical system files into a single file (SupportInfo.uhq*) which may be saved to a Compact Flash card or to a memory stick, for despatch to the manufacturer for analysis. For security reasons, this file cannot be viewed by anyone other than the manufacturer or the manufacturers agents. Once the save operation is complete, a Support message appears on the screen giving details of where to send the file. More information is held in the file SupportInfo.txt which is also saved. This file can be opened, and the information within it read, by inserting the disk/memory stick into a PC, clicking on the floppy disk icon (A drive) in My Computer and then double clicking on the file icon when it appears. * SupportInfo is the default name. This name may be edited by the user before saving to disk or pc. The .uhq suffix is automatically appended to the new name.
4 .7 JoBs
A number of sources (e.g. channel, event, totaliser) can be set up to trigger one or more jobs. The following description includes all possible job categories, but which jobs are available on any particular recorder depends on the options fitted to that recorder. The type of action (continuous or single-shot), available for selection, depends on the type of trigger source. Continuous actions are selected from: While active, While inactive or While unacknowledged. The available single-shot actions are: On becoming active, On becoming inactive, On acknowledgement.
4 .7 .1 No action
This means that no job action is configured for the trigger source.
Active
4 .7 .3 Totaliser category
If the Totaliser option is fitted (section 4.3.8), the following jobs become available: Preset Preset Group Disable Disable Group Loads the selected totaliser with the value set up in Preset in the totalisers configuration menu. Loads all the totalisers in the group with their Preset values. Stops the specified totaliser accumulating. Stops all totalisers in the group.
Note: If more than one job is set up to disable a particular totaliser, then any of these jobs going active will disable the totaliser.
Job Number Category Action Totaliser On
1 Totaliser Preset Totaliser 1 Active
Select 'Preset', 'Disable', 'Preset Group' or 'Disable Group' Select Required Totaliser Select 'Active', 'Inactive' or 'Acknowledgement'
4 .7 .4 Message category
One or more messages (section 4.3.6) can be directed to the display, to All groups or to a Specified Group (Group 1 for this recorder model). The messages must be contiguous - e.g. messages 2, 3 and 4 may be sent, but messages 1, 3 and 4 cannot be sent, without message 2 as well.
Job Number 1 Category Message Send Message(s) to Display
4 .7 .5 Maths category
If Maths channels (section 4.3.7) are enabled, the following jobs become available to applicable functions: Reset Disable Switch to B Trigger Sets the selected maths channel value to zero. Stops historical functions such as Rolling Average from accumulating further values. When the function is subsequently re-enabled, the function re-starts from its pre-disabled value. Disable has no effect on other functions. Not applicable to this recorder model. Not applicable to this recorder model.
Select 'Reset', 'Disable' 'Switch to B' or 'Trigger' Select Required Maths channel Select 'Active', 'Inactive', or 'Acknowledgement'
4 .7 .6 Clock category
This job causes the System Clock to be Preset to the value entered in Instrument Configuration (Preset Hour, Preset Minute) (Section 4.3.1). This job can be used to synchronise a number of recorders as follows: a. For each recorder, set up one input channel as Input Type ........... Digital Closed String....... Synch (for example) Enable ................... Trigger Active when ........ Synch Job 1 category .... Clock Job 1 action ....... Preset Job 1 On ............... Active b. For each recorder, set the same preset hour and minute in Instrument Configuration. c. For each recorder provide a simultaneous pulse or contact closure to the digital input previously set up. The recorders will all be automatically set to the preset time on receipt of the input. An alternative way of synchronising recorders is via an SNTP time server as described in section 4.5.1.
Job Number Category Action On
1 Clock Preset Active
Notes 1 Whenever a time change occurs, a green line is drawn across the chart in vertical trend mode. 2 The clock presets to the Preset Hour value set in Config/Instrument menu. If, however, Use Summertime (DST) is enabled in System/Locale configuration, then an hour is added whilst daylight saving time is in operation.
4 .7 .7 Counter category
If Counters (section 4.3.9) are enabled, the following jobs become available: Preset counter Loads the selected counter with the preset value set in the configuration for that counter. Disable counter Stops the selected counter. Increment Adds 1 to the selected counters value. Decrement Subtracts 1 from the selected counters value. Preset group Loads all the counters in the group with their Preset values. Disable group Stops all counters in the group.
Job Number Category Action Counter On
1 Counter Increment Counter 1 Acknowledgement
Select 'Preset', 'Disable', 'Increment', 'Decrement','Preset group', 'Disable Group'. Select Required Counter Select 'Active', 'Inactive' or 'Acknowledgement'
4 .7 .8 Timer category
The following jobs are available: 1. 2. 3. Reset timer - sets the timer to zero Start timer - causes the timer to start. Disable timer - stops the timer.
Job Number Category Action Timer On
1 Timer Reset Timer 1 Active
Select 'Reset', 'Start' or 'Disable' Select Required Timer Select 'Active', 'Inactive' or 'Acknowledgement'
4 .7 .9 recording category
The following Recording jobs are available: Enable Notes: 1 The group will be recorded only if Recording Enable selected in group Configuration (section 4.3.2) and the job is active. 2. A blue line is drawn across the chart whenever a recording job is used to disable/enable recording. This enables recording to the groups history file, while active, while inactive or while unacknowledged.
Select required action Select required Group if appropriate Select 'Active', 'Inactive' or 'Unacknowledged'
5 FilE
Figure 5, below, gives an overview of the File Menus. The area is entered by touching the File key of the root menu, and can be used to display the contents of directories stored both in the user area of flash memory and on any bulk storage device inserted or connected. The first display page shows the volume or device names associated with the various areas of memory available to the user. If one of these volume names is selected (touched), and the open-folder key* operated, the contents of the selected volume is displayed. This would typically consist of a list of folders. Similarly, if a folder name is selected and the open folder key* is touched, the contents of the folder is displayed and so on. To return to higher levels, the close-folder key* is used. The path name of the current window is shown at the top of the window. *Note: The open-folder and close-folder key functions are the same as the down arrow and up arrow key functions respectively.
2
No batch In Progress
Root Menu
Home File Goto View
1
Select volume
Engineer
No batch In Progress
4
Date 07/09/05 09:25:46 Bytes
Name history\
Type Folder
Engineer
No batch In Progress
6
Date 12/09/05 11:40:56 Bytes
\mediacard\history
Select folder
Name group1\
Type Folder
Engineer
No batch In Progress
8
Date 28/09/05 15:39:18 12/09/05 11:40:54 07/09/05 09:26:32 Bytes
\mediacard\history\group1\
Select folder
Engineer
No Batch In Progress
\mediacard\history\group1\000
Select file
10
Note: The down arrow navigation key can be used as an alternative to the 'Open Folder' key.
New Cut Paste
Filer Options
5 .3 FilE sTrUCTUrE
The file structure on the archive medium, is as depicted below in figure 5.3. Each subdirectory contains a maximum of 32 files, there being sufficient subdirectories created, to contain all the groups history files. The subfolder names are the numerical part of the first history file that they contain. For example if the first file name is Furnace1 Temp~20051012 80155F2601000120.uhh, then the subdirectory name will be 20051012 80155F2601000120. If there are more than 32 files, the next subdirectory name is 20051012 80155F2601000140 (assuming the file names are contiguous).
SD or Flash card history\ The group contains subdirectories, each containing up to 32 files. group 1
6 .2 iNTroDUCTioN
MODBUS TCP allows one or more recorders to act as slave devices to one or more host computers connected via the RJ45 connector at the rear of the recorder. Each recorder must have a unique Internet Protocol (IP) address, set up as described in Section 4.5. MODBUS TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) is a variant of the MODBUS family of communications protocols intended for supervision and control of automated equipment specifically covering the use of MODBUS messaging in an intranet or internet environment, using TCP/IP protocols. Much of the MODBUS detail in this manual is derived from the document openmbus.doc, available at http://www.modbus.org/default.htm The above mentioned document also includes implementation guidelines for users. Note: The Modbus protocol allows a maximum of 255 data bytes to be read from or written to in one transaction. For this reason, the maximum number of standard (16 bit) registers that can be accessed in one transaction is 255/2 = 127 and the maximum number of IEEE (32-bit) registers is 127/2 = 63.
6 .2 .1 Function Codes
MODBUS function codes 3, 4, 6, 8 and 16, defined in table 6.2.1a below, are supported and are fully described in section 6.5, below.
Code 03 04 06 08 16 MODBUS definition Read holding registers Read input registers Pre-set single register Diagnostics Pre-set multiple Registers Description Reads the binary contents of holding registers. In this implementation, code 03 is identical with code 04. Reads the binary contents of input registers. In this implementation, code 04 is identical with code 03. Writes a single value to a single register. Obtains communications diagnostics information Writes values to multiple holding registers
DiagNosTiC CoDEs Function code 08, subfunction 00 (Return query data) echoes the query (Loop back).
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .2 .1 FUNCTioN CoDEs (Cont .) EXCEPTioN CoDEs MODBUS TCP provides reserved codes used for exceptions. These codes provide error information relating to failed requests. Exceptions are signalled by hex 80 being added to the function code of the request, followed by one of the codes listed in table 6.2.1b, below.
Code MODBUS definition Dec Hex 01 02 03 04 09 10 11 01 02 03 04 09 0A 0B Illegal Function Illegal Data Address Illegal Data Value Slave Device Failure Illegal Sub Function Gateway path unavailable Gateway target device failed to respond Description (see Modbus specification for full details) An invalid function code was received An invalid data address was received An invalid data value was received An unrecoverable error occurred in the recorder An invalid sub function was received. Gateway misconfigured or overloaded. Device not present on the network
6 .2 .2 Data types
The following data types are supported: 1 2 3 4 5 2s complement signed 16-bit analogue values with implied decimal point. The decimal point position must be configured in both the recorder and the host computer. 2s complement, 16, 32 and 64 bit signed integers. 16-bit unsigned integer values. 32 bit IEEE Floating point values. Strings of limited size, can be transferred across Modbus TCP in ASCII format using a single non-multiplexed set of consecutive registers.
DaTa ENCoDiNg MODBUS uses what is called a Big endian representation for addresses and data items. This means that when a numerical quantity larger than a single byte is transmitted, the most significant byte is sent first. For example a 32-bit hex value of 12345678 would be transmitted as 12, followed by 34, followed by 56 and finally 78.
6 .2 .4 security
The recorder has a local file in which the correct Username and Password are stored. Should a host fail to login after three attempts, the recorder will terminate the connection. This MODBUS security function can be enabled/disabled in the Operator/Config/Instrument menu (section 4.3.1). Note: Modbus Security must be disabled in order for Modbus communications to be established. Once the Master is communicating with the Slave, Modbus security can be re-enabled, providing that the master has the correct remote user name and password data for the relevant slave. If this information is missing, all read/write requests will be ignored by the slave.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .2 .4 sECUriTY (Cont .) The following C++ code is intended for use in creating a suitable 16-bit encrypted register using an IP address and password: /*--------------------------------------------------------------------------FUNCTION : MB_Driver::encrypt DESCRIPTION : Create an encrypted value from a password string ARGUMENTS : pswd : Pointer to password from network file eKey : Pointer to eKey, usually I.P. address (must be 4 bytes) RETURN : result : A 16 bit value representing the encryption result NOTES : None ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*/ Ushort MB_Driver::encrypt(cchar *pswd, cchar *ipAddr) { Uchar key1; Uchar key2; Ushort dataLen; Uchar ibyte; Ushort byteResult = 0; Uchar *encryptedData = NULL; Uchar eKeys[4]; Ulong ipAddress; /* Convert ip address to an unsigned long value so that we can manipulate each of the 4 bytes, to be used as our private keys */ ipAddress = inet_addr(ipAddr); // Now split the bytes up by copying the IP address into a byte array memcpy(eKeys, &ipAddress, sizeof(Ulong)); // From the 4 bytes of the IP address create two exclusive keys key1 = eKeys[0] ^ eKeys[3]; key2 = eKeys[1] ^ eKeys[2]; // Calculate the length of the string to be encrypted dataLen = strlen(pswd); // Create some memory to store the new encrypted password encryptedData = (Uchar*) malloc(sizeof(Uchar)*dataLen); /* Copy the unencrypted password into a byte array, so we can use the character code as each byte value */ memcpy(encryptedData, pswd, dataLen); /* Perform EXOR comparison between keys and raw data. Perform the operation on each byte using alternate key values starting at byte 1 with key 1 */ for(ibyte=0; ibyte < dataLen;) { // EXOR with the key1 encryptedData[ibyte++] ^= key1; (Continued)
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .2 .4 sECUriTY (Cont .) // Compare the next byte with key2 if(ibyte < dataLen) { encryptedData[ibyte++] ^= key2; } } /* Now EXOR each byte to the next byte until no more are available if all goes well the last byte in the array should never change */ for(ibyte=0; ibyte < (dataLen-1); ibyte++) { encryptedData[ibyte] = (encryptedData[ibyte] ^ encryptedData[ibyte+1]); } // Now add all the bytes together to get a 16 bit value result for(ibyte=0; ibyte < dataLen; ibyte++) { byteResult += encryptedData[ibyte]; } // Return the encrypted string as a 16 bit value return(byteResult); } Notes: 1. If login is accepted, a standard response is sent to the master 2. If three invalid logins are sent, by the master, then an illegal address exception code (2) is sent to the master.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .2 .4 sECUriTY (Cont .) To sEND a logiN rEQUEsT Request Figure 6.2.4a shows data transmission sequence for sending a login request to a recorder with Modbus address 1, using the Ethernet network connection. Figure 6.2.4b is the same message for use with serial communications
Byte 0 00 Byte 1 00 Byte 2 00 Protocol identifier Byte 3 00 Protocol identifier Byte 4 00 Byte 5 Byte 6 01 Recorder Modbus address Byte 7 10 Byte 8 CC Byte 9 30 Byte 10 00 Byte 11 06 13 Always 00 Number of bytes following (hex)
Start Start No. of regis- No. of regisModbus ters low function address high address low ters high code (hex)
Byte 21 00 Null
User name (as configured in instrument. Must be followed by null character (Hex 00) Byte 24 00 Null Null character inserted only, if otherwise, the Byte count in Byte 12 would be Odd.
Byte 1 10
Byte 2 CC
Byte 3 30
Byte 4 00
Byte 5 06
Byte 6 0C
Start Start No. of regis- No. of regis- Byte count MODBUS ters low function address high address low ters high (excluding code (hex) CRC)
Byte 15 00 Null
Byte 18 00 Null
Null character inserted only if without it, the Byte count in Byte 6 would be Odd.
Notes: 1 The high and low password bytes are entered using the result of the encryption program above. If the password is blank, both High and Low Bytes must be 00 (null). 2 For successful login, the Connect from remote item must be enabled (ref. Access levels in section 4.4.1).
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .2 .4 sECUriTY (Cont .) To sEND a logiN rEQUEsT (CoNT .) Response Figures 6.2.4c and 6.2.4d show response messages for successful and non-successful login attempts.
