Excel 50/100/500/600/800
CONTROLLERS
HONEYWELL EXCEL 5000 OPEN SYSTEM
SOFTWARE DESCRIPTION
® U.S. Registered Trademark
EN2B-0092GE51 R0512
Copyright © 2012 Honeywell Inc. • All rights reserved
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600
CONTENTS
REVISION OVERVIEW....................................................................................................... 5
SYSTEM OVERVIEW ......................................................................................................... 6
DATAPOINTS ..................................................................................................................... 9
PHYSICAL DATAPOINTS .................................................................................................................................9
FLEXIBLE DATAPOINTS................................................................................................................................10
PSEUDO DATAPOINTS ..................................................................................................................................10
GLOBAL DATAPOINTS ..................................................................................................................................11
MAPPED DATAPOINTS (V2.04.XX OR HIGHER) ..........................................................................................12
ATTRIBUTES.................................................................................................................... 13
ACCESS LEVEL..............................................................................................................................................13
ACKNOWLEDGE ALARM (V2.04.XX OR HIGHER) .......................................................................................13
ACTIVE STATE (PRIOR TO V2.04.X) .............................................................................................................14
ACTIVE STATE (EXCEL 800) .........................................................................................................................14
ALARM DELAY................................................................................................................................................15
ALARM SUPPRESSION..................................................................................................................................15
ALARM STATUS (PRIOR TO V2.04.X)...........................................................................................................15
ALARM STATUS (V2.04.XX OR HIGHER)......................................................................................................16
ALARM TYPE ..................................................................................................................................................16
ALARM DEFINITION .......................................................................................................................................16
CYCLE COUNT................................................................................................................................................18
DELAY TIME SWITCHING UP ........................................................................................................................18
DELAY TIME SWITCHING DOWN..................................................................................................................18
DESCRIPTORS................................................................................................................................................19
ENGINEERING UNIT.......................................................................................................................................19
FEEDBACK DELAY.........................................................................................................................................19
HIGH/LOW ALARM/WARNING LIMITS ..........................................................................................................19
HOURS RUN....................................................................................................................................................20
HOURS RUN LOG...........................................................................................................................................20
HOURS SINCE SERVICED .............................................................................................................................20
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HYSTERESIS................................................................................................................................................... 21
Alarm Hysteresis..................................................................................... 21
Trend Hysteresis ..................................................................................... 22
Broadcast Hysteresis .............................................................................. 23
Intrinsic Hysteresis for Analog Input Signals........................................... 23
INPUT/OUTPUT STATUS TEXT (PRIOR TO V2.04.XX)................................................................................. 24
INPUT/OUTPUT STATUS TEXT (V2.04.XX OR HIGHER).............................................................................. 24
INTERVAL COUNT.......................................................................................................................................... 24
INTERVAL LIMIT............................................................................................................................................. 25
I/O CHARACTERISTIC.................................................................................................................................... 25
PULL-UP RESISTOR HANDLING................................................................................................................... 26
LAST CHANGE ............................................................................................................................................... 26
LED MODE (XF823X, XFL823X, AND XFX830X MODULES)........................................................................ 27
MAINTENANCE ALARM................................................................................................................................. 27
MANUAL VALUE............................................................................................................................................. 27
NETWORK VARIABLE (V2.04.XX OR HIGHER)............................................................................................ 28
NORMALLY OPEN/NORMALLY CLOSED (V2.04.XX OR HIGHER)............................................................. 28
MOTOR RUN TIME.......................................................................................................................................... 29
OFF PHASE..................................................................................................................................................... 29
OPERATING MODE ........................................................................................................................................ 29
OUTPUT TYPE ................................................................................................................................................ 31
Subtype................................................................................................... 31
POINT ALARMS.............................................................................................................................................. 31
PULSE DURATION ......................................................................................................................................... 32
SAFETY POSITION (XFX822X, XFX824X, AND XFX830X MODULES) ........................................................ 32
SCALING FACTOR ......................................................................................................................................... 32
SENSOR OFFSET........................................................................................................................................... 33
SUPPRESS POINT.......................................................................................................................................... 33
SWITCHING DOWN ........................................................................................................................................ 33
SWITCH-ON COUNTER.................................................................................................................................. 34
TECHNICAL ADDRESS .................................................................................................................................. 34
TREND LOGGING........................................................................................................................................... 34
Value Hysteresis ..................................................................................... 35
Trend Cycle (V2.03.x) ............................................................................. 35
USER ADDRESS............................................................................................................................................. 36
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
VALUE .............................................................................................................................................................36
WRITE PROTECTION .....................................................................................................................................37
LIST OF DATAPOINT ATTRIBUTES ..............................................................................................................38
TIME PROGRAMS............................................................................................................ 41
STRUCTURE ...................................................................................................................................................41
INDIVIDUAL TIME PROGRAMS .....................................................................................................................41
Daily Program..........................................................................................41
Weekly Program......................................................................................42
Annual Program.......................................................................................42
Special Day List.......................................................................................43
The "TODAY" Function............................................................................43
GENERATING A TIME PROGRAM.................................................................................................................43
ALARM HANDLING.......................................................................................................... 45
POINT ALARMS ..............................................................................................................................................45
SYSTEM ALARMS ..........................................................................................................................................46
System Alarms Suppression (V. 2.04.xx or higher).................................50
USER PROGRAM ALARMS............................................................................................................................51
DATA STORAGE.............................................................................................................................................51
Alarms Sent across the System Bus .......................................................51
TEST MODE (V2.03.X) ..................................................................................................... 53
COMMUNICATION ........................................................................................................... 53
SYSTEM BUS ..................................................................................................................................................53
Access.....................................................................................................54
Bus Initialization ......................................................................................54
Bus Communication ................................................................................54
I/O Runtime Synchronization...................................................................54
Initialization of Distributed I/O Modules ...................................................55
New Bus Devices ....................................................................................55
Network-Wide Controller Time Synchronization......................................55
Point Refreshing......................................................................................56
PC COMMUNICATION ....................................................................................................................................56
EXCEL IRC ......................................................................................................................................................56
REMOTE COMMUNICATION..........................................................................................................................56
REMOTE TRENDING (DIAL-UP).....................................................................................................................58
General....................................................................................................58
Controller Firmware 2.03.xx and Higher..................................................58
Controller Firmware 2.04.xx and Higher..................................................58
Excel 800.................................................................................................59
MODEMFAQ ....................................................................................................................................................59
MISCELLEANOUS ........................................................................................................... 60
CUSTOMIZE WINDOWS DEFAULT REGIONAL AND LANGUAGE SETTINGS...........................................60
INDEX .............................................................................................................................. 83
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
REVISION OVERVIEW
The following pages have been changed from the previous issue of this document:
page
change
33
Section “SENSOR OFFSET” added
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
SYSTEM OVERVIEW
General
Excel 50/500/800 controllers support both LONWORKS communication and the
Honeywell proprietary C-Bus communication. All LONWORKS-related information is
described in the LONWORKS Mechanism document (EN0B-0270GE51).
Excel 50/100/500/600/800 is a control and monitoring system specially designed for
use in buildings. These Excel controllers use the latest Direct Digital Control (DDC)
technology. Excel 50/500/800 controllers are also capable of communicating on an
open Echelon® LONWORKS® network. Excel 50/100/500/600/800 controllers are
particularly well-suited to controlling buildings such as schools, hotels, offices, and
hospitals. Excel 50/100 controllers differ from Excel 500/600/800 controllers in
having a fixed input/output configuration. Excel 50 controllers have a smaller fixed
input/output configuration, and are designed for smaller buildings such as
restaurants, shops, banks, and offices.
Excel 50/100/500/600/800 functions are:
•
•
•
•
•
Heating control
Air conditioning control
Energy management
Energy optimization
Other building management functionality
Software
The Excel 50/100/500/600/800 system includes a comprehensive software package
specially designed to meet the requirements of application engineers. It comprises
the following:
•
•
•
•
Datapoint description
Time program
Alarm handling
Password protection
The software package comes with all the files listed. The menu-driven format allows
quick and easy operation.
Firmware version number
All information appearing in this Software Description is valid for firmware versions
V1.3.xx and earlier. All information, functions, and attributes valid for newer
firmware versions (V1.5.xx or higher) are marked by the corresponding version
version numbers that they support.
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
OVERVIEW
Fig. 1. Controllers and their supported firmware versions
Excel 50 firmware compatibility
Please always make sure that your firmware and the bootstrap loader match; if in
doubt, consult Software Release Bulletin(s). Special care must be taken in
particular in the case of the combinations of firmware and bootstrap loader with
XD50B-xxx modules as set forth in Error! Reference source not found..
Table 1. Firmware / bootstrap loader compatibility with XD50B-xxx modules
firmware ≤ 2.06.07
bootstrap loader ≤ 1.01.07 NO*
firmware ≥ 2.06.08
OK
OK
bootstrap loader ≥ 1.01.08 OK
*Problems may occur when LONWORKS bus is in use.
Table 2. Firmware / bootstrap loader compatibility with XD50-xxx modules
firmware ≤ 2.06.07
bootstrap loader ≤ 1.01.07 OK
firmware ≥ 2.06.08
OK
OK
bootstrap loader ≥ 1.01.08 OK
*Problems may occur when LONWORKS bus is in use.
Datapoint description
Time programs
Datapoints are the basis of the Excel 50/100/500/600/800 system. Datapoints
contain system-specific information such as values, status, limit values, and default
settings. The user has easy access to datapoints and the information they contain.
The user can recall and modify information in the datapoints.
