background image

    

- 20 - 

 

B    

4th value of value sequence  

 

C   

Programmed to select specific data from  

 

 

 

a data string 

 

4 sequential Values  

 

1 value only 

 
The addressable commands of Modes 0-6 can display remote data on one or  more  Counters 
having  the  command  address  in  a  multi-point  configuration  or  a  single  Counter  having  the 
command address in a Point-to-point configuration. Modes 7 - 11 (B) do not use addressable 
commands,  but  values  only.  They  are  primarily  designed  for  Host  Counter  or  Scale  meter  to 
Slave  Counter  or  remote  display  applications  but  may  be  used  also  in  Host  Computer  to 
Remote Display Counter configurations. Since the Host Counter may be selected to transmit up 
to four sequential measurement values, Item 1, Item 2, Item 3 and Peak, (Scale meter transmits 
up to 3 values) each measurement cycle, Modes 8-11 provide the ability of the Remote Display 
to extract one of four sequential values and display it. 

Modes 0-5

 are normal counter modes that may be commanded as follows: 

1. 

H Command. 

H Command. 

H Command. 

H Command.  Overrides the normal display reading only.  

2.  

K Command.

K Command.

K Command.

K Command.  The value is not displayed, but is stored as Item 3 if Item 3 is not being 
used.  It  may  then  become  the  source,  if  selected,  for  the  Alarm  comparison  and  the 
Analog Output.  Item 3 is normally only used for the Batch and Arithmetic functions.  

3. 

L Command.

L Command.

L Command.

L Command.  Both 1 and 2.  

In  addition,  the  H,  K,  L  commands  may  or  may  not  include  a  coded  Alarm  character.  If 
included,  this  character  always  overrides  the  internal  Alarm  comparisons  and  determines  the 
alarm  indicators,  the  relay  operation  and  the  alarm  character  sent  with  the  serial  communi-
cations.  Readings continue to be made internally during Remote Display operation and may be 
received by a Host Computer, manipulated, and returned as remote data. When reset by a *1C4 
Command, the display returns to its internal readings, the Alarms to its internal comparisons, 
the  Analog  Output  to  zero  and  the  Item  3  value  to  zero.  A  signal  conditioner  board  must  be 
present in these modes to return to normal readings. If no signal conditioner board is present, 
any Mode setting from 0-5 automatically changes to Mode 6. 

Modes 6-11

 are used for remote display operation only. No normal readings are made. A signal 

conditioner board is optional, and if present, is ignored. When reset, the display shows “rESEt” 
until the first remote display data is received. 

Mode 6

 is an addressable remote display mode that uses the H, K, L commands. 

Mode 7

 is not addressable, and data representing a value to be displayed is received in a point-

to-point connection. In addition to being displayed, that value is put into Item 3, where it may 
be  selected  for  Alarm  comparisons  and/or  for  Analog  Output.  If  a  Coded  Alarm  character  is 
included, it overrides the internal alarm comparisons. 

Modes 8-11

 are able to extract one value of data from a sequence of values, and display that 

particular  value  only.  Using  this  mode,  multiple  slave  counters  connected  to  a  Host  Counter 

Summary of Contents for IPM490

Page 1: ...IPM490 IPM500 SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS MANUAL For Series 2 Digital Meters Custom ASCII protocol 10 Thomas Irvine CA 92618 USA Tel 949 465 09001 Fax 949 465 0905 Website www futek com...

Page 2: ...multipoint or multidrop communi cations with addressing of up to 31 devices on the same RS485 serial data line Digital panel meters counters and timers require a plug in option board for serial commun...

Page 3: ...fety information and instruction on how to open the case Signal wiring changes external to the case can be made safely while the units are under power 3 2 RS232 RS485 CONNECTION OF METERS COUNTERS TIM...

Page 4: ...and j installed RS485 and RS485 Modbus Boards Full Duplex Operation b e These bias jumpers should be installed on 1 and only 1 meter a d Installed on last meter in line with long cable runs Half Dupl...

Page 5: ...19200 baud __000U Output update rate 60 Hz 50 Hz 0 0 017 sec 0 020 sec 1 0 28 sec 0 34 sec 2 0 57 sec 0 68 sec 3 1 1 sec 1 4 sec 4 2 3 sec 2 7 sec 5 4 5 sec 5 4 sec 6 9 1 sec 10 9 sec 7 18 1 sec 21 8...