Byte 0 00 Byte 1 00 Byte 2 00 Protocol identifier Byte 3 00 Protocol identifier Byte 4 00 Byte 5 Byte 6 01 Recorder Modbus address Byte 7 10 Byte 8 CC Byte 9 30 Byte 10 00 Byte 11 05 06 Always 00 Number of bytes following (hex)
Start No. of regis- No. of regisStart Modbus ters low function Address high Address low ters high code (hex)
Byte 0 00
Byte 1 00
Byte 4 00
Byte 5
6 .2 .5 Text messages
In order to increase efficiency, it is possible to set the system to transmit screen messages (e.g. alarm on/off) only when a new message occurs. This is done by continuously polling the Text Length parameter (in group data - section 6.4.4) to see if its value is non-zero. (This parameter contains the character count of the latest message to occur since the last poll.) If text length is non-zero, the host must access the parameter Read Text (also in group data) to read the message, and it must also reset the Text Length parameter to zero. This causes the recorder to look for any further messages in the queue, and if there are, it will load the latest message into the area accessed by Read Data, and then set Text Length to the length of the new message. If the host fails to set Text Length to zero after reading a message, no new messages will be read. If Text Length is zero, no new messages have been generated since the last poll. loNg MEssagEs All messages are terminated with a null character. Messages of up to 60 characters (including the time and date and the terminating null) can be read by the master device in a single transaction. If the message contains more than 60 characters, one or more continuation messages of up to 60 characters each are placed in Read Text, as soon as the previous message has been confirmed as read. The master can continue to read all these messages, until it detects a null character. Intelligent masters can then re-assemble the characters into a single message. Non-intelligent masters can treat the continuation messages as separate messages sent at the same time as the first message. Notes: 1. If any of the messages is of less than 60 characters, the unused part of message is filled with null characters (example 1). Thus, by reading character 60, the master can determine either that this is the last message (character 60 = null), or that there is at least one message to follow (character 60 is not null). 2. Continuation messages cannot contain only null characters. For this reason, if the message itself (i.e. excluding final null characters) is exactly 60 characters long (or a multiple of 60 characters long) then the final extension message contains a space, followed by 59 nulls (Example 2). 3. Time and date appear only in the main message, not the continuation message(s). Example 1 Message of less than 60 characters
Character no. English message ASCII (Hex)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
04/04/02
16:31:05
Lines
stopp ed
because
of
belt
failure
30 34 2F 30 34 2F 30 32 20 31 36 3A 33 31 3A 30 35 20 4C 69 6E 65 73 20 73 74 6F 70 70 65 64 20 62 65 63 61 75 73 65 20 6F 66 20 62 65 6C 74 20 66 61 69 6C 75 72 65 00 00 00 00 00
Message
04/04/02
16:31:05
Lines
stopp ed
because
of
belt
failure
BT01
30 34 2F 30 34 2F 30 32 20 31 36 3A 33 31 3A 30 35 20 4C 69 6E 65 73 20 73 74 6F 70 70 65 64 20 62 65 63 61 75 73 65 20 6F 66 20 62 65 6C 74 20 66 61 69 6C 75 72 65 20 42 54 30 31
20 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .2 .5 TEXT MEssagEs (Cont .) Example 3 Message of more than 60 but less than 120 characters
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Message
04/04/02
16:31:05
Line s
stopp ed
because
of
belt
failure
on
30 34 2F 30 34 2F 30 32 20 31 36 3A 33 31 3A 30 35 20 4C 69 6E 65 73 20 73 74 6F 70 70 65 64 20 62 65 63 61 75 73 65 20 6F 66 20 62 65 6C 74 20 66 61 69 6C 75 72 65 20 6F 6E 20 6C
Extension message
ine
se ct i on
17
69 6E 65 20 33 20 73 65 63 74 69 6F 6E 20 31 37 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
6 .3 aDDrEss MaP
Figure 6.3 shows the range of addresses allocated to various recorder functions. Each of these functions is described in detail in later sections.
FFFF FFF5 FFF4 FFF0 FFEF
Addresses FFF5 to FFFF: Not used Addresses FFF0 to FFF4: Permanent ID table Addresses FCBF to FFEF: Spare 32-bit run-time data
Addresses FC47 to FCBE: Counters Addresses FB7F to FC46: Totalisers Addresses F9EF to FB7E: Maths Addresses F8C3 to F9EE: Input channels Addresses F48B to F8C2: Counters 32-bit config. data Addresses ED83 to F48A: Totalisers
Addresses F8C3 to FCBE: Run-time data IEEE Region (32-bit data access area) Addresses D4E7 to F8C2: Point configuration data IEEE Region (32-bit data access area)
Addresses D0E6 to D4E6: R/W Indirection table Addresses CCE5 to D0E5: R/O Indirection table Addresses CC26 to CCE4: Feature ID table Addresses A4D6 to CC25: Group data
Addresses 007B to A1D8: Point configuration data Input channels = points 1 to 75 Math channels = points 76 to 175 Totalisers = points 176 to 225 Counters = points 226 to 255 Point config. data
Notes: 1 All addresses in hexadecimal 2 Areas represent relative sizes, but are not to scale 3. Not all the points referred to in the map are available with this recorder model
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .3 aDDrEss MaP (Cont .) The contents of the group can be determined by reading the relevant register number, as shown in section 6.4.4, below. The table below is a decoder for the results. For example, if the group has channels 1 to 6, maths channel 1 and totaliser three fitted, the results would be: Register 1 = 63 (32 + 16 + 8 + 4 + 2 + 1) (channels 1 to 6) Register 5 = 2048 (maths channel 1) Register 12 = 2 (Totaliser 1) All other register values = 0
16384 1024 2048 4096 8192 Value if bit set Bit number 32768
128
256
1
2 18 34 50 66 M7
2
3 19 35 51 67 M8
3
4 20 36 52 68
4
5 21 37 53 69
5
6 22 38 54 70
6
7 23 39 55 71
7
8 24 40 56 72
8
9 25 41 57 73
512
16
32
64
9
10 26 42 58 74
10
11 27 43 59 75
11
12 28 44 60 M1
12
13 29 45 61 M2
13
14 30 46 62 M3
14
15 31 47 63 M4
15
16 32 48 64 M5
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
1 17 33 49 65 M6
Register Number
M9 M10 M11 M12 M13 M14 M15 M16 M17 M18 M19 M20 M21
M22 M23 M24 M25 M26 M27 M28 M29 M30 M31 M32 M33 M34 M35 M36 M37 M38 M39 M40 M41 M42 M43 M44 M45 M46 M47 M48 M49 M50 M51 M52 M53 M54 M55 M56 M57 M58 M59 M60 M61 M62 M63 M64 M65 M66 M67 M68 M69 M70 M71 M72 M73 M74 M75 M76 M77 M78 M79 M80 M81 M82 M83 M84 M85 M86 M87 M88 M89 M90 M91 M92 M93 M94 M95 M96 M97 M98 M99 M100 T1 T2 T18 T34 T50 T3 T4 T5 T6 T7 T8 T9 T10 T11 T12 T13 T14 T15 T16 T17 T19 T20 T21 T22 T23 T24 T25 T26 T27 T28 T29 T30 T31 T32 T33 T35 T36 T37 T38 T39 T40 T41 T42 T43 T44 T45 T46 T47 T48 T49 C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 C6 C7 C8 C9 C10 C11 C12 C13 C14 C15
C16 C17 C18 C19 C20 C21 C22 C23 C24 C25 C26 C27 C28 C29 C30 Table 6.3 Channels in group interpretation
6 .4 aDDrEss alloCaTioN
This section consists of a number of tables showing how the address space within the memory map is allocated. For full details of configuration parameters, refer to section 4. For convenience, the word channel is used as an umbrella term for measuring points in general (i.e. input channels, maths channels, totalisers etc.). The following types are used in the tables. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Uint16 Uint32 Uint64 Scaled 16 bit unsigned integer. 32 bit unsigned integer. 64 bit unsigned integer. Double precision floating point value scaled to represent single precision 16-bit integer between 32,767 and + 32,767. Boolean Represented as a single 16 bit integer. Enum Enumeration value - represented by a single 16 bit character. 16, 32 and 64-bit 2s complement signed integers. Note: When reading a Process Variable (PV) values, as scaled integers the position of the decimal point is set by the Max. Decimal Digits parameter in the relevant Channels Configuration. Only if the resulting value can be represented within 16 bit resolution (32767), will the value be transmitted accurately. For example, a value of 12.3456 needs more than 16-bit resolution, and the transmitted value would be the maximum value of 32767 (over range). Reducing the number of decimal places to three, for example (12.345) allows the value to be encoded as a 16-bit value which can be transmitted accurately.
6 .4 .1 instrument data
Parameter Name
Instrument type Instrument descriptor Reserved Instrument status
Description
Instrument type number Instrument descriptor (up to 20 characters) Not used
Type
Uint16 String_20 Uint16
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Write only Read only Read only Read only Read only
Bit 0: Not used (value always 0) Bit 1: Not used (value always 0) Bit 2: Not used (value always 0) Bit 3: 0 = SD/Flash card inserted, 1 = Missing Bit 4: 0 = SD/Flash card not full, 1 = Full Bit 5: Not used (value always 0) Bit 6 Not used (value always 0) Bit 7 Not used (value always 0) Bit 8: Not used (value always 0) Bit 9: 0 = No channel failures, 1 = channel failure Bits 10 to 15: Not used (value always 0) Config counter Counts configuration changes. Powers up at zero, and is reset to zero at brown-out Time Current instrument time (UTC format) Date Current instrument date Global alarm acknowledge A value of 1 acknowledges all alarms. Other values: no effect Spare Not used Product version Product version. Returns value HHHH (CNOMO*) (HHHH = version number in hex. E.G. 0401 = version 4.01) Serial number Returns Instrument Number (see Section 4.5) in decimal. Not used Company ID Company ID. Returns value hex 0500 (CNOMO*) Product ID Product ID. Returns model number in hex (CNOMO*) * CNOMO = Comit de normalisation de movens de production
0017 (23) 0018 (24) 001C (28) 0020 (32) 0021 (33) 006B (107) 006C (108) 006E (110) 0079 (121) 007A (122)
1 4 4 1 74 1 2 11 1 1
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone high value (two decimal places) Zone low value (two decimal places) Input type 1 = Analogue input 3 = Totaliser 2 = Maths 4 = Counter Number of decimal places (0 to 9) (used by all scaled parameters except where stated) Channel colour (0 to 55) (See Annex B for RGB definitions) Units string (up to five characters) Open Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Closed Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Channel descriptor (up to 20 characters) Number of alarms on this channel 0 = Numeric 1 = Digital strings
Type
Scaled Scaled Scaled Scaled Enum
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
Register Length
1 1 1 1 1
Ch1 Decimal places Ch1 Colour Ch1 Units Spare Ch1 Open string Spare Ch1 Close string Spare Ch1 Descriptor Spare Ch1 No of alarms Ch1 PV format
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
0080 (128) 0081 (129) 0082 (130) 0085 (133) 0087 (135) 008B (139) 008F (143) 0093 (147) 0097 (151) 00A1 (161) 00AB (171) 00AC (172)
1 1 3 2 4 4 4 4 10 10 1 1
Ch1 Alarm 1 setpoint Spare Ch1 Alarm 2 enable Ch1 Alarm 2 type Ch1 Alarm 2 setpoint Spare Ch1 Alarm 3 enable Ch1 Alarm 3 type Ch1 Alarm 3 setpoint Spare Ch1 Alarm 4 enable Ch1 Alarm 4 type Ch1 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Alarm 1 enable 0 = Off 1 = Unlatched Alarm 1 type 0 = Absolute low 2 = Deviation in 4 = Rate of change rise Trigger setpoint (Note 2)
Enum 2 = Latched 3 = Trigger Enum 1 = Absolute high 3 = Deviation out 5 = Rate of change fall Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled
Read only
60 1
Read only
00EA (234)
Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
Alarm 2 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 2 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) Alarm 3 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 3 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) Alarm 4 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 4 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2)
00EB (235) 00EC (236) 00F6 (246) 00F7 (247) 00F8 (248) 00F9 (249) 0103 (259) 0104 (260) 0105 (261) 0106 (262) 0110 (272) 0111 (273) 0112 (274) 0113 (275)
1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10
Notes: 1 For maths totalisers and counters refer to the relevant section of the manual 2. If an alarms Setpoint Source (section 4.3.3) is anything other than Constant, the value returned is the previously configured constant value.
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone high value (two decimal places) Zone low value (two decimal places) Input type 1 = Analogue input 3 = Totaliser 2 = Maths 4 = Counter Number of decimal places (0 to 9) (used by all scaled parameters except where stated) Channel colour (0 to 55) (See Annex B for RGB definitions) Units string (up to five characters) Open Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Closed Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Channel descriptor (up to 20 characters) Number of alarms on this channel (0 to 2) 0 = Numeric 1 = Digital strings
Type
Scaled Scaled Scaled Scaled Enum
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
Register Length
1 1 1 1 1
Ch2 Decimal places Ch2 Colour Ch2 Units Spare Ch2 Open string Spare Ch2 Close string Spare Ch2 Descriptor Spare Ch2 No of alarms Ch2 PV format
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
0122 (290) 0123 (291) 0124 (292) 0127 (295) 0129 (297) 012D (301) 0131 (305) 0135 (309) 0139 (313) 0143 (323) 014D (333) 014E (334)
1 1 3 2 4 4 4 4 10 10 1 1
Ch2 Alarm 1 setpoint Spare Ch2 Alarm 2 enable Ch2 Alarm 2 type Ch2 Alarm 2 setpoint Spare Ch2 Alarm 3 enable Ch2 Alarm 3 type Ch2 Alarm 3 setpoint Spare Ch2 Alarm 4 enable Ch2 Alarm 4 type Ch2 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Alarm 1 enable 0 = Off 1 = Unlatched Alarm 1 type 0 = Absolute low 2 = Deviation in 4 = Rate of change rise Trigger setpoint (Note 2)
Enum 2 = Latched 3 = Trigger Enum 1 = Absolute high 3 = Deviation out 5 = Rate of change fall Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled
Read only
60 1
Read only
018C (396)
Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
Alarm 2 enable (As alarm 1 enable, above) Alarm 2 type (As alarm 1 type, above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) Alarm 3 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 3 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) Alarm 4 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 4 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2)
018D (397) 018E (398) 0198 (408) 0199 (409) 019A (410) 019B (411) 01A5 (421) 01A6 (422) 01A7 (423) 01A8 (424) 01B2 (434) 01B3 (435) 01B4 (436) 01B5 (437)
1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10
Notes: 1 For maths totalisers and counters refer to the relevant section of the manual 2. If an alarms Setpoint Source (section 4.3.3) is anything other than Constant, the value returned is the previously configured constant value.