Whenever you want, you can use time programs to enter the setpoint or status for
any datapoint. The following time programs are available:
•
•
Daily programs
Weekly programs
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OVERVIEW
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
•
•
•
Annual programs
The "TODAY" function
Special day list
Daily programs are used to create a weekly program. The annual program is
created automatically by multiplying the weekly program and then incorporating
additional daily programs. The "TODAY" function enables you to have a direct
influence on the switching program. This function enables you to allocate a setpoint
or status to the selected datapoints for a defined time period. This action does not
depend on the current daily program.
Alarm handling
The alarm handling facility offers system security. Alarm signals can, for example,
alert the operator to maintenance work that is due. All alarms that occur are stored
in data files and reported immediately. If your system configuration allows, you can
also list alarms on a printer or transmit alarms to higher-level front-ends. There are
two kinds of alarm: Critical and Non-critical. Critical alarms have priority over non-
critical alarms. System alarms, caused by a fault in a controller, are always critical
alarms.
To distinguish between alarm types, you can generate your own alarm messages or
select appropriate messages already in the system.
The following events all generate alarm messages:
•
•
•
•
Exceeding limit values
Overdue maintenance work
Totalizer readings
Digital datapoint changes of state
Application program
Passwords
You can use the Honeywell CARE engineering tool to create application programs
for your system. A particular advantage offered by Honeywell CARE is the ability to
create a fully functional control program without having to be familiar with the
programming language. CARE stands for Computer Aided Regulation Engineering.
Your control system is also protected by passwords. This ensures that only
authorized persons have access to the system data. There are four operator levels,
each protected by its own password.
•
•
Operator level 1:
Operator level 2:
Read only; the operator can display information about
setpoints, switching points, and operating hours.
Read and make limited changes; the operator can
display system information and modify certain preset
values.
•
•
Operator level 3:
Operator level 4:
Read and make changes; system information can be
displayed and modified.
Programming.
Password protection prevents unauthorized access system information and ensures
permanent, secure system operation.
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
DATAPOINTS
An Excel 50/100/500/600/800 system can have the following number of datapoints:
•
•
•
•
Excel 50:
22 physical (onboard I/Os) plus up to 46 physical LON I/Os
36 physical (onboard I/Os)
128 physical I/Os, extendable via LONWORKS I/Os
128 physical I/Os
Excel 100:
Excel 500:
Excel 600:
Furthermore, Excel 50/100/500/600 support an additional 256 pseudo datapoints.
Excel 800: 381 datapoints (random mix of physical and pseudo datapoints)
A datapoint has different attributes according to its type. Attributes are displayed
and modified on the XI581 (not with XCL5010, Excel 100C), XI582, and the PC-
based XL-Online operator interfaces or on the Excel 50 MMI. Attributes contain
information about the given datapoint. This information could be:
•
•
•
•
Input limits values
Operating status
Current temperature
Elapsed run time
The following sections provide more-detailed information about the different kinds of
datapoints and datapoint attributes and explain which attributes are assigned to
which datapoints.
Physical Datapoints
Physical datapoints are inputs and outputs attached to hardware devices like
sensors and actuators.
Fig. 2. Physical datapoint symbols
The following are examples of physical datapoints
Analog inputs
Analog outputs
NTC, PT 1000, PT 3000, BALCO Sensors (PT 3000/BALCO not with Excel 100C),
standard 0 (2)...10 V and 0 (4)...20 mA input, to connect e.g. outside air
temperature sensors.
Outputs with a continuous 0...10 V output signal for controlling continuous actuators
(Excel 100C supplies up to 20 mA on the analog outputs).
Digital inputs
Inputs for processing voltage-free signals (switches, contacts).
Digital outputs (not Excel 100C)
Outputs for driving three-position actuators, for example, a damper motor; two
position devices, for example, a circulation pump; 0...10 V and pulsed outputs
Totalizer inputs
Digital inputs for processing pulsed signals up to 20 Hz (depending on Distributed
I/O module specifications), for example, metered energy consumption.
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DATAPOINTS
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
Flexible Datapoints
Flexible datapoints allow the control of more than one physical output with one
datapoint. There are three subordinate types of flexible datapoints:
•
•
•
Pulse 2
Multi-stage
Feedback.
Pulse 2 flexible datapoint
A pulse 2 datapoint allows to pulse two digital outputs (e.g. relays). When activated
(e.g. set to “on”), Pulse 2 triggers one of the digital outputs, and when deactivated,
Pulse 2 triggers the other digital output.
Pulse 2 “on”
Relay 1
Pulse 2 “off”
Relay 2
Fig. 3. Pulse 2 flexible datapoint switching
Multistage flexible datapoint
Feedback flexible datapoint
Multistage flexible datapoints allow to switch up to six physical digital outputs via
one datapoint. A typical example would be a multi-stage electric heater or a multi-
stage fan. A multistage flexible datapoint provides up to six editable stage texts,
e.g., stage 1, stage 2, stage 3, etc, to be edited in CARE.
Feedback flexible datapoints, also called “DO feedback DI” combine up to three
pairs of digital outputs/digital inputs to form up to three-stage switching with
feedback. The digital inputs of each pair act as the feedback point. If the digital
input does not feedback the actual equipment status within a predefined time “Off
Phase”, then the software will switch down this point type until a "non-alarm" state is
reached. In extreme cases, the point may be switched to the off position. See also
“Off Phase”.
Increased support (V2.04.xx or higher) Excel 500 controllers now support up to 60 flexible datapoints. In case of Feedback
flexible points, the maximum number is 128.
Previous firmware versions supported only up to 20 flexible datapoints.
Pseudo Datapoints
Excel 50/100/500/600 support 256 pseudo datapoints, while Excel 800 supports
381 datapoints (consisting of a random mix of physical and pseudo datapoints)
Pseudo datapoints are values (intermediate results and parameters) computed
while the application program is running. In contrast to physical datapoints, pseudo
datapoints are not directly connected to hardware devices.
Access via the user address
During system operation, you may need to access these values. To simplify this
process, you can include pseudo datapoints in the datapoint list, where you can
access them directly via their user addresses. Like physical datapoints, pseudo
datapoints, too, can have different attributes; for example, they can specify a
manual value, set minimum and maximum values, or log trends.
The following are types of pseudo datapoints:
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DATA POINTS
•
•
•
•
Pseudo analog points
Pseudo digital points
Pseudo totalizer inputs
Pseudo point multistage
Pseudo analog points
Pseudo analog points are software points containing an analog value in the user
program. A pseudo analog point could, for example, contain a flow temperature
setpoint calculated from the room setpoint and the outside air temperature via the
heating curve.
Pseudo digital points
Pseudo digital points are software points containing a digital value in the user
program.
For example, logical AND operation.
The AND operation provides a logical 1 output when all input conditions are also
logical 1. Otherwise the output is a logical 0. If the user program contains such an
AND operation on different input conditions, then the output could be available as a
pseudo digital datapoint.
Pseudo totalizer inputs
Pseudo point multistage
Pseudo totalizer inputs are digital software points from the user program, where a
totalizer counter input is recorded
.
Pseudo point multistage datapoints are identical to flexible datapoint of the type
"multistage" except that they allow for 16 stages (including the “off stage“) and the
attribute "Status Text" allows for 16 status texts to be attached. The attribute "Tech-
nical Address" is not required.
Global Datapoints
If your control and monitoring system contains more than one controller, the con-
trollers communicate with one another via the system bus. Any given controller can
thus both receive (read) datapoints from other controllers and transmit datapoints to
other controllers. Such datapoints are referred to as global datapoints.
NOTE: The term “global” as used here encompasses more than just those points
explicitly labeled as “global” in the CARE engineering tool.
Global datapoints which a controller receives (reads) from other controllers are
referred to as local global datapoints, and global datapoints which a controller
transmits to other controllers are referred to as remote global datapoints.
During CARE engineering, the program engineer must take care that he does not
exceed the maximum allowed 256 global datapoints (remote and local) per
controller.
SYSTEM BUS
C
LON
Fig. 4. Global datapoints are available to all controllers on the system bus
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DATAPOINTS
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
Mapped Datapoints (V2.04.xx or higher)
With firmware version V2.04.xx or higher, those Excel 50/500 controllers which
feature free programmability on LONWORKS (those that contain the 3120E5 Neuron
chip, i.e. date code 0044 or higher) may have I/O devices connected via the
LONWORKS network. LONWORKS network variables (or individual fields of structured
network variables) can be mapped to the attribute "Value" of physical datapoints
(AI/DI/AO/DO). Pseudo analog, pseudo digital, and pseudo multistage points are
also supported for NV mapping.
See Excel 50/500 LONWORKS Mechanisms Interface Description, EN0B-0270GE51,
for more information on LONWORKS network variables and datapoint mapping.
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
ATTRIBUTES
Each datapoint type has associated with it various parameters which allow the user
to set, e.g., the user address, the level of access protection, alarm behavior, and
other options. These parameters are called attributes. Each attribute performs a
specific function related to the datapoint. A complete list of datapoint types and their
every datapoint type.
Point refreshing (V1.5.x)
Four attributes ("Value", "Manual Value", "Operating Mode", and "Alarm Status") will
be simultaneously refreshed to an XL-Online operator interface.
NOTE:
A complete list of attributes associated with the various datapoint types
can be found in the section "List of Datapoint Attributes" on page 38.
Access Level
Four levels of protection
The attribute "Access Level" protects datapoints against unauthorized changes on
the basis of the password level needed to modify a datapoint. "Access Level"
attributes between "1" and "4" are assigned to a point. These attributes correspond
to the four password levels found in the XI581 (not with XCL5010, Excel 100C),
XI582, and XL-Online operator interfaces and the Excel 50 MMI:
•
•
•
•
Operator level 1:
Operator level 2:
Operator level 3:
Operator level 4:
Read only.
Read and make limited changes.
Read and make changes.
Programming.
For example, setting the "Access Level" attribute for the datapoint with the user
address "room temp floor 1" to "2" means that all attributes for this datapoint can
now only be edited or modified at password level 2 or higher.
