Extron Electronics IPCP 505 User Guide User Manual

Page 61

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IPCP 505 • SIS Programming and Control

55

X3$

= Daylight saving time (DST) is a region-specific 1-hour

offset that begins in spring and ends in fall.

0 = off/ignore (default)

1 = USA on – DST begins on the second

Sunday of March at 2 AM and ends at 2 AM

on the first Sunday of November. For example,

time in California is GMT -8:00 from March to

November and GMT -7:00 from November to

March. However, DST should be turned off in

Hawaii, American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico,

the Virgin Islands, the eastern time zone portion

of the state of Indiana, and the state of Arizona

(excluding the Navajo Nation).

2 = Europe on – begins on the last Sunday in

March, ends on the last Sunday in October. DST

should be turned off for Iceland.

3 = Brazil on

X3%

= Event number: 0 - 99

This is valid only while events are running.

X3^

= Event buffer:

0 = receive

1 = user (absolute, unified)

2 = user (relative, data)

3 = NVRAM

X3&

= Event buffer offset: 0 - [max. buffer size]

X3*

= Event data buffer size (only the first letter is needed):

b = bit

B = byte (8 bits)

S = short (16 bits)

L = long (32 bits)

NOTE: This parameter is case sensitive.

X3(

= Event data to write

X4)

= Flex I/O mode:

0 = digital input

1 = digital output

2 = digital input with +5 VDC pull-up

3 = digital output with +5 VDC pull-up

4 = analog input

5 = analog input with +5 VDC pull-up

6 = digital input with adjusted thresholds
(requires

X5%

and

X5^

thresholds)

7 = digital input with adjusted thresholds with +5
VDC pull-up (requires

X5%

and

X5^

thresholds)

X4!

= Password to display on screen (response to

password query or set). When the unit

connects to a host device via RS-232, the
password (

X3#

), itself, is the response. When

the connection is via IP,

X4!

is 4 asterisks (****)

if a password has been assigned, or it is an

empty field ( ) if a password hasn’t been

assigned.

X4#

= Flex I/O port status:

0 = off

1 = on

n (0-4095), analog port voltage increments of

about 0.006 V per step (for analog in modes,

based on 12-bit A-to-D conversion over a range

of 0 to about 24 V)

X4$

= Number of bytes to read (1 - 27)

X4%

= E-mail event number or mailbox (1 - 64). The

response includes leading zeros.

X4^

= E-mail address of recipient

(such as [email protected]) for the person

to whom messages will be sent. The e-mail

address has a 31 character maximum.

X4&

= Name (for CR commands) or numeral (1 - 999, for

SM commands) of the e-mail file to be sent

NOTE: E-mail files must have a file extension of

.eml. The first line of the file is the subject, the

rest is the body of the e-mail.

X4(

= Default name: a combination of the model name

and the last 3 pairs of the MAC address of the

unit (for example, IPCP-505-03-69-B0)

X5)

= Redirection status:

0 = no redirection

1 - 16 = redirect serial port communication

from the specified port (1 = COM1, 2 =

COM2, 3 = COM3,... 8 = COM8; 9 = IR/

serial port 1,... 16 = IR/serial port 8) to allow a

serial pass-through mode (see

Serial pass-

through (redirect mode)

on page 32 in the

“Software-based Configuration and Control”

section)

X5@

= Security level of the connection:

0 = not logged in

11 = user

12 = administrator

The response includes leading zeros.

X5#

= Timeout period in tens of milliseconds for serial data

pass-through mode, after which event data can

be inserted into the transmit buffer and the serial

port is released to another source

(Default = 10 = 100 ms, range = 1 - 32767.) The

response includes leading zeros.

X5$

= ASCII digit(s) representing the numeric value of

the data element read from the event buffer

(Leading zeros are suppressed.)

X5%

= Upper signal transition threshold

(detection of a “1”) for digital inputs:

0-04095 (0-25.3 VDC)

328 = default ≈ 2 VDC

X5^

= Lower signal transition threshold

(detection of a “0”) for digital inputs:

0-04095 (0-25.3 VDC)

164 = default ≈ 1 VDC.

NOTE: The lower threshold (

X5^

) must be smaller

than the upper threshold (

X5%

).

X5&

= IR playback file number (0 to 99) (no extension). The

response includes leading zeros.

X5*

= IR playback function number (1 to 137). The

response includes leading zeros. IR function

numbers 0 and 127 or higher can return

information only.

0 = return all data

129 = manufacturer

130 = model

131 = class

132 = remote

133 = creation date

134 = comments

137 = user file name (a descriptive name the

user/installer gave the file)

X5(

= IR playback mode

0 = play once

1 = play continuously

The response includes leading zeros.

NOTE: Send the command again with mode = 0

to stop mode 1 playback.

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