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone high value (two decimal places) Zone low value (two decimal places) Input type 1 = Analogue input 3 = Totaliser 2 = Maths 4 = Counter Number of decimal places (0 to 9) (used by all scaled parameters except where stated) Channel colour (0 to 55) (See Annex B for RGB definitions) Units string (up to five characters) Open Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Closed Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Channel descriptor (up to 20 characters) Number of alarms on this channel (0 to 2) 0 = Numeric 1 = Digital strings
Type
Scaled Scaled Scaled Scaled Enum
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
Register Length
1 1 1 1 1
Ch3 Decimal places Ch3 Colour Ch3 Units Spare Ch3 Open string Spare Ch3 Close string Spare Ch3 Descriptor Spare Ch3 No of alarms Ch3 PV format
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
01C4 (452) 01C5 (453) 01C6 (454) 01C9 (457) 01CB (459) 01CF (463) 01D3 (467) 01D7 (471) 01DB (475) 01E5 (485) 01EF (495) 01F0 (496)
1 1 3 2 4 4 4 4 10 10 1 1
Ch3 Alarm 1 setpoint Spare Ch3 Alarm 2 enable Ch3 Alarm 2 type Ch3 Alarm 2 setpoint Spare Ch3 Alarm 3 enable Ch3 Alarm 3 type Ch3 Alarm 3 setpoint Spare Ch3 Alarm 4 enable Ch3 Alarm 4 type Ch3 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Alarm 1 enable 0 = Off 1 = Unlatched Alarm 1 type 0 = Absolute low 2 = Deviation in 4 = Rate of change rise Trigger setpoint (Note 2)
Enum 2 = Latched 3 = Trigger Enum 1 = Absolute high 3 = Deviation out 5 = Rate of change fall Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled
Read only
60 1
Read only
022E (558)
Alarm 2 enable (As alarm 1 enable, above) Alarm 2 type (As alarm 1 type, above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) Alarm 3 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 3 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) Alarm 4 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 4 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2)
Read/Write 0230 (560) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
022F (559) 10 023A (570) 023B (571) 023C (572) 023D (573) 0247 (583) 0248 (584) 0249 (585) 024A (586) 0254 (596) 0255 (597) 0256 (598) 0257 (599)
1 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10
Notes: 1 For maths totalisers and counters refer to the relevant section of the manual 2. If an alarms Setpoint Source (section 4.3.3) is anything other than Constant, the value returned is the previously configured constant value.
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone high value (two decimal places) Zone low value (two decimal places) Input type 1 = Analogue input 3 = Totaliser 2 = Maths 4 = Counter Number of decimal places (0 to 9) (used by all scaled parameters except where stated) Channel colour (0 to 55) (See Annex B for RGB definitions) Units string (up to five characters) Open Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Closed Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Channel descriptor (up to 20 characters) Number of alarms on this channel (0 to 2) 0 = Numeric 1 = Digital strings
Type
Scaled Scaled Scaled Scaled Enum
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
Register Length
1 1 1 1 1
Ch4 Decimal places Ch4 Colour Ch4 Units Spare Ch4 Open string Spare Ch4 Close string Spare Ch4 Descriptor Spare Ch4 No of alarms Ch4 PV format
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
0266 (614) 0267 (615) 0268 (616) 026B (619) 026D (621) 0271 (625) 0275 (629) 0279 (633) 027D (637) 0287 (647) 0291 (657) 0292 (658)
1 1 3 2 4 4 4 4 10 10 1 1
Ch4 Alarm 1 setpoint Spare Ch4 Alarm 2 enable Ch4 Alarm 2 type Ch4 Alarm 2 setpoint Spare Ch4 Alarm 3 enable Ch4 Alarm 3 type Ch4 Alarm 3 setpoint Spare Ch4 Alarm 4 enable Ch4 Alarm 4 type Ch4 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Alarm 1 enable 0 = Off 1 = Unlatched Alarm 1 type 0 = Absolute low 2 = Deviation in 4 = Rate of change rise Trigger setpoint (Note 2)
Enum 2 = Latched 3 = Trigger Enum 1 = Absolute high 3 = Deviation out 5 = Rate of change fall Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled
Read only
60 1
Read only
02DO (720)
Read/Write
Alarm 2 enable (As alarm 1 enable, above) Alarm 2 type (As alarm 1 type, above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) Alarm 3 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 3 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) Alarm 4 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 4 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2)
02D1 (721) 02D2 (722) Read only 02DC (732) Read only 02DD (733) Read/Write 02DE (734) 02DF (735) Read only 02E9 (745) Read only 02EA (746) Read/Write 02EB (747) 02EC (748) Read only 02F6 (758) Read only 02F7 (759) Read/Write 02F8 (760) 02F9 (761)
1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10
Notes: 1 For maths totalisers and counters refer to the relevant section of the manual 2. If an alarms Setpoint Source (section 4.3.3) is anything other than Constant, the value returned is the previously configured constant value.
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone high value (two decimal places) Zone low value (two decimal places) Input type 1 = Analogue input 3 = Totaliser 2 = Maths 4 = Counter Number of decimal places (0 to 9) (used by all scaled parameters except where stated) Channel colour (0 to 55) (See Annex B for RGB definitions) Units string (up to five characters) Open Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Closed Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Channel descriptor (up to 20 characters) Number of alarms on this channel (0 to 2) 0 = Numeric 1 = Digital strings
Type
Scaled Scaled Scaled Scaled Enum
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
Register Length
1 1 1 1 1
Ch5 Decimal places Ch5 Colour Ch5 Units Spare Ch5 Open string Spare Ch5 Close string Spare Ch5 Descriptor Spare Ch5 No of alarms Ch5 PV format
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
0308 (776) 0309 (777) 030A (778) 030D (781) 030F (783) 0313 (787) 0317 (791) 031B (795) 031F (799) 0329 (809) 0333 (819) 0334 (820)
1 1 3 2 4 4 4 4 10 10 1 1
Ch5 Alarm 1 setpoint Spare Ch5 Alarm 2 enable Ch5 Alarm 2 type Ch5 Alarm 2 setpoint Spare Ch5 Alarm 3 enable Ch5 Alarm 3 type Ch5 Alarm 3 setpoint Spare Ch5 Alarm 4 enable Ch5 Alarm 4 type Ch5 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Alarm 1 enable 0 = Off 1 = Unlatched Alarm 1 type 0 = Absolute low 2 = Deviation in 4 = Rate of change rise Trigger setpoint (Note 2)
Enum 2 = Latched 3 = Trigger Enum 1 = Absolute high 3 = Deviation out 5 = Rate of change fall Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled
Read only
60 1
Read only
0372 (882)
Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
Alarm 2 enable (As alarm 1 enable, above) Alarm 2 type (As alarm 1 type, above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) Alarm 3 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 3 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) Alarm 4 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 4 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2)
0373 (883) 0374 (884) 037E (894) 037F (895) 0380 (896) 0381 (897) 02E9 (907) 02EA (908) 02EB (909) 02EC (910) 02F6 (920) 02F7 (921) 02F8 (922) 02F9 (923)
1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10
Notes: 1 For maths totalisers and counters refer to the relevant section of the manual 2. If an alarms Setpoint Source (section 4.3.3) is anything other than Constant, the value returned is the previously configured constant value.
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone high value (two decimal places) Zone low value (two decimal places) Input type 1 = Analogue input 3 = Totaliser 2 = Maths 4 = Counter Number of decimal places (0 to 9) (used by all scaled parameters except where stated) Channel colour (0 to 55) (See Annex B for RGB definitions) Units string (up to five characters) Open Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Closed Digital Input string (up to eight characters) Channel descriptor (up to 20 characters) Number of alarms on this channel (0 to 2) 0 = Numeric 1 = Digital strings
Type
Scaled Scaled Scaled Scaled Enum
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
Register Length
1 1 1 1 1
Ch6 Decimal places Ch6 Colour Ch6 Units Spare Ch6 Open string Spare Ch6 Close string Spare Ch6 Descriptor Spare Ch6 No of alarms Ch6 PV format
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
03AA (938) 03AB (939) 03AC (940) 03AF (943) 03B1 (945) 03B5 (949) 03B9 (953) 03BD (957) 03C1 (961) 03CB (971) 03D5 (981) 03D6 (982)
1 1 3 2 4 4 4 4 10 10 1 1
Ch6 Alarm 1 setpoint Spare Ch6 Alarm 2 enable Ch6 Alarm 2 type Ch6 Alarm 2 setpoint Spare Ch6 Alarm 3 enable Ch6 Alarm 3 type Ch6 Alarm 3 setpoint Spare Ch6 Alarm 4 enable Ch6 Alarm 4 type Ch6 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Alarm 1 enable 0 = Off 1 = Unlatched Alarm 1 type 0 = Absolute low 2 = Deviation in 4 = Rate of change rise Trigger setpoint (Note 2)
Enum 2 = Latched 3 = Trigger Enum 1 = Absolute high 3 = Deviation out 5 = Rate of change fall Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled Enum Enum Scaled
Read only
60 1
Read only
0414 (1044)
Alarm 2 enable (As alarm 1 enable, above) Alarm 2 type (As alarm 1 type, above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) Alarm 3 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 3 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) Alarm 4 enable (As alarm 1 enable above) Alarm 4 type (As alarm 1 type above) Trigger setpoint (Note 2)
Read/Write 0415 (1045) 0416 (1046) Read only 0420 (1056) Read only 0421 (1057) Read/Write 0422 (1058) 0423 (1059) Read only 042D (1069) Read only 042E (1070) Read/Write 042F (1071) 0430 (1072) Read only 043A (1082) Read only 043B (1083) Read/Write 043C (1084) 043D (1085)
1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 10
Notes: 1 For maths totalisers and counters refer to the relevant section of the manual 2. If an alarms Setpoint Source (section 4.3.3) is anything other than Constant, the value returned is the previously configured constant value.
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Scaled Enum
Access
Register Length
1 1
Ch1 Alarms
Uint16
A1DB (41435) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
ChaNNEl 2
Parameter Name
Ch2 value Ch2 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Scaled Enum
Access
Register Length
1 1
Ch2 Alarms
Uint16
A1DE (41438) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
Note: PV access is Read/Write for any point configured wuth Slave Comms as its Type or Function. Otherwise PV access is Read only User guide Page 130 HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .4 .3 ChaNNEl rUN TiME DaTa (Cont .) ChaNNEl 3
Parameter Name
Ch3 value Ch3 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Scaled Enum
Access
Register Length
1 1
Ch3 Alarms
Uint16
A1E1 (41441) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
ChaNNEl 4
Parameter Name
Ch4 value Ch4 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Scaled Enum
Access
Register Length
1 1
Ch4 Alarms
Uint16
A1E4 (41444) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
Note: PV access is Read/Write for any point configured wuth Slave Comms as its Type or Function. Otherwise PV access is Read only HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08 User guide Page 131
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .4 .3 ChaNNEl rUN TiME DaTa (Cont .) ChaNNEl 5
Parameter Name
Ch5 value Ch5 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Scaled Enum
Access
Register Length
1 1
Ch5 Alarms
Uint16
A1E7 (41447) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
ChaNNEl 6
Parameter Name
Ch6 value Ch6 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Scaled Enum
Access
Register Length
1 1
Ch6 Alarms
Uint16
A1EA (41450) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
Note: PV access is Read/Write for any point configured wuth Slave Comms as its Type or Function. Otherwise PV access is Read only User guide Page 132 HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08
6 .4 .4 group data
groUP 1
Parameter Name
Grp1 Trend type
Description
Trend enhancements 0 = Interpolation enabled 1 = Adaptive recording enabled Trend update rate in milliseconds Archive (to flash) rate in milliseconds Group descriptor (20 characters max.) 16 Registers holding the group contents, as follows: Register 1 Bit 0: 0 = Point 1 not in group; 1 = Point 1 is in group Bit 1: 0 = Point 2 not in group; 1 = Point 2 is in group Bit 2: 0 = Point 3 not in group; 1 = Point 3 is in group Etc. Bit 15: 0 = Point 16 not in group; 1 = Point 16 is in group Register 2 - as register 1, but for points 17 to 32 Register 3 - as register 1, but for points 33 to 48 Register 4 - as register 1, but for points 49 to 64 Register 5 - as register 1, but for points 65 to 80 Register 6 - as register 1, but for points 81 to 96 Register 7 - as register 1, but for points 97 to 112 Register 8 - as register 1, but for points 113 to 128 Register 9 - as register 1, but for points 129 to 144 Register 10 - as register 1, but for points 145 to 160 Register 11 - as register 1, but for points 161 to 176 Register 12 - as register 1, but for points 177 to 192 Register 13 - as register 1, but for points 193 to 208 Register 14 - as register 1, but for points 209 to 224 Register 15 - as register 1, but for points 225 to 240 Register 16 - as register 1, but for points 241 to 256 Identifies the length of a text message to be read Time stamp of the text message to be read (UTC format) Read text string from instrument display Write a text string to instrument display Not used this recorder model Not used this recorder model Not used this recorder model Not used this recorder model) Not used this recorder model Not used this recorder model Not used this recorder model Not used this recorder model Not used this recorder model
Type
Enum
Access
Read only
Register Length
1
Grp1 Trend rate Grp1 Archive rate Grp1 Descriptor Spare Grp1 Channels in group
A4D7 (42199) A4D9 (42201) A4DB (42203) A4E5 (42213) A4EF (42223)
Uint16
Read only
2 2 10 10 (16) 1
Grp1 Text length Grp1 Text time stamp Grp1 Read text Reserved Grp1 Write text Reserved Grp1 Batch start Grp1 Batch stop Grp1 Batch running Grp1 Text field 1 Reserved Grp1 Text field 2 Reserved Grp1 Text field 3 Reserved Grp1 Text field 4 Reserved Grp1 Text field 5 Reserved Grp1 Text field 6 Reserved Spare
Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Double String_60 String_60 Boolean Boolean Boolean String_60 String_60 String_60 String_60 String_60 String_60
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Write only Write only Write only Read only Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write
A4F0 (42224) A4F1 (42225) A4F2 (42226) A4F3 (42227) A4F4 (42228) A4F5 (42229) A4F6 (42230) A4F7 (42231) A4F8 (42232) A4F9 (42233) A4FA (42234) A4FB (42235) A4FC (42236) A4FD (42237) A4FE (42238) A4FF (42239) A500 (42240) A504 (42244) A522 (42274) A540 (42304) A55E (42334) A57C (42364) A57D (42365) A57E (42366) A57F (42367) A59D (42397) A5BB (42427) A5D9 (42457) A5F7 (42487) A615 (42517) A633 (42547) A651 (42577) A66F (42607) A68D (42637) A6AB (42667) A6C9 (42697) A6E7 (42727)
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 30 30 30 30 1 1 1 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 100
Description
Number of supported features Indirection Table Read only indirection table start address (R/O vector) Read/Write indirection table start address (R/W vector) Spare Function codes supported (FC I.D.) Bit map of supported MODBUS function codes Bit 0: 0 = code 1 not supported; 1 = code 1 supported Bit 1: 0 = code 2 not supported; 1 = code 2 supported Bit 2: 0 = code 3 not supported; 1 = code 3 supported Bit 3: 0 = code 4 not supported; 1 = code 4 supported Etc. Bit 15: 0 = code 16 not supported; 1 = code 16 supported Reserved Reserved Security ID (MODBUS login security feature) User name Password Reserved 100 Spare addresses for further features
Type
3 1 CD89 D18A 4 32940
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only Read only
Register Length
1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Feature 2
Feature 3
Feature N
CC2D (52269) CC2E (52270) Read only CC2F (52271) Write only CC30 (52272) Write only CC58 (52312) CC80 (52352) CC81 (52353)
1 1 1 40 40 1 100
6 .4 .6 indirection tables
The standard MODBUS protocol allows block register reads and writes. This is efficient only if data is grouped contiguously, or nearly so. Indirection tables are a means by which widely spaced register addresses can (in effect) be grouped, offering the host the ability to access a block of user defined data in one single read/write request. Two configurable tables are available, one for read only parameters, the other for read/write. Each table is in two halves - the lower address half contains the addresses of the registers to be accessed; the higher address half contains the values which have been read or which are to be written. Notes: 1. For Ethernet connections, indirection table entries are lost at power off, as the result of a brownout or if the connection with the host is broken. 2. Parameters in IEEE format can be accessed by configuring two successive entries in the table. Parameters which occupy more than one register can be loaded into the indirection area by using function code 16 (pre-set multiple registers) and the parameters base address (i.e. the parameters 1st register). 3. Separate indirection table entries are held for each host - the recorder automatically switches each host to its own indirection table without user intervention. 4. Indirection table addresses (CCE5 to D4E7) cannot be entered in the indirection tables. Any attempt to do so will be ignored.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .4 .6 iNDirECTioN TaBlEs (CoNT .) Table 6.4.6a shows the overall arrangement of the indirection table area. Figures 6.4.6b and 6.4.6c show simple examples of Read only and Read/Write addressing for tables with 6 entries.