Acknowledge Alarm (V2.04.xx or higher)
The attribute "Acknowledge Alarm" allows a controller to acknowledge an alarm for
a flexible datapoint of the type "feedback" without changing the operating mode.
The controller takes the point out of alarm as soon as a rising edge is detected on
the input of the WIA statement writing to the attribute "Acknowledge Alarm".
Fig. 5. The "Acknowledge Alarm" attribute for WIA statement
This attribute is a virtual attribute and can be accessed only by a WIA statement in
CARE. It is not part of the datapoint description and therefore cannot be displayed
on an MMI or building supervisor.
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ATTRIBUTES
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
Active State (prior to V2.04.x)
The attribute "Active State" defines when a digital input/output is active.
NOTE:
The "Active State" attribute does not reflect the current condition of a
digital datapoint.
NOTE:
This is not applicable to digital inputs in applications designed for con-
trollers using V2.04.xx firmware or higher. In such applications, this
attribute is fixed at 1, and the new attribute "Normally Open/Normally
Closed" (NO/NC) is active (see section "Normally Open/Normally Closed
(V2.04.xx or higher)" on page 28 for more details).
The following values are possible:
•
•
0 = digital input/output is active when a "logical 0 signal" is present
1 = digital input/output is active when a "logical 1 signal" is present
Table 3 indicates the active state for various conditions of the XF523 and XFL523
modules.
Table 3. Active state for the digital input of XF523 and XFL523 modules
digital input
contact status
open
closed
CARE definition
(NC/NO system diagram)
NC
NO
NC
NO
definition - in XL-Online DP-
Editor attribute "Active State"
(change Active/Passive State
text)
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
CARE interpretation
(control table)
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
OFF/
ON/
OFF/
ON/
ON/
OFF/
ON/
OFF/
display at operator interface
(status text)
trouble: operating trouble: operating operating trouble: operating trouble:
alarm RTN* alarm RTN* RTN* alarm RTN* alarm
* RTN = Return To Normal
NOTE:
XFL523 Module is applicable only for V2.0.xx software.
Active State (Excel 800)
The attribute "Active State" defines when a digital input/output is active. 1 means,
that a digital input/output is active when a "logical 1 signal" is present
NOTE:
NOTE:
"Active State" = 0 is not allowed/possible.
The "Active State" attribute does not reflect the current condition of a
digital datapoint.
Table 4. Active State for the digital input of XF823 and XFL823 modules
digital input
contact status
open
closed
CARE definition
(NC/NO system diagram)
NC
NO
NC
NO
definition - in XL-Online DP-
Editor attribute "Active State"
(change Active/Passive State
text)
1
1
1
1
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ATTRIBUTES
digital input
CARE interpretation
(control table)
1
0
0
1
OFF/
OFF/
ON/
ON/
display at operator interface
(status text)
trouble:
alarm
trouble:
alarm
operating
RTN*
operating
RTN*
* RTN = Return To Normal
Alarm Delay
Delaying alarm outputs
The alarm delay time (in seconds) is entered in the attribute "Alarm Delay". The
alarm delay time determines how long an alarm condition must exist before an
alarm is generated. Entering an alarm delay time of 10 seconds means that the limit
value must be exceeded for at least 10 seconds before this datapoint generates an
alarm. If the limit value lasts for only 7 second, then no alarm occurs.
Alarm Suppression
The attribute “Suppress Alarm” establishes whether or not alarm messages from
the following alarm attributes should be suppressed:
•
•
•
•
•
Operational status
Min/Max. limit
Maintenance alarm
Interval counter
Alarm Status
The following entries are possible:
•
•
Off
On
Alarms not suppressed
Alarms suppressed
Digital input example
In addition to a variety of other attributes, a digital input also has the "Operating
Mode", "Alarm Status", and "Maintenance Alarm" attributes. If alarm suppression is
activated for this datapoint, then no message is displayed during an operating mode
change-over, or when changing into the alarm condition, or when reaching the
maintenance alarm.
Suppression of system
alarms (V2.04.xx or higher)
The controller will not issue a system alarm when the alarm’s system alarm text
starts with an @ character.
Alarm Status (prior to V2.04.x)
Alarm monitoring
In the case of a digital input or a pseudo digital point, the attribute "Alarm Status"
specifies whether or not alarm monitoring is required.
The following entries are possible:
•
•
Yes: Alarm monitoring is required
No: Alarm monitoring is not required
When alarm monitoring is required, the alarm message occurs when the digital
point changes from the active state to the passive state (alarm reached). An
additional message is generated (alarm going) when the digital point returns to the
active state
Alarm
Alarm
reached
ending
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ATTRIBUTES
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
DI in
“Active State”
DI in
“Passive State”
Fig. 6. Alarm status messaging
NOTE:
The active state and passive state are defined in the "Active State"
datapoint attribute.
Alarm Status (V2.04.xx or higher)
Alarm monitoring
In the case of a digital input or a pseudo digital point, the attribute "Alarm Status"
specifies whether or not alarm monitoring is required.
The following entries are possible:
•
•
Yes: Alarm monitoring is required
No: Alarm monitoring is not required
When alarm monitoring is required, the alarm message occurs depending on the
physical contact status and on the logical status as defined in the online attribute
“Normally Open/Normally Closed”.
Alarm Type
The attributes listed in Table 5 are capable not only of generating alarms, but also
of writing them to the internal alarm memory and sending them to the PC front-end
or to the modem module (when connected).
Table 5. Alarm attributes
attribute
Operating Mode
Min. Limit
always critical
optional critical or non-critical
X
X
X
X
Max. Limit
Maintenance
Alarm
Interval Counter
Alarm Status
X
X
Changing over the attribute "Operating Mode" always results in a critical alarm, but
the attribute "Alarm Type" offers a choice for the alarm attributes "Min. Limit", "Max.
Limit", "Maintenance Alarm", "Totalizer", and "Alarm Status" whether an alarm is
classified as critical or non-critical. Distinguishing between critical and non-critical
alarms is significant for the subsequent reporting of the alarms to the PC front-end
or to the modem module. Compared to non-critical alarms, critical alarms are given
priority on the bus when several alarms are in the alarm queue. When the type of
alarm for a datapoint has been decided, e.g. "critical" alarm type, it refers to all
alarm attributes for this datapoint.
Alarm Definition
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In the datapoint description, the alarms can be influenced using the functions
described below (see also Table 6 on page 17).
Alarm type
For each datapoint in the datapoint description, the user can determine whether the
signals generated are to be treated as critical or non-critical alarm.
Alarm delay
An alarm signal can be delayed by entering an alarm delay time. An alarm signal
will be generated only if an alarm continues uninterrupted during the alarm delay
time.
Suppress alarm
If an alarm signal is not desired from a particular datapoint, this can be fixed in the
datapoint description. Thus, all the alarm signals relevant to the particular datapoint
and the "Operating Mode" alarm types are suppressed.
Fig. 7. Alarm condition depending on point value and Suppress Alarm status
Fig. 7 shows an example of a changing point value that rises above and falls below
the limit Max 2. If Suppress Alarm is not active, then the alarm condition switches
between normal to alarm, according to the limit Max 2. If Suppress Alarm is active,
then the alarm condition remains normal unless Suppress Alarm is switched off
before the point value falls below the limit Max 2. Regardless of the setting of the
Alarm suppression flag, an alarm is entered into the controller's history buffer and is
also available in the EBI alarm report.
Point alarm
It is possible to view all datapoints at the operator interfaces for which the limit
value (analog point) or the alarm status (digital point) is currently exceeded.
Driven by a menu, the user address and the accompanying alarm text are displayed
on the XI581 (not with XCL5010, Excel 100C) or XI582 operator interfaces or Excel
50 MMI.
On the XL-Online operator interface, a datapoint within the framework of the
datapoint description can be seen in all four password levels. If a current alarm is
present for the point in question, the attribute “Point in Alarm” produces the display
“Yes”, otherwise “No”.
Within the framework of the datapoint description, it is possible, under the attribute
“Alarm text”, to enter an alarm text of up to 18 characters in addition to the prepro-
grammed text. There are 256 alarm texts in total.
Table 6 presents a summary of various alarm types and attributes.
Table 6. Alarm summary
enter alarm
delay time
alarm
suppression alarm
point in no. of prepro-
supplementary
text
alarm type/attributes alarm status
grammed texts
Limit Values
selection in DPD*
selection in DPD*
selection in DPD*
selection in DPD*
always critical
possible
possible
possible
possible
possible
possible
-
X
X
-
8
possible
Alarm Status
Maintenance Alarm
Totalizer
possible
2
possible
-
-
-
-
1
-
-
-
-
-
1
Operating Mode
System Alarms
-
2
always critical
-
approx. 110
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enter alarm
delay time
alarm
suppression alarm
point in no. of prepro-
supplementary
text
alarm type/attributes alarm status
grammed texts
user program reports
always non-critical
-
-
-
-
-
*DPD = datapoint description
NOTE:
A point is still seen as “in alarm” even when alarm suppression is
enabled.
Cycle Count
The attribute "Cycle Count" contains the value indicating the number of transitions
to the active state (see "Active State (prior to V2.04.x)" on page 14).
Delay Time Switching Up
This attribute is used in conjunction with flexible points of the type "feedback". It
defines the delay time between switching upwards from one stage to another. The
delay time affects every stage. The delay time also takes effect when switching, e.g.
from manual value 0 to 2. In this case, it is switched from stage 0 to stage 1, then to
stage 2 with the delay time between the switching processes.
Range:
Default value:
Resolution:
0 to 255s
10s
1s
Fig. 8. Delay time switching up
Delay Time Switching Down
This attribute is used in conjunction with flexible points of the type "feedback". It
defines the delay time between switching downwards from one stage to another.
