Programming outputs, General, Programming outputs -13 – Tyco F3200 User Manual

Page 115: 4 programming outputs

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Document No: LT0122

F3200 Installation & Programming Manual

Programming System Configuration

Issue 2.7

5 July 2001

Page 7-13

7.4 PROGRAMMING

OUTPUTS

7.4.1 GENERAL

The F3200 outputs (Ancillary Relays, MAF Brigade Relays, 8 Zone Module open collectors

and 8 Relay Module relays) may be programmed to operate on a logic equation of zone and

FIP status. Zone LEDs may also be controlled by an output logic equation. Output logic

equations may also be used to isolate, de-isolate or reset zones. The Ancillary Relays

(including Anc3 /Bells) and the Open Collector outputs each have a default logic equation

but the module relays do not. By default, Ancillary Relays and Bells operate on an alarm on

any zone mapped to operate that output. By default, open collector output n is active when

zone n is in alarm. The LEDs on the 16 zone LED display boards may be controlled by

output logic using a relay equation where the relay number is in the range 65 to 256.

The outputs which can be programmed are shown in the Output Logic Menu in Fig 7.1.1 and

described in Section 7.4.6.

The logic equation takes the form of:

Output = [operand] operator [operand] operator [operand] ...

E.g. RL1 = Z3A + Z4A means that Module relay number 1 will energise when zone 3 is in

alarm or zone 4 is in alarm (or both). Zone 3 alarm and zone 4 alarm are operands (inputs)

and the logic operator is OR (+).

Some examples of equations are shown in Section 7.4.4.

Output Logic

:

Number of "small" equations

289 maximum

Number of "()" per equation

14 maximum

Equation Size (note 1)

100 bytes max

Number of variables available

256

Number of network variables

128 per SID

Number of seconds timers available

64 (1-64)

Number of minutes timers available

8 (65-72)

Type of timer (see following)

Stretch/Pulse

Time range of timers

0-250 seconds/minutes

Error margin of seconds

0-1 sec plus

timers 1-64

O/P Logic Time

Error margin of minutes timers 65-72

0-1 Minute

Output Logic Processing Time

0-1 second

(refer to note 2 following)

1.

The maximum size of an equation is approximately 30-40 operands plus operators.

It is 100 token bytes, where most operands use 2 bytes, and operators use 1 byte.

2.

The Controller continually "updates" the status of the inputs to the output logic

equations, processes the equations, and updates the resultant outputs. The

processing time taken is dependent on the number and size of the equations.

A timer is started by a logic equation, and then operates the output via another logic

equation. There is a processing delay added to the timer delay.

For a system with only 10-20 small to medium sized equations, the processing delay

should be of the order of 100 msec, and an approximate 1 second timer can be used.

For a system with the maximum number of equations the processing time may delay

beyond the 1 second stated, so that a delay programmed as "1 second" would cause

a real delay (from input event to output options) in excess of 3 seconds.

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