D4E6
D2E7 D2E6
Alarms chan 1 PV chan 1 PV chan 1 Archive rate Trend rate Instrument type
CCEB CCEA Enter required data addresses here CCE9 CCE8 CCE7 CCE6 CCE5
Channel 1 Alarm status Channel 1 PV (bits 16 to 31) Channel 1 PV (bits 0 to 15) Group 1 archive rate Group 1 trend rate Instrument type number Number of Read only entries 32-bit IEEE channel
D2EC D2EB Write values to, or read values from this area (address + hex 200) D2EA D2E9 D2E8 D2E7
Ch6 Alarm1 Sp Ch5 Alarm1 Sp Ch4 Alarm1 Sp Ch3 Alarm1 Sp Ch2 Alarm1 Sp Ch1 Alarm1 Sp
D0EC D0EB D0EA Enter required data addresses here D0E9 D0E8 D0E7 D0E6
Chan 6 Alarm 1 setpoint Chan 5 Alarm 1 setpoint Chan 4 Alarm 1 setpoint Chan 3 Alarm 1 setpoint Chan 2 Alarm 1 setpoint Chan 1 Alarm 1 setpoint Number of Read/Write entries
Description
Upper span value (Display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone upper value (% of chart width) Zone lower value (% of chart width) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) for alarm 1 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) for alarm 2 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) for alarm 3 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint (Note 2) for alarm 4 (Note 2)
Type
Float Float Float Float Float Float Float Float
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write
Register Length
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 20
ChaNNEl 2
Parameter Name
Ch2 span high Ch2 span low Ch2 Zone high Ch2 Zone low Ch2 Alarm 1 setpoint Ch2 Alarm 2 setpoint Ch2 Alarm 3 setpoint Ch2 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone upper value (% of chart width) Zone lower value (% of chart width) Trigger setpoint for alarm 1 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 2 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 3 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 4 (Note 2)
Type
Float Float Float Float Float Float Float Float
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write
Register Length
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 20
ChaNNEl 3
Parameter Name
Ch3 span high Ch3 span low Ch3 Zone high Ch3 Zone low Ch3 Alarm 1 setpoint Ch3 Alarm 2 setpoint Ch3 Alarm 3 setpoint Ch3 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone upper value (% of chart width) Zone lower value (% of chart width) Trigger setpoint for alarm 1 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 2 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 3 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 4 (Note 2)
Type
Float Float Float Float Float Float Float Float
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write
Register Length
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 20
Notes 1. For maths, totalisers and counters, see the relevant option description. 2. If an alarms Setpoint Source (section 4.3.3) is set to anything other than Constant the value returned will be the previously configured constant value.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .4 .7 iEEE 32-BiT ChaNNEl CoNFigUraTioN DaTa (Cont .) ChaNNEl 4
Parameter Name
Ch4 span high Ch4 span low Ch4 Zone high Ch4 Zone low Ch4 Alarm 1 setpoint Ch4 Alarm 2 setpoint Ch4 Alarm 3 setpoint Ch4 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone upper value (% of chart width) Zone lower value (% of chart width) Trigger setpoint for alarm 1 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 2 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 3 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 4 (Note 2)
Type
Float Float Float Float Float Float Float Float
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write
Register Length
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 20
ChaNNEl 5
Parameter Name
Ch5 span high Ch5 span low Ch5 Zone high Ch5 Zone low Ch5 Alarm 1 setpoint Ch5 Alarm 2 setpoint Ch5 Alarm 3 setpoint Ch5 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone upper value (% of chart width) Zone lower value (% of chart width) Trigger setpoint for alarm 1 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 2 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 3 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 4 (Note 2)
Type
Float Float Float Float Float Float Float Float
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write
Register Length
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 20
ChaNNEl 6
Parameter Name
Ch6 span high Ch6 span low Ch6 Zone high Ch6 Zone low Ch6 Alarm 1 setpoint Ch6 Alarm 2 setpoint Ch6 Alarm 3 setpoint Ch6 Alarm 4 setpoint Spare
Description
Upper span value (display full scale) Lower span value (display zero) Zone upper value (% of chart width) Zone lower value (% of chart width) Trigger setpoint for alarm 1 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 2 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 3 (Note 2) Trigger setpoint for alarm 4 (Note 2)
Type
Float Float Float Float Float Float Float Float
Access
Read only Read only Read only Read only Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write Read/Write
Register Length
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 20
Notes 1. For maths, totalisers and counters, see the relevant option description. 2. If an alarms Setpoint Source (section 4.3.3) is set to anything other than Constant the value returned will be the previously configured constant value.
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Float Enum
Access
Register Length
2 1
Channel 1 Alarms
Uint16
F8C6 (63686) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
ChaNNEl 2
Parameter Name
Channel 2 value Channel 2 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Float Enum
Access
Register Length
2 1
Channel 2 alarms
Uint16
F8CA (63690) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
Note: PV access is Read/Write for any point configured with Slave Comms as its Type or Function. Otherwise PV access is Read only.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .4 .8 iEEE arEa ChaNNEl rUN-TiME DaTa (Cont .) ChaNNEl 3
Parameter Name
Channel 3 value Channel 3 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Float Enum
Access
Register Length
2 1
Channel 3 Alarms
Uint16
F8CE (63694) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
ChaNNEl 4
Parameter Name
Channel 4 value Channel 4 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Float Enum
Access
Register Length
2 1
Channel 4 alarms
Uint16
F8D2 (63698) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
Note: PV access is Read/Write for any point configured with Slave Comms as its Type or Function. Otherwise PV access is Read only.
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 6 .4 .8 iEEE arEa ChaNNEl rUN-TiME DaTa (Cont .) ChaNNEl 5
Parameter Name
Channel 5 value Channel 5 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Float Enum
Access
Register Length
2 1
Channel 5 Alarms
Uint16
F8D6 (63702) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
ChaNNEl 6
Parameter Name
Channel 6 value Channel 6 status
Description
Current process value (PV) Channel status 0 = Good PV 5 = Ranging error 1 = Channel off 6 = Overflow 2 = Over range 7 = Bad PV 3 = Under range 8 = No data 4 = Hardware error Alarm information Bit 0: 0 = Alarm 1 inactive; 1 = Alarm 1 active Bit 1: 0 = No alarm 1 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 2: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 1 Bit 3: Spare Bit 4: 0 = Alarm 2 inactive; 1 = Alarm 2 active Bit 5: 0 = No Alarm 2 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 6: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 2 Bit 7: Spare Bit 8: 0 = Alarm 3 inactive; 1 = Alarm 3 active Bit 9: 0 = No alarm 3 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 10: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 3 Bit 11: Spare Bit 12: 0 = Alarm 4 inactive; 1 = Alarm 4 active Bit 13: 0 = No Alarm 4 Ack. required; 1 = Ack. required Bit 14: 1 = Acknowledge alarm 4 Bit 15: Spare
Type
Float Enum
Access
Register Length
2 1
Channel 6 alarms
Uint16
F8DA (63706) Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write Read only Read only Read/Write
Note: PV access is Read/Write for any point configured with Slave Comms as its Type or Function. Otherwise PV access is Read only.
6 .4 .9 Permanent iD table
This table contains information relating to the recorder, and also gives the start address of the feature identification table (FIT).
FFF4 FFF3 FFF2 FFF1 FFF0
6 .5 DaTa TraNsMissioN
Each message (request or response) is packaged in the (MODBUS) frame shown below. The messages consist of a 7 byte prefix, followed by the function code (in hex), followed by the relevant data bytes, the number and content of which depend on the function code, as described in subsequent sections.
Byte 0 Byte 1 Transaction Transaction identifier identifier (usually 00) (usually 00)
Byte 4 Always 00
Notes: 1 The transaction identifier has no active function - the recorder just copies the bytes from the request message to the response message. 2 The protocol identifier bytes are always zero. FUNCTioN CoDEs aND EXCEPTioN CoDEs Refer to section 6.2.1 for lists of function codes and exception codes supported. TEXT sTriNgs When sending text strings, the final character must be followed by one or two Null characters. The number of bytes in the text string (including the null) must be even, even if this means adding two nulls at the end of the message instead of one. For example, the text string: Alarm Number should be sent as Al ar mSpace Nu mb er NullNull, or Al ar mSpace Nu mb er SpaceNull
where each pair of characters occupies on 16-bit word. Similarly, the text string Alarm Number: would be sent as Al ar mSpace Nu mb er :null,
but only one Null character is required to provide an even number of bytes.
6 .5 .1 Function code 03
rEQUEsT The bytes after the 7-byte prefix described above are: Function code (03) (1 byte) Register start address (2 bytes) Word count (Total number of registers) (1 to 125 decimal; 1 to 7D hex) (2 bytes) Thus to read Channel 5 descriptor (start address 031F - 10 registers altogether) the following request (as described in figure 6.5.1a) would be transmitted for a recorder with a Modbus address of 1: 0000000000060103031F000A
Byte 0 00 Byte 1 00 Byte 2 00 Protocol identifier Byte 3 00 Protocol identifier Byte 4 00 Always 00 Byte 5 06 Number of bytes following Byte 6 01 Recorder Modbus address Byte 7 03 Byte 8 03 Byte 9 1F Byte 10 00 Byte 11 0A
Modbus Register start Register start Word count Word count high byte low byte function address high address byte low byte code (hex)
rEsPoNsE As a response to a request, the recorder returns a similar message, but the function code (03) is followed by: Byte count (= 2 x the number of register values requested) in hex (1 byte) Value of register at start address (2 bytes) Value of register at start address + 1 (2 bytes) etc. etc. Value of final register (2 bytes) Thus as a response to the above request for channel 5 descriptor, the following message (as expanded in figure 6.5.1b) would be returned to the host (assuming channel descriptor to be: Channel 5 Descriptor) and Modbus address = 1: 0000000000170103144368616E6E656C20352044657363726970746F72
Byte 0 00 Byte 1 00 Byte 2 00 Protocol identifier Byte 3 00 Protocol identifier Byte 4 00 Always 00 Byte 5 17 Number of bytes following (hex) Byte 6 01 Recorder Modbus address Byte 7 03 Byte 8 14 Byte 9 43 ASCII C (Hex) Byte 10 68 ASCII h (Hex) Byte 11 61 ASCII a (Hex)
Byte count Modbus function (No of registers x 2) code (hex) (Hex) Byte 19 44 ASCII D (Hex) Byte 20 65 ASCII e (Hex)
EXCEPTioN rEsPoNsEs Byte 0 = Function code 83 (hex) (i.e. Hex (80 + function code)) Byte 1 = Exception code 01 (Illegal function) or 02 (Invalid data address)
6 .5 .2 Function code 04
This is identical with function code 03, except that 04 must be used as the function code and the exception response Function code is 84 (hex) not 83.
6 .5 .3 Function code 06
rEQUEsT This is used to write a value to a single register. The bytes after the 7-byte prefix described in section 6.5, above are: Function code (06) (1 byte) Register address (2 bytes) Value to be written (2 bytes) Thus to write a value of 80 degrees as Alarm 1 setpoint for channel 3 (register address 022F), the following request (as detailed in figure 6.5.3) would be transmitted to the recorder: 0000000000060106022F0050
Byte 0 00 Byte 1 00 Byte 2 00 Protocol identifier Byte 3 00 Protocol identifier Byte 4 00 Always 00 Byte 5 06 Number of bytes following Byte 6 01 Recorder Modbus address Byte 7 06 Modbus function code (hex) Byte 8 02 Register start address high byte Byte 9 2F Register start address low byte Byte 10 00 Value high byte (hex) Byte 11 50 Value low byte (hex)
rEsPoNsE As a response to a request, the recorder returns a message identical with the request message. EXCEPTioN rEsPoNsEs Byte 0 = Function code 86 (hex) (i.e. Hex (80 + function code)) Byte 1 = Exception code 01 (Illegal function) or 02 (Invalid data address)
6 .5 .4 Function code 08
This is used to initiate a loop-back test. The bytes after the 7-byte prefix described in section 6.5, above are: Function code (08) (1 byte) Subfunction code (00 00) (2 bytes) Query data (loopback value) (HH HH) (2 bytes) Thus to initiate a loopback test (using, as an example, P Q as the query data), the following request (as detailed in figure 6.5.4) is transmitted to the recorder: 000000000006010800005051 The response to the receipt of such a message should be to echo the request back to the host.
Byte 0 00 Byte 1 00 Byte 2 00 Protocol identifier Byte 3 00 Protocol identifier Byte 4 00 Always 00 Byte 5 06 Number of bytes following Byte 6 01 Recorder Modbus address Byte 7 08 Byte 8 00 Byte 9 00 Byte 10 50 Byte 11 51
Modbus Subfunction Subfunction Query data Query data code code high byte low byte function high byte low byte (ASCII 'P') (ASCII 'Q') code (hex) (Hex) (Hex)
0E Modbus Base address Base address Word count Word count Byte count High byte Low byte Low byte High byte function code (hex)
rEsPoNsE The response message (detailed in figure 6.5.5b) after the 7-byte prefix described in section 6.5, above is: Function code 10 (1 byte) Start address (2 bytes) Word count (2 bytes) Thus, the response to the above batch field request would be: 0000000000060110A5400007
Byte 0 00 Byte 1 00 Byte 2 00 Protocol identifier Byte 3 00 Protocol identifier Byte 4 00 Byte 5 Byte 6 01 Recorder Modbus address Byte 7 10 Modbus function code (hex) Byte 8 A5 Base address High byte Byte 9 40 Base address Low byte Byte 10 00 Byte 11 07
EXCEPTioN rEsPoNsEs Byte 0 = Function code 90 (hex) (i.e. Hex (80 + function code)) Byte 1 = Exception code 01 (Illegal function) or 02 (Invalid data address) Note: Function code 16 can be used to write multiple registers into the indirection table area, for example, by writing the base register address of a 32-bit channel value (e.g. channel 3 - start address: F994) into location D18B.
7 .2 FUsiNg
7 .2 .1 Fuse rating
The circuit board is protected by a 20 mm anti-surge (type T) fuse, the value of which depends on the supply voltage as shown in table 7.2.1, below. Access to the output wiring and to the fuse is achieved by isolating the recorder from mains power and opening the terminal cover (after removing its securing screws). The process is fully described below.
Supply voltage 115V ac 230V ac Fuse rating 100 mA 63mA Part Number CH050012 CH050630
100 MM PAPERLESS GRAPHIC RECORDER 7 .2 .2 aCCEss To ThE UsEr CoNNECTioNs/FUsE (Cont .) 3 Open the cover (figure 7.2.2b) to reveal the circuit board, user connections etc. (figure 7.2.2c)
Swing rear cover down for access Recorder Body Connector clip access
The fuse is located as shown in figure 7.2.2c. User wiring to the terminal block (figures 7.2.3a/b) can be carried out now, or the terminal cover can be removed for convenience, as described in steps 5 onwards below.
