Midas
®
Gas Detector
10-10
10.2.3 Other Characteristics
WINK Command
The LonWorks
®
“wink” command causes the service
LED to energize for approximately six seconds.
LED Interpretation
All LED operation is inhibited for 35 seconds after
power-up. This is because the neuron is held in reset
until the internal ARM-7 microprocessor boots. If
the neuron is “unconfigured”, after 35 seconds the
yellow service LED will flash slowly. If the neuron is
“configured” the service LED will be dark.
The interface contains a second LED which can be
useful for debugging. This is red in color and only
visible when the lid is removed from the interface.
It is labeled D15 and is located immediately below
the black FT-X1 transformer on the PCB. D15 will
blink every second when the neuron is executing
code correctly. This will be “on” most of the time if
communication to the Midas
®
is successful. It will
be “off” most of the time if communications to the
Midas
®
is unsuccessful. Communications is certain
to be unsuccessful for 190 seconds after power-up
due to the Midas
®
boot time.
Caution
After commissioning, Echelon’s LonMaker
tool will put this device into the “offline”
state. In this mode, the Midas
®
interface
will not transmit over LonWorks
®
. To
correct this, it is necessary to click-right,
on the device, select “Manage” and click on
“Online”
Compatibility with old LonMaker
This device is observed to work incorrectly with
Echelon LonMaker for Windows version 3.00.66.
This is because it was created with NodeBuilder
version 3.1 and contains an XIF file in format version
4. The problem is manifested as network variables
having the wrong direction – outputs appear as
inputs. The problem can be corrected by replacing
a file in the network management tool with a new
version. This file is “C:\LonWorks\bin\XIF32Bin.
exe”. Echelon has granted permission for this file to
be copied freely. A copy of this file can be obtained
from Honeywell Analytics on request.
Summary of Contents for Midas
Page 7: ...Midas Gas Detector 1 1 1 Description ...
Page 9: ...Midas Gas Detector 2 1 2 Overview ...
Page 14: ...Midas Gas Detector 3 1 3 Default Configuration ...
Page 17: ...Midas Gas Detector 4 1 4 Installation ...
Page 41: ...Midas Gas Detector 5 1 5 Startup ...
Page 43: ...Midas Gas Detector 6 1 6 Operation ...
Page 53: ...Midas Gas Detector 7 1 7 Navigating Modes and Submenus ...
Page 74: ...Midas Gas Detector 8 1 8 Maintenance ...
Page 82: ...Midas Gas Detector 9 1 9 Pyrolyzer Module Options ...
Page 89: ...Midas Gas Detector 10 1 10 Optional LonWorks Interface Installation ...
Page 99: ...Midas Gas Detector 11 1 11 Troubleshooting and Fault Diagnosis ...
Page 102: ...Midas Gas Detector 12 1 12 REFLEX ...
Page 104: ...Midas Gas Detector 13 1 13 Internal Web Server ...
Page 106: ...Midas Gas Detector 13 3 Diagram 13 1 IPAddress setting in Windows XP ...
Page 129: ...Midas Gas Detector 14 1 14 Typical Installation Topologies ...
Page 132: ...Midas Gas Detector 15 1 15 Ordering Information ...
Page 136: ...Midas Gas Detector 16 1 16 Specifications ...
Page 139: ...Midas Gas Detector 17 1 17 Calibration and Bump Testing ...
Page 143: ...Midas Gas Detector A 1 A Modbus TCP Interface ...
Page 150: ...Midas Gas Detector B 1 B Gas Tables ...
Page 158: ...Midas Gas Detector C 1 C Warranty ...