Chapter 9. rs-232 communication, 1 introduction, 1 aquiring the putty application – AERCO BMK 6000 User Manual

Page 129: 2 logging on to a remote machine using putty, Chapter 9, Rs-232 communication

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Benchmark 6000 Boiler Installation, Operation & Maintenance Manual

CHAPTER 9 – RS-232 COMMUNICATION

OMM-0086_0D

AERCO International, Inc. • 100 Oritani Dr. • Blauvelt, NY 10913

Page 129 of 210

GF-133

Ph.: 800-526-0288

03/20/14

CHAPTER 9. RS-232 COMMUNICATION

9.1 INTRODUCTION

The RS-232 communication feature permits viewing or changing of Control Panel menu options
and also provides access to data logs showing Event Time Line, Fault and Sensor log displays.

NOTE

The information in this chapter does not apply when implementing BST.

The RS-232 port on the front panel of the C-More Control Box (Error! Reference source not
found.
) can be interfaced to a laptop computer or other suitable terminal using a RS-232
adapter cable. RS-232 communication can be accomplished using any “Dumb Terminal”
emulation, such as “PuTTY” which is not included with Microsoft Windows, but can be
downloaded for free on the internet. Source and instructions for using Putty are provided below.

9.1.1 Aquiring the PuTTY Application

Download the putty.exe program to your desktop from:

www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/download.html

You can use PuTTY to logon to remote computers as well as run a single command on a
remote server. PuTTY does not need to be installed, so just clicking the downloaded executable
will start it.

9.1.2 Logging on to a Remote Machine Using PuTTY

To use PuTTY to logon to a remote machine, bring up the PuTTY application by double-clicking its
icon. You will see the main window as shown in left image of

Figure 9-1

.

Figure 9-1: PuTTY GUI: Basic Serial Session (L) and Serial Options (R)

In Serial mode, text typed into the PuTTY window will be sent straight out of your computer's serial port,
and data received through that port will be displayed in the PuTTY window.

To create a Serial connection, click the radio button labeled Serial. The Serial line and Speed fields will
then be automatically filled in as shown in left image of Figure

9-1, but will allow you to specify the serial

line to use (if your computer has more than one) and what speed (baud rate) to use when transferring
data. For further configuration options (data bits, stop bits, parity, flow control), you can use the Serial

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