Power cord to recorder
Fuse
To remove the terminal cover: 5. 6. Unplug the IEC connector from the rear of the recorder connector panel and remove the cable tie securing the loom to the chassis. Close the terminal cover, and lift it off. Note: Four apertures in each side of the terminal cover allow the user to actuate the clips which secure the i/o connectors to the rear panel of the recorder. This allows the i/o connectors to be removed if, for example, the recorder is to be removed from the panel for any reason. The positions of these apertures are shown in figure 7.2.2b (right-hand side shown; left-hand side similar). HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08 User guide Page 147
7 .2 .3 User wiring
Figure 7.2.3a shows the terminal block pinout, and figure 7.2.3b shows typical applications wiring.
o/P 1 o/P 2 o/P 3 + + + User terminal block
Black
Black
Black
Red
Red
Other transmitters
Transmitter
R (minimum spec) = 1.4W,
Only one channel shown, for clarity. 1%. 100 or 250 as required (see table)
Red
0 mA 4 mA 20 mA
V+ VR
installation category ii
The rated impulse voltage for equipment on nominal 230V ac mains is 2500V.
Pollution degree 2
Normally, only non-conductive pollution occurs. Occasionally, however, a temporary conductivity caused by condensation shall be expected.
standard features
Three input channels Configuration Copy CSV Archive file format File transfer protocol (FTP) Job search Log scales MODBUS TCP Messages Timers USB port behind access flap Web server
options
Software: Hardware: Maths/Totalisers/Counters Three additional input channels (total six channels) Transmitter power supply - isolated (100 mm recorders only) Low supply voltage
Environmental Performance
Temperature limits Humidity limits Operation: Storage: Operation: Storage: 0 to 50C. - 20 to +60C 5% to 80% RH non - condensing 5% to 90% RH non - condensing <2000 metres IP66 for a recorder mounted in a panel. IP20 BS EN61010 2g peak
Altitude (maximum) Protection Standard bezel/display: Standard sleeve: Shock Vibration (10 Hz to 150Hz)
Physical
Panel mounting Bezel size Panel cutout Depth behind bezel Weight Mounting angle DIN 43700 144mm x 144mm 138mm x 138mm (-0.0 + 1.0) mm 246.5 mm (211.5 mm without terminal cover, 284 with long terminal cover) 3 kg. max. 45 from vertical
Electrical safety
BS EN61010. Installation category II, Pollution degree 2
Power (max.) Inrush current Fuse type Interrupt protection Standard: Low voltage option:
Back-up battery
Type Support time Replacement period Stored data Poly-carbonmonofluoride/lithium (BR2330). Part Number PA261095. See also section B2.2. A fully-charged, new battery supports the Real-Time Clock for a minimum of 1 year with the recorder unpowered 3-years Time; date; values for totalisers, counters and timers; Rolling average maths values
Touch screen
Colour TFT LCD with cold-cathode backlighting, fitted with resistive, analogue, touch panel Screen specification 1/4 VGA Resolution = 320 x 240 pixels
Update information
Input/relay output sample rate: Display update: Archive sample value: Trended/displayed value: 8 Hz. 1 Hz, Latest value at archive time Latest value at display update time
Ethernet Communications
Type Protocols Cable 10/100 base T (IEEE802.3) TCP/IP, FTP, DHCP, BootP, SNTP, Modbus, SMTP, ICMP. CAT5 100 metres RJ45 Indicates a 100MB link Indicates Ethernet activity Indicates a 10MB link
Type: Maximum length: Termination: RJ45 LED indicators Green: Yellow: Internal green LED
Note: The recorder meets the industrial EMC requirements of BS EN61326. Typically, USB peripherals are tested to domestic information technology standards (BS EN55022) with category C performance. Some USB peripherals, designed for use in domestic or office environments, can be susceptible to lock up in environments containing high electromagnetic field strengths. In order to recover from such lock up situations, the peripheral must be disconnected and then reconnected. Recorder operation is not affected.
other items
Virus susceptibility The 6000 series VxWorks operating system is immune to viruses targeted at Windows based operating systems. As at December 2005, there are no known viruses that target VxWorks. Input: Instrument: The Read-only input coefficients are stored in EEPROM on the input board. Instrument configuration is held in FLASH memory and has no effect on calibration coefficients.
Calibration coefficients
DC input ranges
Shunt Additional error due to shunt Performance Externally mounted resistor modules 0.1% of input See table
Low Range -38 mV -150 mV -1 V -20 V High Resolution Range 38 mV 1.4 mV 150 mV 5.5 mV 1V 37 mV 20 V 720 mV Typical error (Instrument at 20 deg C) 0.013% input + 0.031% range 0.013% input + 0.028% range 0.013% input + 0.024% range 0.075% input + 0.027% range Maximum error (Instrument at 20 deg C) 0.030% input + 0.052% range 0.029% input + 0.039% range 0.029% input + 0.029% range 0.393% input + 0.033% range Worst case temperature performance 25ppm of input per deg C 25ppm of input per deg C 25ppm of input per deg C 388ppm of input per deg C
Low Range 0 0 0
ResoluTypical error Maximum error tion (Instrument at 20 deg. C) (Instrument at 20 deg. C) 5m 0.027% input + 0.034% range 0.037% input + 0.077% range 22 m 0.027% input + 0.035% range 0.037% input + 0.057% range 148 m 0.030% input + 0.034% range 0.040% input + 0.041% range
Worst case temperature performance 30ppm of input per C 30ppm of input per C 30ppm of input per C
RTD type
Cu10 Cu53 JPT100 Ni100 Ni120 Pt100 Pt100A Pt1000
Thermocouple data
Temperature scale Bias current Cold junction compensation types Remote CJC source: Internal CJC error Internal CJC rejection ratio Upscale/downscale drive Types: Additional error: Types, ranges and accuracies
Standard
General Electric Co. RC21-4-1966 JIS C1604:1989 DIN43760:1987 DIN43760:1987 IEC751 Eurotherm Recorders SA IEC751
ITS90 0.05nA Off, internal, external, remote Any input or maths channel. 1C max with instrument at 25C 50:1 minimum High. low or none selectable for each thermocouple channel. Typically 0.01C - depends on wiring. (Detect current = 57nA.) See table
T/C type
B C D E G2 J K L N R S T U NiMo/NiCo Platinel Ni/NiMo Pt20%Rh/Pt40%Rh
Standard
Hoskins Hoskins IEC584.1 Hoskins IEC584.1 IEC584.1 DIN43710:1985 (To IPTS68) IEC584.1 IEC584.1 IEC584.1 IEC584.1 DIN43710:1985 ASTM E1751-95 Engelhard Ipsen ASTM E1751-95
Max.linearisation error 0 to 400 C = 1.7C 400 to 1820 C = 0.03C 0.12C 0.08C 0.03C 0.07C 0.02C 0.04C 0.02C 0.04C 0.04C 0.04C 0.02C 0.08C 0.06C 0.02C 0.14C 0.07C
input error:
From thermocouple tables, a type T thermocouple generates a voltage of 17.819mV at 350 C. From the dc performance table above, the maximum error is 0.030% input = 0.03 x 17.819/100 = 5.346V
range error:
The 38mV range is used as the type t thermocouple is defined to cover the range -270C (-6.258mV) to +400C (20.872mV). From the dc performance table, the maximum range error is 0.052% range, and the range is 38 + 38 = 76 mV. Thus the maximum range error is 0.052 x 76/100 = 39.52V.
Temperature error:
The dc performance table above is specifed at 20C, but the ambient in this example is 40C. From the dc performance table, the worst case temperature performance is 25ppm/C, so our error is 25 x (40-20) x 17.819 x 10 -6 = 8.910V.
linearisation error:
From the thermocouple table, the maximum linearisation error for a type t thermocouple is 0.02 C
Maximum error
From the above, the total error adds up as follows: Input error: 5.346V Range error: 39.520V Temperature error: 8.910V Linearisation error: 0.02C CJC error: 1.30 C Total error: 53.776V + 1.32C From thermocouple tables, a change of 1C is equivalent to a change of 60V, so a change of 53.776V is equivalent to a change of 0.896C. Thus the total worst case error for this example is (0.896 + 1.32) = 2.216C
aC load ratings
Derating The figures given below are for resistive loads. For reactive or inductive loads, de-rate in accordance with graph 1, in which F1 = Actually measured results on representative samples F2 = Typical values (according to experience) Contact life = Resistive contact life x reduction factor. Maximum switching power 500VA Maximum contact voltage 250V providing this does not cause the maximum switching power (above) to be exceeded Maximum contact current 2 Amps providing this does not cause the maximum switching power (above) to be exceeded
DC load ratings
Maximum switching power Maximum contact voltage/current See graph 2 for operating volt/Amp envelope See graph 2 for examples.
safety isolation
Isolation (dc to 65 Hz; BS EN61010) Relay to relay: Relay to ground: Installation category II; Pollution degree 2 300V RMS or dc (double insulation) 300V RMS or dc (basic insulation)
Reduction Factor F
F1
DC Voltage (Volts)
300
F2
0.3 1
0.8
0.2
20
Special Modes
Display Test
Touch Calibration
System Summary
Diag Summary
Quit
B1 .2 sPECial MoDEs
For factory use only, selecting 'Special Modes' allows the enabling and disabling of the Sales Demo mode of operation.
An 'S' symbol is displayed at the top of the screen whilst the recorder is in sales demo mode.
B1 .3 DisPlaY TEsT
Selecting this option, allows the user to check the display by flooding the screen with single colours. Repeatedly touching the screen, scrolls through the following colour sequence: Black, White, Red, Green, Blue, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow. A further operation of the touch screen returns the main diagnostic screen.
B1 .4 ToUCh CaliBraTioN
Touching this key calls a selection screen as shown below:
Main Menu
B1 .4 .3 Main menu
Touching this returns the user to the top level diagnostics screen (Figure B1.1)
B1 .5 sYsTEM sUMMarY
This key calls a system summary display, as shown for a typical small-frame recorder, in figure B1.5.
SYSTEM SUMMARY Variant: 6100E Software: 4.2.1 DRAM: 67108864 SRAM: 2621448 FLASH: 668467208 MAC address: 000A8D002026 Date: 18/02/08 Time: 16:41:58 Main Menu
Figure B1.5 System summary display
B1 .6 Diag sUMMarY
Note: The diagnostic display does not include details of the Transmitter Power Supply option (if fitted).
MAC address Software version
00 00 00 Serial 1 Serial 2
3_RELAY_1
Option boards
NONE
Input boards
Figure B1.6 Diag Summary (small frame recorder - large frame similar)
B1 .6 .1 MaC address
Each instrument is allocated a unique hex address as a part of the manufacturing process. The display at the top left of the display screen shows the final 6 characters of this address. The full address can be found in the System Summary display, described above, or in the Network\Name display described in section 4.5.1.
B1 .6 .3 serial 1/serial 2
Not applicable this recorder model
B1 .6 .4 Battery
This area, normally green, flashes red/white when the battery needs to be replaced (section B2). Battery status is checked once every 15 minutes.
B1 .6 .5 lockable
The lockable flap display is green if the lockable flap is fitted, or flashes red/white if the option is not fitted. (Option not available for this recorder version.
B1 .6 .6 option boards
This shows which option boards are fitted where as viewed from the rear of the recorder. (Only one option board (three change-over relay) is available for this recorder model. rElaY oUTPUT BoarDs If a relay output board is fitted, its relays can be tested by touching the Option board key, then touching the relevant relay key to energise/de-energise the relay. Figure B1.6.6 shows a typical display.
3 (De-Energised )
4 (De-Energised )
Main Menu
Figure B1.6.6 Relay board test display
B1 .6 .7 input boards
This shows how many input boards are fitted. (Only one input board available this model of recorder.
B1 .6 .8 Main menu
To return to the main diagnostics display, touch the 'Main Menu' key.
B1 .7 QUiT
Allows the user to quit diagnostics (after confirmation). The recorder restarts in normal operating mode.
CaUTioN The touch-sensitive screen used in this product is designed for use by hand or by the stylus supplied only. The use of sharp or pointed implements such as pens, keys and fingernails to operate the instrument must be avoided, or irreparable damage will be done to the surface material. When cleaning the touch-screen, a moist cloth should be used, if necessary with a minimal amount of mild soap solution. ALCOHOLS SUCH AS ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL MUST NEVER BE USED ON THE SCREEN.
B2 .2 MaiNTENaNCE sChEDUlE
Battery replacement - Every three years B2 .2 .1 BaTTErY rEPlaCEMENT ProCEDUrE WarNiNg In order to eliminate the risk of user contact with hazardous voltages, the recorder must be isolated from line power before its top cover is removed. The battery is of poly-carbonmonofluoride/lithium construction and should be disposed of according to local regulations covering this type of battery. Note: All battery backed RAM data is lost during battery change (see Annex A for details of stored data).. 1. 2. Isolate the recorder from supply power and remove the recorder from the panel (if fitted) Remove the recorder cover by removing the Four Torx headed screws (A) and the Pozidriv-headed screw B, and then lifting the cover up and out, under the gasket (C).
a a a a B
3.
With the cover removed, the battery board is accessible, allowing the exhausted battery to be slid out of its holder and the replacement battery to be inserted (+ up).
B3 oPTioN ENaBliNg
See 'Upgrade' in section 4.6.3.
B4 ColoUr sElECTioN
The following table, gives RGB values and decimal and hex numbers for the available channel colours. Normally, this table is necessary only when communicating over the Modbus link. Note: Colour representation varies from screen to screen. For this reason, it is unlikely that the colour on a PC will match those on these pages or those on the recorder display.