The delay time affects every stage.
Range:
Default value:
Resolution:
0 to 255s
10s
1s
The feedback delay time starts to count after termination of delay time switching
up/delay time switching down.
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Fig. 9. Delay time switching down
Descriptors
Informative descriptors
A controller contains up to 128 physical datapoints and up to 256 pseudo
datapoints. The Excel 100C provides 36 physical datapoints. An individual user
address can be assigned to each of these 384 datapoints. 255 plain-language
descriptors can be created with a maximum of 32 characters each. These
descriptors are then assigned to datapoints in the datapoint description via the
attribute "Descriptor". Descriptors complete the information concealed behind the
user address. They can contain, for instance, a reference to a section of a building.
The following list is an example of the relationship between user addresses and
descriptors:
User Address
Descriptor
Room temp floor 1
Room temp floor 3
Room temp floor 10
Room temp corridor
Flow temp floor 1
Lights floor 1
Heating circuit, West wing
Heating circuit, West wing
Heating circuit, East
Heating circuit, East
Heating circuit, West wing
Building section V
Lights corridor
Building section V
Engineering Unit
The attribute "Engineering Unit" contains a list for selecting different engineering
units for both analog datapoints (physical and pseudo), totalizer inputs (physical
and pseudo), and digital datapoints.
If, for instance, the external temperature is measured by an analog datapoint, the
engineering unit of this datapoint must be set to "°C" or "°F". If the electrical load is
detected by a totalizer input, the engineering unit must be set to "kWh" for kilowatt-
hours.
Feedback Delay
The attribute "Feedback Delay" determines the time delay between, e.g. when a
pump switched on (and detected) and when this status is made available to a
program.
High/Low Alarm/Warning Limits
Specifying limit values
In the case of analog inputs (e.g. inputs for sensing room temperature) and pseudo
analog points (for instance, internally computed datapoints for the heating flow
setpoint), two minimum and two maximum monitored limit values may be entered.
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The following four limit value attributes exist:
•
•
•
•
Low Warning Limit
Low Alarm Limit
High Warning Limit
High Alarm Limit
Exceeding the limit values generates an alarm.
Example:
Monitoring supply air temperature limits (see Fig. 10).
Fig. 10. Monitoring supply air temperature limits
Hours Run
Display of elapsed hours
The attribute "Hours Run" returns the total number of hours during which any of the
stages is in the ON position. However, if more than one stage is in the ON position,
the "Hours Run" count is not added up, but rather counted only once. Display of the
NOTE:
If the attribute "Active State" of the point is 0, then the OFF position is
also counted.
Hours Run Log
Hours run log
An hours run log can be carried out for digital datapoints (physical and pseudo) and
for flexible datapoints, e.g. logging the hours run by a heating circuit pump. This
requires the decision: hours run log = Yes/No to be made in the attribute "Hours
Run Log". The accumulated hours run are displayed in the attribute “Hours Run”.
Hours run are logged with a sample rate of 1 minute.
Hours Since Serviced
Display hours run since last maintenance The elapsed hours run since the last maintenance work are totaled in the attribute
"Last Maintained". If, for example, the maintenance alarm is 500 hours, and a pump
has already been running for 120 hours, then the entry in the attribute “Last
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maintained” will be 120 hours. By comparing the attributes "Maintenance Alarm"
and "Last Maintained", the user can see that the next maintenance period will be
after an additional 380 hours have elapsed. If the maintenance alarm is reached,
and the maintenance work has been performed, the counter can be reset manually.
The counter can also be reset manually before reaching the maintenance alarm if,
for instance, the maintenance has been performed earlier. If the counter is not
reset, on expiration of the maintenance alarm, e.g. after 500 hours, the elapsed
hours run continues to be incremented, and an additional alarm will be generated
when 1000 hours running has been reached.
Hysteresis
The following hysteresis attributes allow the user to control the triggering conditions
based on a changing parameter under which actions are taken, such as alarm
signaling, writing values to buffers, etc. A hysteresis can be used, e.g., to prevent
an alarm from being generated unless the value being monitored changes by more
than a given value. This eliminates unnecessary alarm generation and reduces bus
communication traffic.
Alarm Hysteresis
Alarm hysteresis (V1.5.x)
In the case of analog inputs and pseudo analog points, the attribute "Alarm
Hysteresis" is available. It provides variable hysteresis that can be implemented,
e.g., in order to reduce the cost of communicating with a remote front-end. The
hysteresis value is set from an MMI and can have a value anywhere in the range
defined by [10-a to (Max1 - Min1)] where “a” is the number of decimal places set in
the attribute "Engineering Unit". The minimum value for the hysteresis is 10-a.
Alarms are generated under the following conditions:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Max 1 Alarm (generated if MAX 1 is exceeded)
Max 2 Alarm (generated if MAX 2 is exceeded)
Max 2 Normal (generated if the value falls below MAX 2-Hysteresis)
Max 1 Normal (generated if the value falls below MAX 1-Hysteresis)
Min 1 Alarm (generated if the value falls below MIN 1)
Min 2 Alarm (generated if the value falls below MIN 2)
Min 2 Normal (generated if the value MIN 2+Hysteresis is exceeded)
Min 1 Normal (generated if the value MIN 1+Hysteresis is exceeded)
The CARE default value (i.e. 1% of actual value and no less than 0.2) for this
attribute is 0. Access to "Alarm Hysteresis" is also possible via RIA/WIA.
NOTE:
NOTE:
The number of decimal places can be changed only using CARE.
Attempting to enter a hysteresis value that is less than the allowed
minimum will result in the attribute being assigned the minimum value as
defined above.
Example:
In this example, the number of decimal places in the attribute "Engineering Unit"
as a function of time that increases and decreases over the range from Max 1 to
Min 1.
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Fig. 11. Example of alarm hysteresis
The “normal” and “alarm” states as defined by the attribute "Alarm Hysteresis" are
the determined using the appropriate values in the formula given above:
Range = [10-2 to (Max1 -Min1)] = [0.01 to 2]
Table 7 lists the resulting alarm conditions for the chosen hysteresis value of 0.05:
Table 7. Alarm conditions for alarm hysteresis
limit
normal to alarm condition alarm to normal condition
Max 1
Max 2
Min 1
Min 2
4.00
5.00
2.00
0.5
4.00 - 0.05 = 3.95
5.00 - 0.05 = 4.95
2.00 + 0.05 = 2.05
0.5 + 0.05 = 0.55
Trend Hysteresis
Trend hysteresis (V1.5.x)
The attribute "Trend Hysteresis" is available for the trend functions “Local Trend
Data” and “Trend Setup Data”. The attribute "Trend Hysteresis" prevents new
values from being written to the trend buffer unless the datapoint value changes
(positively or negatively) at more than the specified trend hysteresis. The minimum
hysteresis value is 10-a (a = number of decimal places set in the attribute
"Engineering Unit"). The CARE default value (i.e. 1% of actual value and no less
than 0.2) for this attribute is 0. Access to "Trend Hysteresis" is also possible via
RIA/WIA.
This value can be edited from an operator interface (XI581 (not with XCL5010,
Excel 100C), XI582, XL-Online, or Excel 50 MMI) via the B port (XC5010C/XC6010)
or the serial port, the system bus (XBS 1.3.3 and higher and XFI 1.6.1 and higher)
and CARE RIA/WIA statements. The password level for this attribute is determined
by the attribute "Access" (default initialization value in CARE is 0).
Fig. 12. Example of the attribute "Trend Hysteresis"
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Broadcast Hysteresis
Broadcast hysteresis (V1.5.x)
The attribute "Broadcast Hysteresis" is available for the datapoint type "Global
Analog". The attribute "Broadcast Hysteresis" prevents new values from being
broadcast to other controllers unless the datapoint value changes (positively or
negatively) at least by the amount specified in the attribute "Broadcast Hysteresis".
The minimum hysteresis value is 10-a (a = number of decimal places set in the
attribute "Engineering Unit"), but not smaller than 0.2 (see also the example in
value and no less than 0.2) for this attribute is 0. Access to the attribute "Alarm
Hysteresis" is also possible via RIA/WIA.
This value can be edited from an operator interface (XI581 [not with XCL5010,
Excel 100C], XI582, XL-Online, and Excel 50 MMI) via the B port (XC5010C /
XC6010) or the serial port (Excel 100C, Excel 500), the system bus (XBS 1.3.3 and
higher and XFI 1.6.1 and higher), and CARE RIA/WIA statements. The password
level for this attribute is determined by the "Access" attribute (default initialization
value in CARE is 0). If several global points (remote points) are assigned to the
same physical point, the lowest global point "Broadcast Hysteresis" value of all
assigned global points is used.
Intrinsic Hysteresis for Analog Input Signals
A minimum default hysteresis of 37 mV (24 - 1 bit) for 0 to 10 V input signals is
implemented. Due to the nonlinearity of NTC sensors, the hysteresis varies over the
temperature range, whereas it is approximately constant for PT 100/1000/3000 and
Balco 500 sensors. Approximations of hysteresis depending on the sensor and
temperature range are summarized below.
NOTE
The Intrinsic Hysteresis for analog input signals is not a user-
programmable attribute, but rather an intrinsic hysteresis of the Excel
50/100/500/600/800.
