Comtech EF Data LPOD-R User Manual

Page 122

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LPOD-R Outdoor Amplifier / Block Up Converter (BUC)

MN-LPODR

Optional Serial-based Remote Product Management

Revision 1

5–12

Parameter

Type

Command

(Instruction

Code and

Qualifier)

Arguments

for Command

or Response

to Query

Description of Arguments

(Note that all arguments are printable ASCII characters)

Response to

Command

(Target to

Controller)

Query

(Instruction

Code and

Qualifier)

Response to

Query

(Target to

Controller)

Concise

Maintenance

Status

N/A

95 bytes

Query only.

Returns the Maintenance status of the unit. This is the concise version of the RMS command, response is semicolon

delimited in the form aaa.a;bbb.b;ccc.c;ddd.d;eee.e;fff.f;ggg.g;hh.h;iii.i;jjj.j;kkk.k;lll.l;mmm.m; nnn.n;ooo.o;ppp.p; qqq.q;

rrr.r;sss.s;ttt.t;’cr’’lf’ where:

aaa.a = LINEV

bbb.b = LINEA

ccc.c = LNBVT

ddd.d = P13VT

eee.e = P10V1

fff.f = A10V1

ggg.g = A10V2

hhh.h = P7V8T

iii.i = P5V8T

jjj.j = P2V5T

kkk.k = P1V2T

lll.l = N5V8T

mmm.m = FAN voltage

nnn.n = FAN current

ooo.o = BUCVT

ppp.p = FWPWR

qqq.q = REFVT

rrr.r = LNBCS

sss.s = ATEMP

ttt.t = OTEMP

Note: Field values appear if the appropriate model/options are selected/installed. Otherwise, unused fields are padded

with X’s.

CMS=

CMS?

CMS=x….x

(See Description

of Arguments for

details)

Concise

Utility Status

N/A

15 bytes

Query only.

Returns the Maintenance status of the unit, response is semicolon delimited in the form aaaa;bbbbb;ccc; ’cr’’lf’ where:

aaaa = Remote Unit Address (unused)

bbbbb = Remote Baud Rate (unused)

ccc = Reference oscillator tuning voltage DAC value (unused)

Note: Unused fields are padded with X’s.

CUS=

CUS?

CUS=x….x

(See Description

of Arguments for

details)

Set RTC

(Real-Time-

Clock) Date

E

DAT=

6 bytes

Command or Query.

Sets or returns the date in the form mmddyy, where:

mm = month of the year, between 01 and 12

dd = day of the month, between 01 and 31

yy = year, between 00 and 96 (2000 to 2096)

Example (date = April 24, 2013):

<1/DAT=042413’cr’

>0001/DAT=’cr’’lf’

DAT=

DAT?

DAT*

DAT?

DAT=mmddyy

(Same format as

command

arguments)

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