Colour Red Blue Green Honey Violet Russet Dark Blue Jade Magenta Dusky Rose Yellow Powder Blue Dark Red Avocado Indigo Dark Brown gean Cyan Aubergine Dark Orange Pale Yellow Hyacinth Dark Green Sugar Pink Bluebell Orange Pink Buttermilk
Red 255 0 0 255 170 170 0 0 255 255 255 85 170 0 85 85 0 0 85 255 255 170 0 255 85 255 255 255
Blue 0 255 0 0 153 0 102 0 102 51 255 255 0 102 102 0 51 255 51 0 51 51 0 204 255 0 255 102
Decimal 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27
Hex 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E 0F 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1A 1B
B4 ColoUr sElECTioN (Cont .) Colour Terracotta Blue Babe Lime Blue Jive Cucumber EuroGreen Wheatgerm Sea Blue Ginger Aqua Pool Pale Red Pale Blue Lilac Sky Blue Wild Moss Turquoise Pale Green Coffee Wicker Black Dark Dark Grey Dark Grey Grey Light Light Dark Grey Light Dark Grey Light Grey Light Light Grey White Red Green Blue 170 85 0 85 0 67 255 85 255 0 255 85 170 85 0 0 85 170 255 0 48 64 128 154 172 192 212 255 63 95 223 31 255 107 223 159 159 63 63 127 0 191 127 127 255 127 255 0 48 64 128 154 172 192 212 255 0 255 0 204 153 103 51 255 0 255 51 255 255 255 0 153 153 0 191 0 48 64 128 154 172 192 212 255 Decimal 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 Hex 1C 1D 1E 1F 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 2A 2B 2C 2D 2E 2F 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37
Usage File Transfer Protocol - data File Transfer Protocol - control E-mail; SMTP Web access SNTP server Modbus/TCPIP communications Bridge communications - general Bridge communications - trend review
Abbreviation GMT UTC ECT EET ART EAT MET NET PLT IST BST VST CTT JST ACT AET SST NST MIT HST AST PST PNT MST CST EST IET PRT CNT AGT BET CAT
Full title
Hours of difference 0 0 +1 +1 +2 +3 +3.5 +4 +5 +5.5 +6 +7 +8 +9 +9.5 +10 +11 +12 -11 -10 -9 -8 -7 -7 -6 -5 -5 -4 -3.5 -3 -3 -1
Greenwich mean time............................... 12:00 Co-ordinated Universal time .................. 12.00 Central European time ............................. 13:00 Eastern European time ............................. 13:00 Arabic standard time ................................14:00 Eastern African time .................................. 15:00 Middle East time......................................... 15:30 Near East time .............................................16:00 Pakistan Lahore time................................. 17:00 India standard time ................................... 17:30 Bangladesh standard time .......................18:00 Vietnam standard time.............................19:00 China Taiwan time......................................20:00 Japan standard time .................................. 21:00 Australia Central time ............................... 21:30 Australia Eastern time ...............................22:00 Solomon standard time............................23:00 New Zealand standard time ....................24:00 Midway Islands time .................................. 01:00 Hawaii standard time ................................02:00 Alaska standard time ................................03:00 Pacific standard time ................................04:00 Phoenix standard time..............................05:00 Mountain standard time ..........................05:00 Central standard time ...............................06:00 Eastern standard time ............................... 07:00 Indiana Eastern standard time ............... 07:00 Puerto Rico and US Virgin Islands time08:00 Canada Newfoundland time ...................08:30 Argentina standard time ..........................09:00 Brazil Eastern time .....................................09:00 Central African time .................................. 11:00
B8 MENU sTrUCTUrE
Root Menu
Home Operator Remove Media Goto Group File Goto View
13:35:29 06/10/05 Hide Type Flash Size (Bytes) 1390592 Free (Bytes) 124715008 1361920
Section 4
Engineer
Group 1
15:24:36 28/01/08
Archive
Save/R..
Section 5
2
Engineer \ No batch In Progress
Group 1
10:22:04 29/01/08
Open Folder
Channel descri...
0.7612 V
Channel descriptor
0.0000 0.2000 0.4000
Channel 2
0.6000
42.3960 Deg C
0.7612V
0.8000 1.0000
1
Select volume
Alarm Summary
Vertical Trend Vertical Bargraph
Message Log
Horizontal Trend Horizontal Bargraph
Remov.. 125894656
Archive
Go disp to selec lay m ted ode
Save/R..
Figure B8c
Config
Figures B8d to B9f
Security
Figure B8g
Network
Figure B8g
System
Figure B8h
10:21:37 29/01/08
Figure B8b
Engineer
No batch In Progress
4
Date 07/09/05 09:25:46 Bytes
\mediacard \
Select folder
Name history\
Type Folder
Numeric Page
Option Menu
Note
Faceplates On/Off
Engineer
No batch In Progress
6
Date 12/09/05 11:40:56 Bytes
Alarm summary
Group 1
15:25:04 29/01/08
Engineer
Message Log
Group 1 All Messages All History
Vertical trend
Engineer
Channel Cycling On
Enter History
Trend History mode
Engineer
\mediacard\history
Select folder
12:17:04 29/01/08
Name group1 \
Type Folder
15:24:36 28/01/08
Group 1
10:22:04 29/01/08
Channel descri...
0.7612 V
Channel descriptor
0.0000 0.2000 0.4000
Channel 2
0.6000
42.3960 Deg C
0.7612V
0.8000 1.0000
Group 1
Channel descriptor
0.0000 0.2000 0.4000
0.7612V
0.6000
29/01/08 10:21:25
0.8000
Engineer
1.0000
No batch In Progress
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Date 28/09/05 15:39:18 12/09/05 11:40:54 07/09/05 09:26:32 Bytes
10:21:37 29/01/08
\mediacard\history\group1 \
10:21:37 29/01/08
Select folder
Engineer
No Batch In Progress
Numeric page
Engineer
Horizontal trend
11:00:45 30/01/08
Engineer
\mediacard\history\group1\000
Option Menu
Note
Select file
Date
Group 1
Group 1
0.7612V
Channel descriptor
Exit History
Message Log
deg C
Typical displays - see section 3.4 for full details. The Up and Down arrow keys can be used to scroll through display modes;
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deg C
10
Filer Options New Cut Paste
0.00 0
Horizontal bargraph
Engineer
Vertical bargraph
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Engineer
Group 1
Group 1 100 150 150 150 Channel 1 0.7612V Channel 2 42.3960 Channel 3 32.8853 Channel 4 107.5210 Channel 5 107.1660
Deg C
Channel 1
0.0000 1.0000
1.00
100
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Channel 2
0.0000
100.0000
Channel 3
0.0000
100.0000
Deg C
Channel 4
0.0000
150.0000
Deg C
Channel 5
0.0000
150.0000
Channel 6
0.0000
150.0000
Deg C
Maths 1
1000.0000
0.00
Deg C
2000.0000 0.00
Archive
Save/R..
Config
Security
Network
System
Figure B8g
Bring Archive Up To Date Archive Last Hour Archive Last Day Archive Last 7 Days Archive Last 31 Days Archive All Suspend Archiving Cancel Archive
Archive Transfer Inactive Media Full 18/02/2008 00:34:57 Media Size 31954944 Free Space 28786688
Bytes Bytes
Remote
Last Archive 17/02/2008 12:00:00
Bring Archive Up To Date Archive Last Hour Archive Last Day Archive Last 7 Days Archive Last 31 days Archive All Cancel Archive
Archive Transfer Inactive
Archive
Save/R..
Config
Security
Network
System
Save
Figure B8b
Figure B8g
New
Restore Configuration Data Security Data Network Data Screens Data New/Default File Name
Text
\user\
cal\ config\ Filter1a lib\ sdb\ user\
Hide Type
Folder Folder Config Folder Folder Folder 31/01/08 16:19:46 28/12/07 10:27:13 29/12/07 10:22:23 4445 29/01/08 10:23:14 30/01/08 14:01:08 31/01/08 15:41:30
Save Cancel
Date
Bytes
FileName Filter1b :
Config
Security
Network
System
Figure B8b
Figure B8c
Instrument Groups Channels Archive
Figure B8g
Figure B8g
Figure B8h
Figure B8e
Instrument Name Instrument Normal Display 100 % Instrument (Section 4.3.1) % Saver Display 50 Save After 30 Minutes Modbus Address 1 Modbus Security Disabled = Disabled s Comms Channel Timeout0 0 Preset Hour 0 Preset Minute 12 Disable Warning Dialogs Show Operator Notes List Apply Discard
22/08/05 11:04:56
Figure B8f
Thermocouple C C
% % %
Filter Break Response Cold Junction Type Descriptor Spanned Span Low Span High Zone Low Zone High PV Format Max Decimal Digits Colour A Alarm Number Enable Type Setpoint Source Threshold Hysteresis Dwell Job Number Category
100
% % % %
Recording Enable Recording Speed 1,200 Recording Interval 1 Trend History Duration 5.29 Archive to Media Enable Archive via FTP Enable Alarm Message Ack Message
from Channel 3
mm/ hr s Days
% %
Apply
Etc.
Discard
No Action
Apply
Figure B8d Config menu structure (sheet 1)
Discard
Config
Security
Network
System
Figure B8b
Figure B8c
Instrument Groups Channels Archive Events Messages Maths Totalisers
Figure Bg
Figure B8g
Figure B8h
Event Number 1) Event 1 Source 1 Alarm on Group On Group 1) Group 1
Remote
Compression Normal
Mb Days
Lo ca l
Figure B8d
Show Remote settings Archive to Remote None Ftp File format Binary Remote path / h i s t o r y
Primary remote host 0.0.0.0 Primary login name a n o n y m o u s Primary password * * * * * Retype password * * * * *
Source 2 Sense Not Source 2 Descriptor Event 1 Job Number 1 Category No Action Apply
Figure B8f
Secondary remote host 0.0.0.0 Secondary login name a n o n y m o u s Secondary password * * * * * Retype password * * * * * Apply Discard
Discard
Flash Size 9 6 . 2 5 Mb Shortest Trend History G r o u p 1 Duration 1 0 . 8 6 Days CSV include Values CSV include Messages CSV include Header details CSV include Column headings CSV Date/Time format Spreadsheet numeric CSV use Tab delimiter Show Local settings Media mediacard Archive to Media None Media file format Binary and CSV On Media Full Overwrite Removable Media Capacity 3 3 . 1 8 Media Full event limit 100 % Apply Media Size 30.4746094
Mb Days
Lo ca l
Compression Normal
These fields appear only if Media File Format is 'CSV' or 'Binary and CSV'
Discard
Config
Security
Network
System
Figure B8b
Figure B8c
Instrument
Figure B8g
Figure B8g
Figure B8h
Figure B8d
Figure B9e
Scale Low Scale high Zone low Zone high Scale Type PV Format Max Decimal Digits Colour Alarm Number Enable Job Number Category
1) Total Flow 76.54 Add Channel 1 Channel 2 l/min 0 60 0 100 None Numeric 2 1 1 No Action 26 Off 1) Total flow l/min l/min % % l/min
Apply Discard
Preset now Scale Low Scale High Zone Low Zone High Scale Type Colour Alarm Number Enable Job Number Category Descriptor Counter 1
0 1 0 100 0 None 1 1 Units Units % %
Select None or Linear Select Alarm number Select Job number
(currently 0)
Off No Action
Apply
Discard
Seconds Seconds
Scale Low Scale High Zone Low Zone High Scale Type PV format Max Decimal Digits Colour Alarm Number Enable Job Number Category
Numeric
Off
No Action
Apply
Discard
Apply
Discard
Archive
Save/R..
Config
Security
Network
System
Figure B8b
Figure B8h
Address
Address
Instrument number MAC address IP address lookup BootP timeout IP address Subnet mask Default gateway SNTP server enable SNTP client enable SNTP server EuroPRP server enable 149.121.128.179 240 08:00:48:80:00:F0 Obtain from a BootP Server 28 s 192.168.111.222 255.255.255.0 0.0.0.0
Network (Section 4.5) Name Note: 'Name' appears only when 'IP address lookup' is set to 'Get from BootP server' or to 'Get from DHCP Server'
Apply
Select the required access level and enter the password if required.
Touch logged out area ...
Discard
Name
Local Host Domain Domain Name Service Primary DNS Server Secondary DNS Server 149.121.164.11 149.121.165.14 Andy136-4 FishesRus.co.uk
Close Service
Apply
Discard
Config
Security
Network
System
Figure B8b
Figure B8g
Language English Country United Kingdom Select Time Zone GMT timezone
in March End at 12:00:00 PM on the Last in October Long Date format Apply Discard
Sunday
Apply
Discard
Select first channel for adjust Select final channel for adjust
Product Software Version: 4.3 History File Version: 2.0 BootRom Version: 1.5 Board Version 3
Select Channels Adjust Channels Remove Adjust Fast Settle 1) Channel 1 5.0001 2) Channel 2 5.0001 3) Channel 3 5.0001 29/07/08 12:11:55 29/07/08 12:11:55 29/07/08 12:11:55 29/07/08 12:11:55 Unadjusted
Initiate adjustment procedure Remove previous adjustments
Fitted Memory History: 8.00MB SRAM: 256kB DRAM: 64MB Support File
If all the entries are correct, the Web Server home page appears, the top part of which is shown in figure C1, below.
EUROTHERM
H om e Instrument Trends Message Logs History About Recorder Downloads Document Library Search
Web Server
As can be seen there are two sets of 'controls' viz the internet links and the instrument access tabs.
C1 .1 iNTErNET liNKs
These three links take the user to various areas of the manufacturer's web site.
C1 .2 aCCEss TaBs
Most of the information displayed in the pages described below is updated every 20 seconds. The exception is the Trend page refresh rate which can be edited (as shown in figure C1.2.2a) by typing in the new value, and then either clicking on 'Set' or using the computer <Enter> key. Because of the processing time required, it is not recommended that a value of less than 5 seconds be entered.
C1 .2 .1 instrument
This opens the instrument page, a typical example of which is shown in figure C1.2.1 below.
Home I rum ent nst Trends Message Logs History About
Instrument - Status at 18/02/08 14:53:24 Instrument Alarms : SNTP Server Failure Healthy Global Channel Alarm :
iNsTrUMENT alarMs Either 'Healthy' (green background) or a list of any active instrument alarm(s) (red background). gloBal ChaNNEl alarM Either 'Healthy' (green background) if there are no point alarms, or 'Active' (red background) if there is one or more active point alarm.
C1 .2 .2 Trends
Clicking on the 'Trends' tab displays a screen allowing the user to select a refresh rate and one of Horizontal trend, Vertical Trend or Numeric as the display format. Both the horizontal and vertical trend modes include the numeric display table.
Home Instrument Vertical Trend Trends M
Horizontal Trend
Numeric Display
horiZoNTal TrEND Figure C1.2.2b shows a horizontal trend display for an imaginary group (Furnace Temps 1) with two channels (Stack 1 and Stack2North)
Time and date of most recent sample update 18/ 08 14: 09 02/ 53:
EUROTHERM
Home Return to mode selection page Instrument 2 3 Tr ends 4 5 6 7 8 Message Logs 9 10 11 History 12 Group 1 About Only group 1 available for this recorder model
Web Server
Trends
Furnace Temps 1
Span High
Earliest sample
Latest sample
Span Low Descriptor Stack 1 Span Low Process Value Span High 0.0000 61.6667C 41.1667C minutes of data 100.0000 100.0000
Select horizontal scale here... Select horizontal scale here...
Set
As shown in the figure, the group process values appear as though being traced on a chart which is rolling from right to left (i.e the oldest sample is at the left edge of the chart, and the latest sample is at the right edge of the chart). The point Descriptors, Span high and Span low values and process values (at the time and date at the top left of the screen) appear in a table below the chart. The amount of time across the width of the chart (the 'horizontal scale') can be edited from its default of 20 minutes by typing a new value in the box at bottom left of the page, and confirming either by clicking on the 'Set' button at bottom right or by using the pc's <Enter> key. To return to the Trend Mode selection page, Click on the 'Trends' link at top left. User Guide Page 180 HA029722 Issue 1 Aug 08
C1 .2 .2 TrENDs (Cont .) VErTiCal TrEND This viewing mode is identical in operation to the Horizontal Trend mode described above, except that the 'chart' is vertical, with the most recent sample at the top, and the oldest at the bottom. The 'Vertical scale' (i.e the amount of trend history displayed within the height of the chart) is edited as described for 'Horizontal scale' in the Horizontal Trend description above. To return to the Trend Mode selection page, Click on the 'Trends' link at top left. NUMEriC DisPlaY This viewing mode contains only a table of point descriptors, spans high and low, and process values. The table is identical in layout to that shown below the 'chart' in figure C1.2.2b, above. To return to the Trend Mode selection page, Click on the 'Trends' link at top left.
C1 .2 .3 Message logs
Figure C1.2.3 shows an imaginary message log with a number of alarm messages, for a group called Furnace Temps 1.