Page 6: ...end of each item 00000U Data sent digital panel meter only 0 Reading 1 Peak 2 Valley 3 Reading Peak 4 Reading Valley 5 Reading Peak Valley 00000U Data sent scale meter only 0 Net Gross 1 Net only 2 Gr...

Page 7: ...3 1 1 sec 1 4 sec 4 2 3 sec 2 7 sec 5 4 5 sec 5 4 sec 6 9 1 sec 10 9 sec 7 18 1 sec 21 8 sec 8 36 6 sec 43 5 sec 9 72 5 sec 97 sec Ser 2 Serial Setup 2 __0000U Line feed 0 No LF after CR 1 LF after CR...

Page 8: ...mode 0 All active items 1 Item 1 only 2 Item 2 only if active 3 Item 3 only if active 4 Peak only 5 Displayed item 6 Valley only 7 All active items Peak Ser 4 Serial Setup 4 ___000U Modbus ASCII gap...

Page 9: ...ive the measurement data may require a line feed character LF following the CR The line feed character LF may be selected in Ser 2 Adding a Coded Data Character to the Basic Format It is possible to a...

Page 10: ...st device should have a termination resistor installed It is necessary to set up each device on the bus with a different address from 1 to 31 To command a particular device its address is used in conj...

Page 11: ...accordingly Output Rate Data Output Rate Minimum Baud Rate Ser 1 Setting 50 Hz 60 Hz 1 Item Sent 2 Items Sent 3 Items Sent 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 021s 018 s 34 s 0 28 s 68 s 0 57 s 1 4 s 1 1 s 2 7 s 2 3...

Page 12: ...ive buffer is nearly full takes the RTS line low to halt data transmission When its receive buffer has emptied it takes the RTS line high to enable more data transmissions Some measurements could be m...

Page 13: ...ormat is 4 characters Example 5A1 After any command that causes a Meter Reset such as C0 F W X the Counter sends an R character after the Reset is complete and the Counter is ready to accept a new com...

Page 14: ...xamples below use a default address of 1 following the Substitute the desired address from the above table of Serial Comm Address Codes All command sequences shown must terminate with CR followed by a...

Page 15: ...e function 1CA Tare reset 1CB RESET FUNCTIONS COUNTER TIMER Cold reset 1C0 Reads NVMEM into RAM locations after RAM zeroed Function reset 1C1 Resets all total values and or peak value Latched alarms r...

Page 16: ...a continuous string of bytes consisting of 2 hex characters 0 9 A F per byte Included in the command are the total number of bytes to be transferred and the most significant address in RAM of the con...

Page 17: ...OR REMOTE DISPLAY OPERATION OF DPM OVERVIEW A DPM can serve as a remote display that responds to values sent via serial communications by a PC or by another DPM in a Master Slave configuration In one...

Page 18: ...M d Front panel pushbuttons RESET and MENU are simultaneously pushed to cause a Cold Reset of the DPM Notes After the Remote Display value is entered the DPM can be put back in the Continuous mode wit...

Page 19: ...Counter has 13 Display Modes 0 12 Modes 0 5 are normal measurement modes Modes 6 12 are dedicated to Remote Display without making any normal readings In any of the 13 modes remote display data may be...

Page 20: ...n the H K L commands may or may not include a coded Alarm character If included this character always overrides the internal Alarm comparisons and determines the alarm indicators the relay operation a...

Page 21: ...e setting for which there is no serial communication with the meter It is suggested to use CONFIG 6XXX to set the following parameters and then to use CONFIG CXXX for operation 1 START character set t...

Page 22: ...D START AND STOP CHARACTERS The meter recognizes an asterisk as the command recognition character In the counter another command recognition character may be chosen to make the meter compatible with a...

Page 23: ...button tares the meter 0 0 0 Not rate 0 0 1 Rate x 0 1 0 1 0 Rate x 1 0 1 1 Rate x 10 1 0 0 Rate x 100 1 0 1 Rate x 1000 1 1 0 Rate x 10 000 BF L Analog Setup Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 Analog output unfi...

Page 24: ...point programming 1 Alarm setup 1 Front panel DPM reset 1 Front panel Peak Alarm reset 1 View alarm setpoints 1 View Peak value Tare function 33 L Lockout1 0 unlocked 1 locked Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Menu...