NTC 20k Ω
Hysteresis varies nonlinearly over the entire temperature range and depending on
whether the upper boundary (MAX LIMIT) or the lower boundary (MIN LIMIT) is
(intermediate values can be interpolated):
Table 8. Intrinsic hysteresis values for various temperature ranges
average hysteresis
MIN LIMIT
average hysteresis
MAX LIMIT
temperature range
-40 °C (-40 °F)
-30 °C (-22 °F)
0 °C (32 °F)
2.2 K (4.0 °F)
1.3 K (2.3 °F)
0.4 K (0.7 °F)
0.5 K (0.9 °F)
1.5 K (2.7 °F)
3.0 K (5.4 °F)
8.5 K (15.3 °F)
2.5 K (4.5 °F)
1.3 K (2.3 °F)
0.4 K (0.7 °F)
0.4 K (0.7 °F)
1.5 K (2.7 °F)
2.7 K (4.9 °F)
7.2 K (13.0 °F)
40 °C(104 °F)
80 °C (40 °F)
100 °C (212 °F)
130 °C (266 °F)
PT 100 (not with Excel 100C)
PT 1000/1
Hysteresis increases approx. linearly with temperature.
Average hysteresis:
Hyst. At -45 °C (-49 °F):
Hyst. At 145 °C (293 °F):
0.75 K (1.35 °F)
0.7 K (1.3 °F)
0.8 K (1.4 °F)
Hysteresis increases approx. linearly with temperature.
Average hysteresis:
Hyst. At -45 °C (-49 °F):
Hyst. At 145 °C (293 °F):
0.8 K (1.4 °F)
0.7 K (1.3 °F)
0.9 K (1.6 °F)
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Hysteresis increases approx. linearly with temperature.
PT 1000/2
Average hysteresis:
Hyst. At 0 °C (32 °F):
Hyst. At 400 °C (752 °F):
1.6 K (2.9 °F)
1.3 K (2.3 °F)
2.0 K (3.6 °F)
PT 3000 (not with Excel 100C)
Balco 500 (not with Excel 100C)
Hysteresis increases approx. linearly with temperature.
Average hysteresis:
Hyst. At -45 °C (-49 °F):
Hyst. At 145 °C (293 °F):
0.8 K (1.4 °F)
0.7 K (1.3 °F)
1.0 K (1.8 °F)
Hysteresis decreases approx. linearly with temperature.
Average hysteresis:
Hyst. At -50 °C (-49 °F):
Hyst. At 150 °C (293 °F):
0.9 K (1.6 °F)
1.0 K (1.8 °F)
0.7 K (1.3 °F)
Input/Output Status Text (prior to V2.04.xx)
2 status texts per digital data output
Two status texts can be assigned to each digital datapoint status. Status texts give
an overview of the condition of the sensor or switching device connected to the
datapoint.
The associated status text appears in the attribute "Value" depending on the actual
point status.
For instance, the status texts could be as follows for a point connected to a digital
output:
Digital point status 0:
Digital point status 1:
Status Text:
Status Text:
"Passive”
"Active”
Table 9. Relationships between I/O Status, Active State, and Status Text
Input/Output Status
Active State (prior to V.2.04.x)
Status Text
active
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
passive
passive
active
Status Text with flexible datapoints
The attribute "Status Text" allows you to describe the value sent to the controller by
the digital output Pulse 1 and by flexible datapoints. In the case of flexible
datapoints of the type "feedback", the status text refers to the value of the feedback
flexible datapoint and not to the required value.
Input/Output Status Text (V2.04.xx or higher)
With firmware 2.04.xx or higher, the relationship between physical output status and
logical output status as defined by the attribute "Normally Open/Normally Closed"
determines the display of the equivalent status text. See section "Normally
Interval Count
Interval count
The attribute "Interval Count" shows the totalizer value (pulse x scaling factor)
accumulated since the last reset.
Displaying the interval count
The attribute "Interval Count" can be viewed on the XI581, XI582, and Excel 50 MMI
operating units as well as via the XL-Online Operating Software and building
Supervisor front-ends like XBS, EBI and XFI. Based on mathematical rounding, it is
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possible that not every value is displayed when high frequency values with high
scaling factors are received.
Resetting the interval count
Resetting takes place either manually via an operating unit, by reaching the
“Interval Limit” value, or by reaching the “totalized” constant, which is 2 to the power
of 31.
Totalizer overflow
When the “Interval Limit” or the “totalized” constant is reached, a “Totalizer
Overflow” system alarm is created.
Interval Limit
The attribute “Interval Limit” is that value of the "Interval Count" attribute which,
when reached, will generate a “Totalizer Overflow” alarm. The highest possible
value for the attribute "Interval Count" is 99,999,999.
Electrical energy example
A message should be generated after the “consumption” of 5 MWh of electrical
power. The input in the attribute “Interval Limit” must therefore be 5 MWh.
Once the interval count reaches its reporting level of 5 MWh, then a report is
generated, the interval count is reset to “Zero”, and a new totalizing period is
started.
I/O Characteristic
The attribute "I/O Characteristic" enables the user to display special input and out-
permit, for instance, the adaptation of Excel 50/100/500/600/800 to many different
sensor types. Ten individual input/output characteristics are available per
Excel 50/100/500/600/800 controller.
Each special characteristic is assigned a name that can be recalled from the
attribute "I/O Characteristic". Thus, the desired characteristic can be assigned to
the selected datapoint.
Fig. 13. Example of a special output characteristic
Creation of characteristics is carried out at programming level. Up to a maximum of
four reference points can be specified per characteristic. Up to ten different
characteristics can be defined for each controller.
For XFL and XFC I/O modules, user-defined characteristics are supported from
CARE 5.0 and controller firmware 2.06.05 onwards.
CAUTION
Regarding I/O characteristic, the behavior of controllers with OS < 2.06.05
engineered using CARE 4 differs significantly from controllers with OS
2.06.05 and higher engineered using CARE 7 and higher. See also section
“Controller OS 2.06 usage and functionality in CARE 4 and CARE – XL500
7.01.02” in Excel CARE – User Guide (EN2B-0182GE51).
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Pull-Up Resistor Handling
Table 10. Pull-up resistor handling
pull-up
load-free voltage
input
circuit
diagram
for voltage
input or
high-
impedance
input
with NTC
or low-
impedance
input
de-
configured
device
configured activated
by DIP
voltage hardware activated
by @ (8)
by plug-in for DI on AI
switch
XF830A
XFU830A
XF821A
XFL821A
NO
optional
YES
case 1
0 V
switch-off
YES
YES
NO
10 V
8.89 V
XF521,
XF521A
fixed
NO
case 2
case 1
8.89 V
0 V
XF526
XFL521,
XFL521A/B
YES(3
config.(6
NO
optional
YES
NO
switch-off
Smart I/O
XFC
5 V
YES(4
NO
YES(7
YES
case 3
case 2
case 1
5 V
XL20
fixed
8.89 V
0 V
optional
switch-off
XL50
YES(2
YES(5
XL100,
XL100A
10 V
8.89 V
fixed
YES
case 2
case 1
8.89 V
0 V
NO
XL100B
YES
configurable
YES(5
optional
switch-off
XL100C
YES(1
NO
(1 controller firmware ≥ 2.03;
(2 controller firmware ≥ 2.02;
(3 controller firmware ≥ 2.03 (local/shared mode), CARE ≥ 5.00.01 (open mode);
(4 CARE ≥ 5.00.01;
(5 controller firmware < 2.04;
(6 controller firmware < 2.04 (local/shared mode), CARE ≥ 5.01.xx (open mode);
(7 CARE ≥ 5.01.xx;
(8 Assigning "@" as first digit of input characteristic name (e.g.: "@0-10V") in the CARE text editor disables the pull-up resistor.
When using the XF821A/XFL821A for current inputs, be sure to assign "@" as the first digit of the input characteristic name.
Case 1
Case 2
Case 3
10 V
10 V
5 V
24.9 k
Ω
24.9 k
Ω
18.2 k
Ω
(pull-up)
(pull-up)
(pull-up)
A
A
A
150 kΩ
150 k
Ω
100 kΩ
D
D
D
49.9 kΩ
49.9 kΩ
100 kΩ
Fig. 14. Input circuit diagram
Last Change
In the attribute "Last Change", the last change of state of a digital input/output is
stored with the time and date.
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In this way it is possible to determine the last switch-on point of a fan, pump, etc.
connected via a digital output.
In the case of analog inputs and pseudo analog points, the last time an alarm limit
occurred is stored.
LED Mode (XF823x, XFL823x, and XFx830x modules)
The XF823x Panel Bus Binary Input Module, the XFL823x Lonworks Bus Binary
Input Module, and the XF830x / XFU830x modules support the “LED Mode”
attribute, which can be set in the CARE datapoint editor. The following attribute
options are provided:
•
•
“Alarm”
“Status”
LEDs will be red/green (red = alarm state, not XF830x /
XFU830x modules)
LEDs will be yellow/off (yellow = active state)
NOTE:
XF830x / XFU830x modules do not support the Alarm option. Hence, do
not assign this attribute to datapoints allocated to one of these modules.
NOTE:
When the XFL823x LONWORKS Bus Binary Input Module is used with
non-Excel 800 controllers, the LED mode can only be set in the
LONWORKS NV settings in CARE, and not in the CARE datapoint editor.
Maintenance Alarm
Specifying a maintenance alarm
In the case of those datapoints for which an hours run log has been activated, a
time entry can occur within the attribute "Maintenance Alarm" to indicate after how
many operational hours an alarm message should be generated. Entering “Zero”
results in no alarm message.
Example:
Maintenance should be carried out every 500 hours on the heating circuit pump
controlled via a digital output. To achieve this, a time interval duration of 500 hours
is entered in the attribute "Maintenance Alarm" for this datapoint. At the same time,
activation of the hours run log must also take place in the attribute “Hours Run log”
for this datapoint. An alarm message now occurs after 500 hours, to bring to the
operator’s attention the necessary pump maintenance.
Manual Value
When the attribute "Operating Mode" is set to "Manual", the operator can enter a
manual value or state, and the application program will work with this manual value
or state until the operating mode is set back to “Automatic”.