Home Group 1 2 Instrument 3 4 5 6 Trends 7 8 9 M essage Logs 10 11 12 History About Only Group 1 available for this recorder model
Furnace Temps 1
All Messages
18/02/08 11:21:26 Alarm(s) off1(1) 18/02/08 11:21:26 Alarm(s) off2(1) 18/02/08 11:11:13 CO2 over limit 18/02/08 11:11:13 SO2 over limit 18/02/08 11:11:13 CO over limit
minutes of data
The required group is selected by clicking on the relevant number at the top of the page. The length of time that the list covers, can be edited from its default of 20 minutes by typing a new value in the box at bottom left of the page, and confirming by clicking on the 'Set' button at bottom right or using the <Enter> key on the pc. If there are more messages than can be accommodated in the window height, a scroll bar appear at the left edge of the window to allow hidden messages to be revealed.
C1 .2 .4 history
This produces a list of all the .uhh files held in the instrument archive. The files can be saved to a user-specified location, for use in Review or Quickchart applications. Figure C1.2.4 shows part of a typical page.
Home Instrument Message Logs Trends H i ory st Click here to select all files for saving to a user specified location About
Note: This data is in archived (TAR) format, and cannot be opened directly by Review without first having been unzipped.
File Name Group-1~20080213 003F343000000263.uhh Group-1~20080213 003F343000000264.uhh
Click on individual files to save to a user specified location
Size
C1 .2 .5 about
Clicking on this tab displays a subset of the information which appears in the recorder's 'About' screen, described in section 4.6.8.
iNDEX Symbols
? ..........................................................................................................9 ????? ...................................................................................................... 69 {n} source ............................................................................................ 70
Example ..........................................................................58
Unlatched ....................................................................................... 57 All History.............................................................................................18 All Messages ........................................................................................17 Amount ................................................................................................ 58 of history ........................................................................................ 48 Archive Activity indication .........................................................................13 All ...................................................................................................... 37 Config menu ................................................................................ 175 Configuration .................................................................................61 Destination ..................................................................................... 62 Enable .............................................................................................. 48 Failed .................................................................................................11 Frequency ................................................................................ 62, 63 Jobs ................................................................................................. 109 Last Hour, Last Day etc. job .................................................... 109 Local ................................................................................................. 36 Manual Local ............................................................................................. 36 Remote ........................................................................................ 38 Media % full event source ......................................................... 67 Remote Automatic ................................................................................... 63 Manual ........................................................................................ 38 Suspend/Resume.......................................................................... 37 To media ......................................................................................... 62 To Media enable ........................................................................... 48 To remote ....................................................................................... 63 via FTP enable ............................................................................... 48 Archive key Menu structure ........................................................................... 172 ASCII Codes ............................................................................................. 168 At version .......................................................................................... 103 Autoconfigure .................................................................................... 90 Automatic ..................................................................................... 62, 63 Average time ...................................................................................... 58
A
About .................................................................................................. 103 Absolute High/Low ........................................................................... 57 Access flap..............................................................................................7 Access to Configuration .................................................................. 23 ACK all alarms .....................................................................................14 Acknowledge alarms ..................................................................14, 16 Jobs ................................................................................................. 109 Active .................................................................................................... 38 Address Allocation ..................................................................................... 123 MAC................................................................................................ 160 Map ................................................................................................ 121 MODBUS ......................................................................................... 44 Network .......................................................................................... 91 Adjust channels ................................................................................. 98 Alarm ACK ALL............................................................................................14 Acknowledgement ........................................................................14 All alarms.....................................................................................16 Group alarms..............................................................................16 Individual alarms .......................................................................16 jobs ............................................................................................. 109 Message enable/disable ......................................................... 48 Amount ........................................................................................... 58 Average time ................................................................................. 58 Change Time .................................................................................. 58 Configuration ................................................................................ 50 Disable jobs .................................................................................. 109 Dwell ................................................................................................ 58 Enable .............................................................................................. 57 Faceplate icons...............................................................................10 Hysteresis ........................................................................................ 58 Example....................................................................................... 58 Indication Battery exhausted.....................................................................13 Channel ........................................................................................13 Instrument ..................................................................................11 Jobs ................................................................................................. 109 Number ....................................................................................... 60 Latched ............................................................................................ 57 Messages ..........................................................................................17 Enable/disable........................................................................... 48 Number ........................................................................................... 56 Off..................................................................................................... 57 On Group event source .............................................................. 66 Reference........................................................................................ 58 Summary page ........................................................................15, 21 Threshold........................................................................................ 58 Trigger ............................................................................................. 57 Type .................................................................................................. 57 Absolute High ........................................................................... 57 Absolute Low............................................................................. 57
B
Battery Backed RAM cleared ....................................................................11 Backed RAM data....................................................................... 151 Change Symbol..........................................................................................13 Diagnostics ................................................................................... 161 Low event source ......................................................................... 67 Replacement ................................................................................ 163 Specification ................................................................................ 151 Blue line across the chart ............................................... 27, 48, 108 BootP timeout.................................................................................... 91 Break response ...................................................................................55 Bring archive up to date ...........................................................37, 38 Bring FTP archive up to date ....................................................... 109
B (Cont.)
Bring Media Archive up to date ................................................. 109 BSpc key ............................................................................................... 24
C
Cabling Signal...................................................................................................4 Supply voltage..................................................................................6 Cancel Archive ................................................................................. 109 Caps key ............................................................................................... 24 Card slot location.................................................................................7 Category .............................................................................................. 60 Change Battery Procedure ................................................................................. 163 Battery symbol...............................................................................13 Change Time....................................................................................... 58 Channel Alarm Symbol..........................................................................................13 Average ........................................................................................... 72 Configuration Input channels .......................................................................... 50 Configuration data..................................................................... 124 32-bit (IEEE) ............................................................................. 137 Cycling ...................................................................................... 26, 27 Descriptor ....................................................................................... 46 Error ..................................................................................................11 Failure ...............................................................................................11 Maximum ........................................................................................ 72 Menu Structure ...........................................................................174 Minimum ........................................................................................ 72 Number ........................................................................................... 50 Run-Time data............................................................................. 130 32-bit (IEEE) ............................................................................. 139 Character set ........................................................................... 24 to 25 Serial comms ............................................................................... 168 Cleaning ............................................................................................. 162 Clock ..................................................................................................... 96 Accuracy ....................................................................................... 151 Failure ...............................................................................................11 Jobs ................................................................................................. 107 Cold junction compensation (CJC) ...............................................55 Colour Trace................................................................................................. 56 Comma separated values format ................................................. 64 Comms Channel timeout........................................................................... 66 Timeout ........................................................................................... 44 Compact Flash card location ............................................................7 Compression ....................................................................................... 62 Config Revision ......................................................................... 69, 103 Configuration ..................................................................................... 35 Access .............................................................................................. 23 Alarms.............................................................................................. 50 Archive .......................................................................................... 175 Automatic ....................................................................................61 Manual
D
Daily ............................................................................................... 62, 63 Damping................................................................................................55 Data Encoding ........................................................................................114 Transmission ................................................................................ 142 Types ...............................................................................................114 Date89 Format ............................................................................................. 96 Daylight saving time (DST) ................................................... 96, 107 Decimal point position .................................................................... 56 Decrement counter ........................................................................ 107 Default gateway................................................................................. 92 Default password .............................................................................. 23 Delete ..................................................................................................110 Descriptor Channel .................................................................................... 46, 55 Event ................................................................................................ 68 Instrument...................................................................................... 44 Timer ................................................................................................ 89 Deviation in/out ................................................................................ 57 DHCP Server failure ..........................................................................11 Diagnostics Display ........................................................................................... 157 Diag Summary .................................................................................. 160 Disable Alarms jobs .................................................................................. 109
D (Cont.)
Counter ......................................................................................... 107 Group Counters .......................................................................... 107 Maths function ........................................................................... 106 Timer .............................................................................................. 108 Warning dialogues ....................................................................... 45 Disk icon ...............................................................................................13 Display Calibration.................................................................................... 158 Language......................................................................................... 96 Modes .............................................................................................. 26 Horizontal Bargraph................................................................ 32 Horizontal Trend ...................................................................... 29 Numeric ...................................................................................... 33 Trend History............................................................................. 26 Vertical Bargraph ......................................................................31 Vertical Trend............................................................................ 27 Test ................................................................................................. 158 Update rate .................................................................................. 151 Divide.................................................................................................... 72 DNS 94 Primary/Secondary Server ........................................................ 94 Domain ................................................................................................. 94 Name Service (DNS) ................................................................... 94 DO NOT REMOVE Archive Media! .........................................19, 20 Drive relay job.................................................................................. 105 DST 96, 107 Duration Timer ................................................................................................ 89 Trend history ................................................................................. 62 Dwell ..................................................................................................... 58
Event (Cont.)
Archive media % full................................................................ 67 Battery Low................................................................................ 67 Comms channel timeout ....................................................... 66 Event ............................................................................................ 66 Global alarm .............................................................................. 66 Global unacknowledged alarm ............................................ 66 Instrument alarm ..................................................................... 66 Invakid password entry .......................................................... 67 Off ................................................................................................ 66 Power up..................................................................................... 66 Timer active ............................................................................... 66 Unackd alarm on Group ....................................................... 66 Unackd point alarm ............................................................... 66 User logged in ........................................................................... 67 Exception codes............................................................................... 142 External .................................................................................................55
F
Fast Settle ............................................................................................ 98 File Format FTP ................................................................................................ 63 Media ........................................................................................... 63 Key .................................................................................................... 20 Menu ...............................................................................................110 Option-menu keys ......................................................................110 Structure ........................................................................................112 Filter .......................................................................................................55 First channel ....................................................................................... 98 First switch-on ................................................................................... 22 Flash Size ............................................................................................. 62 FTP Error messages ...............................................................................11 File format ...................................................................................... 63 Icon ....................................................................................................13 Full details ............................................................................................18 Function ............................................................................................... 72 Codes .....................................................................................113, 142 Fuse Rating Transmitter power supply ....................................................... 146
E
Earlier messages.. ........................................................................ 17, 18 Elapsed time ....................................................................................... 73 Electrical installation...........................................................................4 Enable Alarm ............................................................................................... 57 Options .......................................................................................... 164 Recording...................................................................................... 108 Timer ................................................................................................ 89 Totaliser........................................................................................... 79 Enter history ........................................................................................18 Ethernet Address.......................................................................................... 160 Diagnostics ................................................................................... 100 LED interpretation ..................................................................... 151 EuroPRP server enable .................................................................... 93 Event Configuration ....................................................................... 66, 175 Event source .................................................................................. 66 Example ........................................................................................... 68 Number ........................................................................................... 66 Source type Alarm on Group ....................................................................... 66
G
General messages ..............................................................................17 Global Alarm ............................................................................................... 66 Channel alarm ............................................................................. 179 Unackd alarm ............................................................................... 66 Goto Group key ................................................................................. 20 Go to View key................................................................................... 20 Green line across the chart.............................................27, 93, 107 Group Average ........................................................................................... 72 Configuration ....................................................................... 46, 174 Maximum ........................................................................................ 72 Minimum ..................................................................................72, 74
H
Hide110 High Cutoff............................................................................................... 79 Point ................................................................................................. 99 History ................................................................................................ 182 Display mode ................................................................................. 26 Duration ................................................................................... 48, 62 Hollow pen symbol .......................................................................... 27 Home key ............................................................................................ 20 Horizontal Bargraph display mode .............................................................. 32 Trend display mode ............................................................ 29, 180 Host 100 Hour ...................................................................................................... 89 Hourly ............................................................................................ 62, 63 Hysteresis............................................................................................. 58 Example ........................................................................................... 58
J
Jobs 105 to 109 Action ............................................................................................ 102 Category................................................................................. 60, 102 Archive ...................................................................................... 109 Clock .......................................................................................... 107 Counter ..................................................................................... 107 Drive relay ................................................................................ 105 Maths ......................................................................................... 106 Message .................................................................................... 106 No action .................................................................................. 105 Recording ................................................................................. 108 Timer.......................................................................................... 108 Totaliser .................................................................................... 105 Number ........................................................................................... 60 Search ............................................................................................ 102
K
Keyboards................................................................................. 24 to 25 Key Code.............................................................................................. 97 File .................................................................................................... 97
I
Inactive ................................................................................................. 38 Include alarm data.......................................................................... 101 Increment counter .......................................................................... 107 Indirection tables ............................................................................ 134 Input Adjust ............................................................................................... 98 Board specification .................................................................... 153 Channel configuration ................................................................ 50 High ...................................................................................................51 Low ....................................................................................................51 Type ...................................................................................................51 Installation Category........................................................................................ 149 Electrical ............................................................................................4 MODBUS ....................................................................................113 Mechanical ........................................................................................2 Drawing ..........................................................................................3 Instrument Alarm .......................................................................................11, 179 Event source .............................................................................. 66 Summary......................................................................................14 Configuration ....................................................................... 44, 174 Name......................................................................................... 44, 69 Number ..............................................................................69, 91, 97 Variant ........................................................................................... 103 Insufficient non-volatile memory... ..............................................11 Internal ..................................................................................................55 Internal flash error messages .........................................................11 Invalid multiple register writes ....................................................114 Invalid Password Entry .................................................................... 67 IP address ............................................................................................ 92 Lookup............................................................................................. 91
L
Language selection ........................................................................... 96 Last channel ........................................................................................ 98 Last Hour/Day/7 days/31 days .................................................... 109 Last Month ...........................................................................................18 Last updated ..................................................................................... 103 Last Week/3 Days/Day/Hour..........................................................18 Latched................................................................................................. 57 Later messages............................................................................. 17, 18 LED indicators (flash card) ................................................................8 Left/ Right arrow keys ..................................................................... 20 Linear .................................................................................................... 53 Linearisation type (LIN type) .........................................................51 Lines across the chart ...................................................................... 27 Line voltage range ...............................................................................6 Local Archive ..................................................................................... 36, 62 Host .................................................................................................. 94 Modbus Client ............................................................................. 100 Locale.................................................................................................... 96 Log Scales ............................................................................................... 53 Logged out access level .................................................................. 22 Login ..................................................................................................... 23 Messages ..........................................................................................18 Name/password............................................................................ 64 Log/Linear ........................................................................................... 53 Long date format .............................................................................. 96 Low Cutoff............................................................................................... 79 Point ................................................................................................. 99 Low voltage Connector..........................................................................................6 Range ..................................................................................................6
M
MAC Address ............................................................................. 91, 160 Maintenance ..................................................................................... 162 Schedule ....................................................................................... 163 Manual archiving ............................................................................... 36 Maths Channel Channel N Error........................................................................ 72 Configuration ............................................................................ 71 Failure ....................................................................................11, 72 Function ...................................................................................... 72 Number ....................................................................................... 71 Partial failure ............................................................................. 67 Config menu ................................................................................ 176 Jobs ................................................................................................. 106 Maximum Decimal digits................................................................................ 56 No. of data bytes.........................................................................113 Mechanical installation ......................................................................2 Drawing ..............................................................................................3 Media .................................................................................................... 62 Archiving too slow ........................................................................11 Capacity .......................................................................................... 63 File format ............................................................................... 63, 64 Full .................................................................................................... 37 Event limit .................................................................................. 63 Strategy ....................................................................................... 63 Removal ...........................................................................................19 Strategy ........................................................................................11 Size.................................................................................................... 63 Menu structure Archive key................................................................................... 172 Channel ..........................................................................................174 Config menu ................................................................... 174 to 176 Network key ................................................................................ 177 Root menu.................................................................................... 171 Save/Restore key ........................................................................ 173 Security key.................................................................................. 177 System key.................................................................................... 178 Message Configuration ....................................................................... 69, 175 Entry ................................................................................................. 69 Example ........................................................................................... 70 Jobs ................................................................................................. 106 Log ..................................................................................... 17, 21, 181 Options menu ............................................................................18 Period filter .................................................................................18 Type filter ....................................................................................17 Number ........................................................................................... 69 Minimum Channel Descriptor.......................................................................74 Minute .................................................................................................. 89 Missing pixels test ........................................................................... 158 MODBUS Address............................................................................................ 44 Allocation ................................................................................. 123 Map ............................................................................................ 121
MODBUS (Cont.)