Page 25: ...0 0 300 baud 0 0 1 600 baud 0 1 0 1200 baud 0 1 1 2400 baud 1 0 0 4800 baud 1 0 1 9600 baud 1 1 0 19200 baud 0 Send unfiltered value 1 Send filtered value 2F L Filter Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 Auto...

Page 26: ...1 0 1 Tare Reset 1 1 0 External Decimal Point 1 1 1 1 External Decimal Point 2 1 Coordinates of 2 points for Scale Offset 0 Scale and Offset direct parameters 0 Normal Format Ser Com Continuous mode 1...

Page 27: ...atch Al4 latch 0 0 Relay3 On when Al3 active Relay4 On when Al4 active 0 1 Relay3 Off when Al3 active Relay4 On when Al4 active 1 0 Relay3 On when Al3 active Relay4 Off when Al4 active 1 1 Relay3 Off...

Page 28: ...2 Off when Al2 active 00 U Serial Cnfg4 NG to review carefully Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Serial Protocol 0 0 No Parity 0 1 Odd Parity 0 0 Custom ASCII protocol 8 bits 0 1 Modbus RTU protocol 8 bits 1 0 Modb...

Page 29: ...3 72 71 70 6F 6E 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 0F 0E 0D 0C 0B Setup1 Deviation4 3 Deviation4 1 Deviation3 2 Setpoint4 3 Setpoint4 1 Setpoint3 2 Alarm Cnfg4 Deviation2 3 Deviation2 1 Deviation1 2 Configur...

Page 30: ...IX B COUNTER TIMER MEMORY ADDRESSES AND DATA DEFINITIONS 9 1 COUNTER TIMER 1 BYTE RAM MEMORY DATA L Lower memory U Upper memory Hex Address Item Name Bit Assignment 43 Resolution Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 M...

Page 31: ...Item 0 1 Item 1 1 0 Item 2 1 1 Item 3 Compare Setpoint 1 to 0 0 Filtered Item 0 1 Item 1 1 0 Item 2 1 1 Item 3 36 Lockout2 0 unlocked 1 locked Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 1 Change Item 1 CALib 1 Ser 1 Ser 2...

Page 32: ...dressable 0 1 1 1 Remote Display Single Value 1 0 0 0 Slave Display 1st data value of string 1 0 0 1 Slave Display 2nd data value of string 1 0 1 0 Slave Display 3rd data value of string 1 0 1 1 Slave...

Page 33: ...baud 0 1 0 1200 baud 0 1 1 2400 baud 1 0 0 4800 baud 1 0 1 9600 baud 1 1 0 19200 baud 0 Send unfiltered value 1 Send filtered value 30 Options Do not use This byte is determined by installed option b...

Page 34: ...1 1 Display item 2 Display item 3 0 Scale2 Offset2 entered directly 1 Scale2 Offset2 using Coordinates of 2 points 0 Scale1 Offset1 entered directly 1 Scale1 Offset1 using Coordinates of 2 points 0 Bl...

Page 35: ...ctive Al2 Hi Active 0 0 0 1 Al1 Lo Active Al2 Hi Active 0 0 1 0 Al1 Disabled Al2 Hi Active 0 1 0 0 Al1 Hi Active Al2 Lo Active 0 1 0 1 Al1 Lo Active Al2 Lo Active 0 1 1 0 Al1 Disabled Al2 Lo Active 1...

Page 36: ...s always Hysteresis1 Offset 1 Setpoint1 Values stored as sign MS bit magnitude all other bits fixed DP 6 Hex MS Hex Mid Hex LS Name A7 A1 A6 A0 A5 9F Scale2 Scale1 9 4 COUNTER TIMER NON VOLATILE MEMOR...

Page 37: ...tart Modbus Address Total A Byte 5 Total A Byte 3 Total A Byte 1 Total B Byte 5 Total B Byte 3 Total B Byte 1 Analog Type Cutoff Byte 1 System Decimal Point Resolution Slope Pulses Byte 1 Analog Outpu...

Page 38: ...ow Reading1 Byte 1 Low Input1 2 Setpoint1 Byte 3 Setpoint1 Byte 1 High Reading2 2 High Input2 Byte 3 High Input2 Byte 1 Low Reading2 Byte 2 Low Input2 Byte 3 Low Input2 Byte 1 High Reading1 Byte 2 Hig...

Page 39: ...40 Copyright 2001 2015 FUTEK Advanced Sensor Technology Rev 27 October 2015...

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