Fig. 15. Example of a sensor input
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manually is processed in the application program.
NOTE:
“Value” and “Manual Value” are online attributes, relevant only during controller
operation via MMI or XL-Online. Furthermore, “Manual Value” is an internal online
attribute only, not visible to the operator! The operator will see only the online
attribute “value”, which can be edited only if the attribute "Operating Mode" is set to
"Manual". See also section "Operating Mode" on page 29.
Network Variable (V2.04.xx or higher)
Datapoints which are mapped to network variables on the LONWORKS network have
an attribute named "Network Variable" containing the network variable index (0-
4095) and the network variable name which allows this information to be displayed
on an MMI.
Normally Open/Normally Closed (V2.04.xx or higher)
The attribute "Normally Open/Normally Closed" defines the relationship between
the input/output signal of a digital datapoint and its logical status. This attribute is
also applicable when the digital point is the basic point of a flexible datapoint.
NOTE:
The attribute "Active State" is fixed at 1 and is no longer relevant for
applications designed for this controller firmware version. Applications
designed for an older controller version will still work with this firmware
though, and in that case the attribute "Active State" is still active.
and the logical status for digital inputs and digital outputs, respectively.
Table 11. The attribute " Normally Open/Normally Closed " – Digital Inputs
input signal
Low (<2.5 V)
High (>5 V)
Low (<2.5 V)
High (>5 V)
NO/NC attribute
logical status
text displayed
passive
active
N.O.
N.O.
N.C.
N.C.
0
1
1
0
active
passive
Table 12. The attribute " Normally Open/Normally Closed " – Digital Outputs
output signal
Low (<2.5 V)
High (>5 V)
Low (<2.5 V)
High (>5 V)
NO/NC attribute
logical status
text displayed
passive
active
N.O.
N.O.
N.C.
N.C.
0
1
1
0
active
passive
In the open LON mode, the "Normally Open/Normally Closed" functionality is
supported from CARE 5.0 and controller firmware 2.06.05 onwards.
CAUTION
Regarding “Normally Open/Normally Closed,” the behavior of controllers
with OS < 2.06.05 engineered using CARE 4 differs significantly from
controllers with OS 2.06.05 and higher engineered using CARE 7 and
higher. See also section “Controller OS 2.06 usage and functionality in
CARE 4 and CARE – XL500 7.01.02” in Excel CARE – User Guide (EN2B-
0182GE51).
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ATTRIBUTES
Motor Run Time
Time to open / time to close
For actuators controlled via a three-position output, two values (time to open / time
to close) can be entered in the attribute “Motor Run Time”. This attribute defines the
time required by the actuator to change from the “Open” to the “Closed” state, and
vice versa.
If no value is entered for the “Time to Closed” motor run time, then the “Time to
Open” motor run time is assumed automatically. In the case of the motor run-on
time, when reversing directions, 1% of the “Time to Open” motor run time is added
to the calculated time.
The three-position output relay energizes when the calculated run time reaches
500 ms. The stated run time always amounts to 500 ms or a multiple thereof. A
calculated run time of, for instance, 1215 ms results in an actual run time of
1000 ms.
CAUTION
Regarding motor run time, the behavior of controllers with OS < 2.06.05
engineered using CARE 4 differs significantly from controllers with OS
2.06.05 and higher engineered using CARE 7 and higher. See also section
“Controller OS 2.06 usage and functionality in CARE 4 and CARE – XL500
7.01.02” in Excel CARE – User Guide (EN2B-0182GE51).
Off Phase
Fig. 16. Off phase
The attribute "Off Phase" is used in conjunction with flexible datapoints of the type
"feedback". It defines the duration of the OFF phase on switching down. It is of
relevance only if the attribute “Switching Down” is set to 0, i.e. if OFF phases are
selected on switching down.
•
•
•
Range:
Default value: 10s
Resolution: 1s
0 to 255s
The OFF phase has to be defined for devices with large inertia, such as fans.
Operating Mode
The attribute "Operating Mode" enables the user to switch between manual and
automatic operation.
Automatic
Under automatic operation, the controller processes the values at the inputs, for
instance from temperature sensors. For outputs, under automatic operation, the
status shown by the user/time switch program is adopted, e.g., "Heating circuit
pump off".
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Manual
During manual operation, the controller uses the manual values, for example, "flow
temperature setpoint = 60°C". Outputs adopt the preselected condition, for
example, "Heating circuit pump on".
Automatic/Manual Alarm
For automatic operation, the attribute "Operating Mode" contains the inputs "Auto"
and "Manual". Each switch from automatic to manual operation and back again
generates a critical alarm.
Remote (V2.0.x) (not Excel 100C)
If manual override controls are present on either the Analog Output (XFL522) or
Digital Output (XFL524) modules connected via a LONWORKS network, then the
status of these controls (automatic/manual override) is stored in the attribute
"Operating Mode". If the manual override controls are set to automatic, the attribute
"Operating Mode" can be set to either automatic or manual. If the manual override
controls are set to manual override, then the attribute "Operating Mode" can be in
the remote mode, only.
Mode", and both the attributes "Value" and "Manual Value" for input and output
functions.
Fig. 17. Control flow for input functions
Fig. 18. Control flow for output functions
NOTE:
The attribute "Remote" is available only if Manual Override modules are
installed on the Distributed I/O output modules. This attribute is therefore
not applicable to Excel 50/100/600.
Analog Points
Table 13 indicates the analog point signals depending on the attribute "Operating
Mode":
Table 13. Analog point signals
auto operating
mode
manual operating
mode
remote**
operating mode
automatic value*
manual value
remote value
resulting value
output signal
20%
don't care
don't care
20%
don’t care
10%
don't care
don't care
50%
don't care
10%
50%
2 V
1 V
5 V
*
Automatic value is either the physical point value (inputs) or the value from the
program (outputs)
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ATTRIBUTES
** Output only (V2.0.x)
Digital points
Table 14 indicates the digital point signals depending on the attribute "Operating
Mode":
Table 14. Digital point signals
auto operating
mode
manual operating
mode
remote**
operating mode
automatic value*
manual Value
remote value
ON
don’t care
n/a
don’t care
OFF
don’t care
don’t care
ON
n/a
resulting Value
output signal
ON
OFF
ON
HIGH
LOW
HIGH
*Automatic value is either the physical point value (inputs) of the value from the
program (outputs)
**Output only (V2.0.x)
Alarming
Firmware prior to V.2.04.x
Firmware V.2.04.x
The change from the 'automatic' to the 'manual' mode will create a point alarm if
other alarm conditions are set accordingly.
With controller firmware prior to V.2.04.xx, the alarm will report the status of the
operating mode as it was before the change.
Beginning with controller firmware V.2.04.x, the alarm will report the status of the
operating mode as it is after the change.
Output Type
Three-position outputs are digital outputs. From an operational viewpoint, they are
assigned the same datapoint description as analog outputs, i.e. a three-position
output possesses attributes similar to those of an analog output.
Analog or 3-position output
The attribute "Output Type" determines whether the analog output datapoint
description should be assigned to an analog output or to a three-position output.
The following inputs are possible:
•
•
•
Continuous
The analog output datapoint description is assigned to
an analog output.
The analog output datapoint description is assigned to
a three-position output.
Three-position
Remote three-position Output to the Excel 100 MCE 3 and MCD 3 output
modules.
Subtype
The attribute "Subtype" is used in conjunction with digital outputs and flexible
datapoints. It determines whether the digital output is of the non-pulsed type.
Point Alarms
The attribute "Point in Alarm" refers to alarm messages from the alarm attributes
"Min. Limit", "Max. Limit", and "Alarm Status".
The attribute "Point in Alarm" indicates whether or not those datapoints using these
attributes are currently in alarm.
The following entries are possible:
•
•
Yes = the chosen datapoint is in alarm
No = the chosen datapoint is not in alarm
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•
As soon as an alarm occurs (e.g. through exceeding a limit value), the attribute
"Point in Alarm" is set to "Yes". The attribute is immediately set back to "No"
when the limit value returns to normal.
Pulse Duration
The attribute "Pulse Duration" is used for the pulsed subtypes of the digital output
(i.e. "Pulse 1") and flexible datapoints of the type "Pulse 2". It defines the duration
between coming and going edge of a pulsed signal. The values for this attribute can
vary from 1 to 255 seconds; the resolution is 1 second. The default value is 1
second.
NOTE:
After a power failure or disconnection of the controller, the “Pulse 1” and
“Pulse 2” outputs will resume their last output pulse behavior before the
outage.
Safety Position (XFx822x, XFx824x, and XFx830x modules)
The analog output modules XF822x/XFL822x/XFLR822x, the relay output modules
XFL824x/XFL824x/XFLR824x and the mixed I/O modules XF830x/XFU830x support
the “Safety Position” attribute, which can be set in the CARE datapoint editor.
The modules will put the outputs into the safety position as soon as communication
with the Excel 800 CPU is lost.
The XF822x/XF824x modules detect this lost communication once no more polls
are received from the Excel 800 CPU for more than one second.
The XFL822x/XFL824x and XF830x/XFU830x modules detect this lost
communication once no more polls are received from the Excel 800 CPU within the
heartbeat time of the module.
XF822x/XFL822x –”The following attribute options are provided:
•
•
•
•
“0%” equals 0 Vdc or 2 Vdc (0…11 Vdc or 2…11 Vdc characteristic)
“50%” equals 5 Vdc or 6 Vdc (0…11 Vdc or 2…11 Vdc characteristic)
“100%” equals 10 Vdc
“Remain in last position” (this is the default setting).
XF824x/XFL824x and XF830x/XFU830x –”The following attribute options are
provided:
•
•
•
“Off (logical)”
“On (logical)”
“Remain in last position” (this is the default setting).