Addressing Channel
Configuration............................................................. 124 Configuration (32-bit) ............................................. 137 Run-time data............................................................ 130 Run-time data (32-bit) ............................................ 139
Counter ............................................................................ 85 to 87 Group......................................................................................... 133 Instrument data...................................................................... 123 Maths ................................................................................ 76 to 78 Totaliser ........................................................................... 81 to 83 Data Transmission ............................................................................ 142 Types ...........................................................................................114 Exception codes.......................................................................... 142 Function code 03 ....................................................................... 143 Function code 04 ....................................................................... 144 Function code 06 ....................................................................... 144 Function code 08 ....................................................................... 144 Function code 16 (Hex 10)...................................................... 145 Function codes....................................................................113, 142 Indirection tables ....................................................................... 134 Permanent ID table ................................................................... 142 Security ..........................................................................................114 Disable ......................................................................................... 44 Sending a login request ............................................................117 TCP Slave comms ........................................................................113 Month ................................................................................................... 89 Monthly......................................................................................... 62, 63 Mouse lock-up ................................................................................. 152
N
Name (Network) ............................................................................... 94 Navigation keys ................................................................................. 20 Network Address............................................................................................ 91 Name................................................................................................ 94 Specification ................................................................................ 151 Network boot failure ........................................................................12 Network key ....................................................................................... 91 Menu structure ........................................................................... 177 New 40, 110 No Action .......................................................................................... 105 None ....................................................................................... 53, 62, 63 Normal/Saver display ...................................................................... 44 Notes.............................................................................................. 18, 34 List..................................................................................................... 45 Not Source 1 (2)................................................................................ 67 Numeric ........................................................................................ 56, 73 Display mode ........................................................................ 33, 181
O
Off 57, 66, 72 Offset .................................................................................................... 52 Correction (touch screen) ....................................................... 158 On going active/inactive/acknowledgement ........................... 60 On Media full ..................................................................................... 63 Open circuit action............................................................................55 Operator Access level .................................................................................... 22 Event source .................................................................................. 67 Key .................................................................................................... 20 Notes ................................................................................................ 34 List ......................................................................................... 34, 45 Option menu key ....................................................................... 18, 20 Options display .................................................................................. 90 Config menu ................................................................................ 176 Ovr key ................................................................................................. 24
R
Range High .................................................................................................. 52 Low ................................................................................................... 52 Units ................................................................................................. 52 Rate of change alarm....................................................................... 57 Example ........................................................................................... 58 Recorder Specification ................................................................................ 150 Recording Failure error message ..................................................................12 Interval ............................................................................................ 48 Jobs ................................................................................................. 108 Speed ............................................................................................... 48 Red bell symbol ..................................................................................13 Red line across the chart ......................................................... 22, 27 Reference ............................................................................................ 58 Refresh .........................................................................................18, 110 Relay Board specification .................................................................... 156 Wiring .................................................................................................5 Remote Archiving ......................................................................................... 63 FTP transfer ............................................................................... 38 CJC .....................................................................................................55 Host Primary ........................................................................................ 64 Secondary................................................................................... 64 Modbus Client ............................................................................. 100 Path .................................................................................................. 63 Removable media Capacity .......................................................................................... 63 Error messages ...............................................................................12 Remove Adjust ................................................................................... 98 Remove Media ....................................................................................19 Key .................................................................................................... 20 Repeat after ........................................................................................ 89 Repeat in.............................................................................................. 89 Replace {n} with ................................................................................ 69 Reset Maths function ........................................................................... 106 Now Maths function ......................................................................... 71 Timer............................................................................................ 89 Timer .............................................................................................. 108 Restore ................................................................................................. 40 Resume Archiving ............................................................................. 37 Rolling Average ........................................................................... 72, 75 Root menu Key .................................................................................................... 20 Structure ....................................................................................... 171 RTD Specifications .............................................................................. 154 Type selection ................................................................................51
P
Page name ............................................................................................10 Page up/ Page down ........................................................................ 20 Password .............................................................................................. 23 Paste .....................................................................................................110 Period Scaler ...................................................................................... 80 Permanent ID table ........................................................................ 142 Ping Now ................................................................................................ 100 Status ............................................................................................. 100 Pinouts.....................................................................................................5 Point Inclusion in group ........................................................................ 49 Type .................................................................................................. 49 Pollution degree .............................................................................. 149 Power requirements....................................................................... 151 Power Up Event source .................................................................................. 66 Messages ................................................................................... 17, 22 Pre-defined messages...................................................................... 34 Preset Counter .................................................................................. 84, 107 Group counters ........................................................................... 107 Group totalisers .......................................................................... 105 Hour/ Minute................................................................................. 45 Now .................................................................................................. 79 Totaliser.................................................................................. 79, 105 Preventive maintenance................................................................ 162 Primary DNS Server ..................................................................................... 94 Login name/password ................................................................ 64 Remote Host .................................................................................. 64 Printed keys ........................................................................................ 20 Process variable Display ................................................................................................9 Format ............................................................................................. 56 PV Format............................................................................................ 73
Q
Question mark symbol ................................................................9, 69
S
Safety notes ...........................................................................................1 Sales Demo Enable/Disable ......................................................... 158 Sample rates ..................................................................................... 151 Save 40 After ................................................................................................. 44 As ...................................................................................................... 40 Save / R... key ..................................................................................... 39 Menu structure ........................................................................... 173 Scale Divisions .......................................................................................... 53 Low/high .................................................................................. 52, 84 Type .................................................................................................. 53 Units ................................................................................................. 52 Scaled (yes or no) ............................................................................. 52 Scientific ....................................................................................... 56, 73 Screen Calibration.................................................................................... 158 Saver................................................................................................. 44 Search results ................................................................................... 102 Secondary DNS Server ..................................................................................... 94 Login name/password ................................................................ 64 Remote Host .................................................................................. 64 Seconds ................................................................................................ 89 Section ............................................................................................... 102 Security Key .................................................................................................... 91 Menu structure....................................................................... 177 MODBUS ........................................................................................114 Select Channels ................................................................................. 98 Selection .............................................................................................. 49 Self Start .............................................................................................. 89 Example ........................................................................................... 89 Serial 1/Serial 2................................................................................ 161 Setpoint source ................................................................................. 57 Shift key ............................................................................................... 24 Shortest Trend History .................................................................... 62 Show (Local/Remote) ...................................................................... 62 Show operator notes list ................................................................ 45 Shunt value entry.............................................................................. 52 Signal wiring ..........................................................................................4 Connector pinouts ..........................................................................5 Slave Comms ...................................................................................... 72 SNTP Client enable ................................................................................. 92 Server............................................................................................... 93 Enable .......................................................................................... 92 Failure ...........................................................................................12 Source Descriptor/Value/Alarm data................................................... 69 Type ......................................................................................... 66, 101 Source 1 ............................................................................................... 67 Sense ................................................................................................ 67 Source 2 ............................................................................................... 67 Sense ................................................................................................ 67 Spanned (yes or no)......................................................................... 56 Special modes .................................................................................. 158 Specification Back-up battery .......................................................................... 151 Input board .................................................................................. 153 Recorder, general ....................................................................... 150
Specification (Cont.)
RTC ................................................................................................. 151 USB ports...................................................................................... 152 Specified Descriptor/Value/Alarm data..................................... 69 S symbol .......................................................................................... 158 Start now ............................................................................................. 89 Start timer ......................................................................................... 108 Status bar .............................................................................................10 Stylus location.......................................................................................7 Subnet mask ....................................................................................... 92 Subtract ............................................................................................... 72 Summary menu ..................................................................................14 Supply voltage Range ..................................................................................................6 Wiring .................................................................................................6 Support File ...................................................................................... 104 Suspend Archive to Media ........................................................... 109 Suspend Archiving ............................................................................ 37 Symbols used on labelling ................................................................1 Synchronisation ........................................................................ 92, 107 Time setting ................................................................................... 45 System Key .................................................................................................... 95 Menu structure....................................................................... 178 Messages ..........................................................................................17
T
Tag Instrument...................................................................................... 44 Text 40 Entry ................................................................................................. 24 Messages (MODBUS) .................................................................119 Thermocouple Types and ranges........................................................................ 154 Type selection ................................................................................51 Threshold............................................................................................. 58 Time change records ....................................................................... 27 Time / date.......................................................................................... 73 Format ............................................................................................. 96 Setting ............................................................................................. 96 Timeout Comms channel ............................................................................ 44 Screen saver ................................................................................... 44 Timer Active event source ..................................................................... 66 Configuration ....................................................................... 88, 176 Disable ........................................................................................... 108 Jobs ................................................................................................. 108 Number ........................................................................................... 89 Reset............................................................................................... 108 Start................................................................................................ 108 TimeServ .............................................................................................. 93 Time Synchronisation failure ........................................................ 93 Time zone ............................................................................................ 96 Torque (electrical connectors) ........................................................4 Totaliser Configuration ....................................................................... 79, 176 Equation .......................................................................................... 79 Job category................................................................................. 105 Number ........................................................................................... 79 Total of ................................................................................................. 79
T (Cont.)
Touch screen Calibration.................................................................................... 158 Precautions .................................................................................. 162 Trace colour ........................................................................................ 56 Transmitter power supply ............................................................ 146 Fuse Access ........................................................................................ 146 Rating......................................................................................... 146 Wiring ............................................................................................ 148 Access ........................................................................................ 146 Trend Colour .............................................................................................. 56 History Display mode............................................................................. 26 Duration............................................................................... 48, 62 Horizontal ..................................................................................... 180 Interval ............................................................................................ 46 Speed ............................................................................................... 46 Units ................................................................................................. 46 Vertical .......................................................................................... 181 Trigger .................................................................................................. 57 Truncation of numeric values ..........................................................9
V
Value Counter ........................................................................................... 84 Input channel .................................................................................51 Maths channel ............................................................................... 71 Totaliser........................................................................................... 79 Vertical Bargraph display mode ....................................................31 Vertical Trend display mode..................................................27, 181 Virtual channels ................................................................................ 90 Virus susceptibility ......................................................................... 152
W
Web server ........................................................................................ 179 Weekly ........................................................................................... 62, 63 While active/inactive/unacknowledged .................................... 60 Wire size Signal...................................................................................................4 Supply voltage..................................................................................6 Wiring MODBUS link................................................................................113 Signal...................................................................................................4 Supply voltage..................................................................................6 Worst case error calculation ....................................................... 155
U
Unackd Alarm on Group............................................................................ 66 Point alarm ..................................................................................... 66 Unfilled pen symbol ......................................................................... 27 Units Counter ........................................................................................... 84 Scaler ............................................................................................... 80 Totaliser........................................................................................... 79 Trend ................................................................................................ 46 Unlatched ............................................................................................ 57 Unpacking the recorder .....................................................................2 Upgrade ............................................................................................... 97 USB Error messages ...............................................................................12 Lock-up ......................................................................................... 152 Port location .....................................................................................8 Specification ................................................................................ 152 User Logged In ................................................................................... 67 Use Summertime ..................................................................... 96, 107
Z
Zone ...................................................................................................... 56
Eurotherm Limited North Point Telephone (+85 2) 28733826 Fax (+85 2) 28700148 E-mail [email protected]
NORWAY Oslo
Eurotherm A/S Telephone (+47 67) 592170 Fax (+47 67) 118301 E-mail [email protected]
AUSTRIA Vienna
Eurotherm GmbH Telephone (+43 1) 7987601 Fax (+43 1) 7987605 E-mail [email protected]
Guangzhou Office
Telephone (+86 20) 8755 5099 Fax (+86 20) 8755 5831 E-mail [email protected]
POLAND Katowice
Beijing Office
Invensys Eurotherm Sp z o.o Telephone (+48 32) 218 5100 Fax (+48 32) 217 7171 E-mail [email protected]
Telephone (+86 10) 6567 8506 Fax (+86 10) 6567 8509 E-mail [email protected]
SPAIN Madrid
Shanghai Office
Telephone (+86 21) 6145 1188 Fax (+86 21) 6145 1187 E-mail [email protected]
Eurotherm Espaa SA Telephone (+34 91) 661 6001 Fax (+34 91) 661 9093 E-mail [email protected]
BRAZIL Campinas-SP
Eurotherm Ltda. Telephone (+5519) 3707 5333 Fax (+5519) 3707 5345 E-mail [email protected]
INDIA Chennai
SWEDEN Malmo
Eurotherm India Limited Telephone (+9144) 2496 1129 Fax (+9144) 2496 1831 E-mail [email protected]
Eurotherm AB Telephone (+46 40) 384500 Fax (+46 40) 384545 E-mail [email protected]
DENMARK Copenhagen
Eurotherm Danmark AS Telephone (+45 70) 234670 Fax (+45 70) 234660 E-mail [email protected]
IRELAND Dublin
SWITZERLAND Wollerau
Eurotherm Ireland Limited Telephone (+353 1) 4691800 Fax (+353 1) 4691300 E-mail [email protected]
Eurotherm Produkte (Schweiz) AG Telephone (+41 44) 787 1040 Fax (+41 44) 787 1044 E-mail [email protected]
FINLAND Abo
Eurotherm Finland Telephone (+358) 22506030 Fax (+358) 22503201 E-mail [email protected]
ITALY Como
Eurotherm S.r.l Telephone (+39 031) 975111 Fax (+39 031) 977512 E-mail [email protected]
FRANCE Lyon
Eurotherm Automation SA Telephone (+33 478) 664500 Fax (+33 478) 352490 E-mail [email protected]
KOREA Seoul
U.S.A Leesburg VA
Eurotherm Korea Limited Telephone (+82 31) 2738507 Fax (+82 31) 2738508 E-mail [email protected]
Eurotherm Inc. Telephone (+1 703) 443 0000 Fax (+1 703) 669 1300 E-mail [email protected] Web www.eurotherm.com ED54
GERMANY Limburg
Eurotherm Deutschland GmbH Telephone (+49 6431) 2980 Fax (+49 6431) 298119 E-mail [email protected]
E U ROT H E R M
EUROTHERM LIMITED Faraday Close, Durrington, Worthing, West Sussex, BN13 3PL Telephone: +44 (0)1903 268500 Facsimile: +44 (0)1903 265982 e-mail: [email protected] Website: http://www.eurotherm.co.uk
Specification subject to change without notice. Eurotherm Limited. Invensys, Eurotherm, the Eurotherm logo, Chessell, EurothermSuite, Mini8, EPower, Eycon, Eyris and Wonderware are trademarks of Invensys plc, its subsidiaries and affiliates. All other brands may be trademarks of their respective owners.
HA029722/1 (CN24697)