NOTE:
When the XFL822x/XFLR822x and XFL824x/XFLR824x modules are
used with non-Excel 800 controllers, the Safety Position can only be set
in the LONWORKS NV settings in CARE, and not in the CARE datapoint
editor.
Scaling Factor
Input pulses from utility meters (gas, water, heat, etc.) can be connected to the
totalizer inputs using the attribute "Scaling Factor". The pulses supplied by the
meters are multiplied by the scaling factor and are then ready to be read as pure
consumption values. The "Scaling Factor" thus always indicates the value of each
pulse received. The adjustable range is 0.0 through 100,000,000.0,
The number of decimal places depends on the selected engineering unit.
Example:
A heat meter supplies 10 pulses per kWh "consumed". Accordingly, the scaling
factor (= value of a pulse) is 0.1 kWh/pulse.
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Pseudo totalizers:
ATTRIBUTES
In the event that you have selected the datapoint type "pseudo totalizer inputs," you
must set the attribute "Scaling Factor" to "1"; otherwise, the number of pseudo
totalizer inputs will not be counted.
Sensor Offset
The attribute “Sensor Offset” is designed for the compensation of the resistance of
the sensor wiring for low-resistance sensors, like Pt 100, Pt 1000, Balco 500.
The voltage offset due to the wire resistance is approximately constant, the attribute
“Sensor Offset” functionality has therefore been designed to compensate constant
voltage offsets at the analog input.
Function principle
The principle is that the attribute “Sensor Offset” can be defined at a selected tem-
perature, e.g., 1 °C at 20 °C. The Excel controller processes this temperature offset
into a voltage offset, e.g., -0.11 V, and applies this very voltage offset for correcting
(offsetting) all voltages measured.
In order to display a temperature, the controller processes the resulting voltage
back into a temperature. This principle and the processing (including mathematical
rounding) from “°C” into “volt” and back into “°C” leads to slightly inconstant offsets
across the temperature range.
Example for a selected “Sensor Offset” of 1°C:
Measured Temperature
20°C
Corrected Temperature
19°C
-10°C
-8,4°C
For XFL and XFC I/O modules, "Sensor Offset" functionality is supported from
CARE 5.0 and controller firmware 2.06.05 onwards.
CAUTION
Regarding sensor offset, the behavior of controllers with OS < 2.06.05
engineered using CARE 4 differs significantly from controllers with OS
2.06.05 and higher engineered using CARE 7 and higher.
For example, for XL50 internal AI and XL500 internal AI (XF521/527
modules), the sensor offset is subtracted from the datapoint value.
For XL50 and XL800 controllers using XF821 modules, the sensor offset is
added to the datapoint value.
See also section “Sensor Offset Handling” in Excel CARE – User Guide
(EN2B-0182GE51).
Suppress Point
The attribute "Suppress Point" means that datapoints are no longer processed and
checked. As a result, no alarms are generated for suppressed points. Where you
have flexible datapoints, this attribute acts upon all basic types of physical
datapoints.
IMPORTANT
Never suppress a datapoint used via your application program. This
causes system failure.
Switching Down
The attribute "Switching Down" is used in conjunction with flexible datapoints of the
type "feedback". On switching down from one stage to another, it determines
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whether the off-phase is selected between the single stages, e.g., for ventilators, or
whether the next lower stage is selected directly, e.g., for electrical air heaters.
Switching down
0
1
Switching down behavior
3, OFF, 2, OFF, 1, OFF
3, 2, 1
Switch-On Counter
Record switching frequency
The attribute "Switch-On Counter" gives information about the switching frequency
of digital datapoints. The change of state from 0 to 1 is counted in each case.
Technical Address
Technical address
An Excel 500/600 controller consists of 16 Distributed input/output modules with a
total of 128 physical inputs and outputs. The Excel 100C provides 36 physical I/Os
(see Excel 100C Installation Instructions, form no. EN1R-0144GE51, for technical
addresses). Where a system requires additional inputs and outputs, several con-
trollers can be connected together. Controllers then communicate with one another
via the system bus.
Each physical datapoint within the system must have an address that identifies the
point uniquely. The technical address contains information about the controller
number, the I/O module number, and also the input/output number in this module
020401
Input/output number
Module number (set via addressswitch on each I/O module)
Controller number (set via MMI)
Fig. 19. Example of a technical address
Thus, the address 02.04.01 uniquely identifies the first input/output in the fourth
module of the second controller in your system.
NOTE:
The Excel 50 controller does not have I/O modules, but its technical
addresses follow the same pattern, with module numbers referring to
internal I/O boards. For details, see the Excel 50 Installation Instructions.
Mapped points (V2.04.xx or higher)
Datapoints that are mapped only to LONWORKS network variables are not assigned
to any I/O board. In this case, the board number (module number) of the technical
address is zero.
Trend Logging
Up to 20 datapoints (all datapoint types, except for global datapoints) in each
controller can be trend logged simultaneously. This means changes in the input or
output value can be stored with the user address, value (or status), date, and time
for 20 different datapoints. This is achieved by selecting the attribute "Trend
Logging" to YES in the datapoint description.
status text, e.g., "On", is displayed in addition to the user address, date, and time.
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ATTRIBUTES
Fig. 20. Trend log display (analog input)
Fig. 21. Trend log display (digital input)
200 values can be written to the local trend log memory. If the memory is full, the
earliest data is overwritten with new data. The 200 most up-to-date values are
always available in the memory.
If several datapoints are selected for the trend log, those datapoints whose value or
status changes more frequently will create a larger number of values to be logged.
Each change in status is logged for digital points. For analog points, there are two
different types of trending: value hysteresis and time-based. The datapoint
attributes for each of these types of trending are described below.
Value Hysteresis
When value hysteresis trending is selected (i.e. when the attribute "Trend Cycle" is
set to 0), a new value is written to the memory when the point changes more than
the given hysteresis compared to the previous value.
The default hysteresis value is 1% of the actual value, but not less than 0.2 (see
also section "Trend Hysteresis" on page 22).
Example 1:
The current measured value is 20°C
1 % of 20°C = 0.2°C
A new trend log value is stored at either 20.2°C or 19.8°C
Example 2:
The current measured value is 9°C
A new trend log value is stored at either 9.2°C or 8.8°C
The trend can be displayed as text and as a graphic. The graphic display offers the
following features:
•
•
•
•
Simultaneous display of an analog and a digital datapoint
Auto-scaling of the time and the value axis
Scrolling the time axis
Manual re-scaling of the time axis (ZOOM/UNZOOM function) with possible
resolutions:
- minute display
- hourly display
- daily display
- weekly display
•
Quick change between graphic and text display
Trend Cycle (V2.03.x)
With V2.03.xx firmware, it is possible to perform time-based trending for physical
and pseudo analog points for both local and remote trending. A trend value is
stored in the trend buffer at the end of a fixed interval given by the datapoint
attribute "Trend Cycle", as shown in Fig. 22:
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VALUE
TREND
VALUE
TREND
VALUE
TREND
VALUE
TREND CYCLE
TREND CYCLE
TIME
Fig. 22. The attribute "Trend Cycle"
The value of the attribute "Trend Cycle" is given in minutes, and the valid range is 0
to 1440 min (=24 hours). A trend cycle value of 0 will disable time-based trending
(this is the default) and value-hysteresis trending is used if the trend log attribute is
set. The value for the attribute "Trend Cycle" can be changed via the MMI, C-Bus,
or modem connection to EBI/SymmetrE, and also via CARE RIA/WIA statements.
NOTE
If the attribute "Trend Cycle" is set to anything other than 0, trending will
be time-based and the attribute "Trend Hysteresis" will be ignored.
User Address
The attribute "User Address" is a sequence of up to 18 letters and numbers
assigned to each datapoint (physical and pseudo).
Example
The temperature of a room is recorded at a sensor input; the associated user
address could be as follows:
Room Temp.1.10
(Room temperature, 1st floor, room 10)
The datapoint can be accessed directly by selecting this user address on the XI581
(not with XCL5010, Excel 100C), XI582, and XL-Online operator interfaces or the
XL50-MMI.
In the case of basic types of physical data, a user address always corresponds
exactly to one technical address (see Table 15).
The user address of flexible datapoints may refer to up to six technical addresses.
Table 15. Number of technical addresses for flexible datapoints
flexible datapoint
Pulse 2
number of technical addresses
2
Multi-stage
Feedback
up to 6
up to 6 (in pairs of 2)
Value
When the controller is working in automatic (the attribute "Operating Mode" is set to
"Auto"), the value currently being processed by the program, or the current status,
can be found in the attribute "Value". The attribute "Value" for an analog input could
contain, for example, the current room temperature of 21 °C / 70 °F.
A pump switched by a digital output could contain the current status of the pump,
for example ON, in its attribute "Value".
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ATTRIBUTES
Write Protection
The attribute "Write Protection" (XBS, only) prevents data from being overwritten.
The default setting of the attribute is 0 (="No"). If the datapoint should be protected,
then "No" must be overwritten with a value between 0 and 100.
0 = No write protection
100 = Highest priority required
To change this attribute, the operator must log in at an operator level that
corresponds to the current write protection attribute (see Table 16).
Table 16. Access values for operator levels
operator level XBS
access for write protection values
1
2
3
4
5
no access
no access
0 to 60
0 to 80
0 to 100
The operator's authority level is compared to the write protection status of the
datapoint to establish whether or not any modification can be made.
As soon as the operator receives permission, he can alter the attribute of secured
datapoints. The operator can also set the write protection to a higher value or
cancel write protection completely.
Example:
A datapoint with a write protection value of 61 can be altered only at operator level
4 or 5.
The write protection can be reduced to 0 from level 4 as well as level 5. The
datapoints can be altered through level 3. A detailed high priority can then be given
through the write protection.
NOTE:
When online, the XI581 (not with XCL5010, Excel 100C), XI582, and XL-
Online operator interfaces and the XL50-MMI do not recognize the
attribute "Write Protection". You can still change any datapoint via the
user interface, even if the datapoint is write-protected.
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List of Datapoint Attributes
Table 19 list the attributes assigned to the various datapoint types:
Table 17. Datapoint attributes
analog input
User Address
Descriptor
analog output
User Address
Descriptor
digital input
User Address
Descriptor
digital output
User Address
Descriptor
digital output (pulse 1)
User Address
Descriptor
Technical Address
Suppress Point
Access Level
Technical Address
Suppress Point
Access Level
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Value
Technical Address
Suppress Point
Access Level
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Value
Technical Address
Suppress Point
Access Level
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Value
Technical Address
Suppress Point
Access Level
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Value
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Value
Manual Value
Engineering Unit
I/O Characteristic
Sensor Offset
Low Warning Limit
Low Alarm Limit
High Warning Limit
High Alarm Limit
Alarm Delay
Manual Value
Engineering Unit
I/O Characteristic
Alarm Reporting
Trend Logging
Subtype
Manual Value
Alarm Delay
Manual Value
Alarm Type
Manual Value
Alarm Type
Alarm Type
Alarm Reporting
Trend Logging
Hours Run Log
Hours Run
Alarm Reporting
Trend Logging
Hours Run Log
Hours Run
Alarm Status
Point in Alarm
Alarm Reporting
Trend Logging
Hours Run Log
Hours Run
Time to Open
Time to Close
Trend Hysteresis
Trend Cycle
Service Interval
Pulse Duration
Hours Since Serviced Service Interval
Active State
Hours Since Serviced
Alarm Type
Service Interval
Active State Text
Active State
Point in Alarm
Alarm Reporting
Trend Logging
Suppress Alarm
NV Name and Index
Safety Position1
Hours Since Serviced Passive State Text
Active State Text
Passive State Text
Cycle Count
Active State
Cycle Count
Last Changed
Subtype
Active State Text
Passive State Text
Alarm Status
changed
Last Changed
Alarm Hysteresis
Trend Hysteresis
Trend Cycle
Last Changed
Cycle Count
Suppress Alarm
Subtype
Suppress Alarm
NV Name and Index *
Suppress Alarm
Normally Open /
Normally Closed
Normally Open /
Normally Closed
Suppress Alarm
NV Name and Index * NV Name and Index *
LED Mode1 Safety Position1
NV Name and Index *
* Read-only attribute. Changing the NV name and index requires changing the datapoint to NV mapping in CARE.
1Excel 800, only.
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ATTRIBUTES
Table 18. Datapoint attributes
pseudo analog point pseudo digital point pseudo point multistage
pseudo totalizer
input
totalizer input
User Address
Descriptor
User Address
Descriptor
User Address
Descriptor
User Address
Descriptor
User Address
Descriptor
Technical Address
Suppress Point
Access Level
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Value
Suppress Point
Access Level
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Value
Access Level
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Value
Access Level
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Value
Point Enable
Access
Write protection
Operating Mode
Value
Manual Value
Engineering Unit
Low Warning Limit
Low Alarm Limit
High Warning Limit
High Alarm Limit
Alarm Type
Manual Value
Alarm Type
Manual Value
Engineering Unit
Alarm Type
Value Manual
Status Text
Manual Value
Engineering Unit
Alarm Type
Alarm Delay
Alarm Status
Point in Alarm
Alarm Reporting
Trend Logging
Hours Run Log
Hours Run
Alarm Type
Trend Logging
Scaling Factor
Interval Limit
Interval Value
Suppress Alarm
Trend Logging
Hours Run log
Hours Run
Trend Logging
Scaling Factor
Interval Limit
Interval Value
Suppress Alarm
Alarm Delay
Maintenance Alarm
Last Serviced
Last Change
Switch on Counter
Point in Alarm
Trend Logging
Service Interval
Alarm Status changed Active State
Alarm Hysteresis
Trend Hysteresis
Trend Cycle
Hours Since Serviced Number of Stages
Active State Text
Passive State Text
Cycle Count
Suppress Alarm
NV Name and Index *
Suppress Alarm
NV Name and Index * Last Changed
Suppress Alarm
NV Name and Index *
* Read-only attribute. Changing the NV name and index requires changing the datapoint to NV mapping in CARE.
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Table 19. Datapoint attributes
global datapoint
(analog)
global datapoint
(digital)
flexible datapoint
(type: Pulse 2)
flexible datapoint
flexible datapoint (type:
multi-stage)
(type: feedback)
User Address
Descriptor
User Address
Descriptor
User Address
Descriptor
User Address
Descriptor
User Address
Descriptor
Technical Address
Technical Address
Technical Address 1/2 Technical Address
1/2/3/4/5/6
Technical Address
1/2/3/4/5/6
Access Level
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Value
Access Level
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Value
Suppress Point
Access Level
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Status
Status
Suppress Point
Access Level
Write Protection
Operating Mode
Value
Switching down
Off phase
Delay switch up
Delay switch down
Feedback Delay
Operating Mode
Manual status
Status Text
Manual Value
Engineering Unit
Low Warning Limit
Low Alarm Limit
High Warning Limit
High Alarm Limit
Alarm Type
Manual Value
Alarm Type
Manual Status
Status Text
Manual Value
Status Text
Alarm Delay
Alarm Status
Point in Alarm
Alarm Reporting
Trend Logging
Hours Run Log
Hours Run
Alarm Type
Active State
Trend Logging
Hours Run Log
Hours Run
Alarm Type
Suppress Point
Access Level
Write Protection
Trend Logging
Alarm Reporting
Trend Logging
Hours Run Log
Hours Run
Alarm Delay
Pulse Duration
Service Interval
Point in Alarm
Trend Logging
Service Interval
Hours Since Serviced Hours Run Log
Service Interval
Hours Since Serviced
Last Changed
Cycle Count
Alarm Status changed Active State
Last Changed
Hours Run
Service Interval
Subtype
Alarm Hysteresis
Trend Hysteresis
Trend Cycle
Hours Since Serviced Cycle Count
Active State Text
Passive State Text
Cycle Count
Suppress Alarm
Hours Since Serviced Suppress Alarm
Alarm Type
Suppress Alarm
Broadcast Hysteresis
Last Changed
Point in Alarm
Suppress Alarm
Alarm Reporting
Last Changed
Cycle Count
Suppress Alarm
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
TIME PROGRAMS
Time programs allow you to set values and control states for specific datapoints at
specific times. You can adapt time programs to suit the structure of your system.
Network-wide time synchronization
Time synchronization of all devices connected to the system bus is carried out by
the controller designated as the synchronization master. Synchronization is based
on date, hours, minutes, and seconds to an accuracy of ± 120 seconds (see also
Structure
Flexible time programs
An Excel 50/100/500/600/800 time program can consist of several individual time
programs. You define these individual time programs according to their function and
assign a name to each one. This means you can generate a time program for each
section of your system or building.
Time programs are created on the basis of the following modules:
•
•
•
daily programs
weekly programs
annual programs
Further, these modules can be modified as needed using the following two
functions:
•
•
the special day list
the “TODAY” function
Daily programs are combined to form a weekly program. The weekly program is
then automatically copied repeatedly to form the annual program. If you need to
execute a different daily program on certain days of the year, you can enter the
customized daily program directly in the annual program.
The special day list and the "TODAY" function are available as additional features.
The special day list allows you to mark specific days as being legal holidays. You
can also use the special day list for floating legal holidays, for example Good Friday
and Easter Monday. The "TODAY" function allows you to overwrite time program
assignments "ad hoc" for a defined time period without permanently changing the
entire time program.
Individual Time Programs
Daily Program
Daily programs are the basic building blocks of any time program. Using daily
programs, you enter the switching times with the desired setpoints and switching
conditions for the datapoints. When preparing a daily program and assigning the
name, there is initially no specific relationship to a particular day in the week.
The modular structure of the time program makes it possible for the user to
establish various different daily programs, keep them in a library, and to include
them in the weekly program as desired. The user is free to extend the list of daily
programs to meet his special requirements.
The repeated use of the same daily program is also possible (for example, the
same daily program can apply from Monday to Friday in the weekly program).
Changes in a daily program are immediately effective in the weekly and annual
programs as well as in the special day list.
A daily program can also have the name "Sundays and holidays", for example. The
names of the daily program provide a reference to the switching points. In the
"Workday 22 hr" daily program, the setpoint is reduced from 22.0°C to 12.0°C at
22.00 hr.
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TIME PROGRAMS
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The daily programs of the heating loops are independent from each other. In spite
of their having the same name, such as "Sunday and holidays", the daily programs
for all heating circuits are distinguished through the user addresses defined. The
same also applies to the service water loop daily programs. The switch points and
values can therefore be changed as desired in any daily program without
influencing another daily program. The exact procedure for creating a daily program
is described in the Operating Instructions.
Switching points
A daily program can be regarded as a module that contains information about
switching times related to the duration of one day. It contains all user addresses
addressed in this time interval.
The number of switching points per user address is not restricted.
These switching points are defined by means of a switching time, referenced user
address, and a setpoint value or control state. The switching times are set to the
minute. Several switching points can be allocated to one switching instant.
Switching points can be re-entered, changed, or deleted to modify the daily
program. The permissible range (minimum or maximum value) for a user address or
its control state is defined in the datapoint description. No values may be entered
outside this range.
New daily program
V1.05.x
Daily programs can be generated at operator level 2 (read and limited changes) of
the XI581 (not with XCL5010, Excel 100C), XI582, and XL-Online operator
interfaces and the XL50-MMI. It is possible to assign a name to a daily program
generated on the XL-Online.
The daily program is automatically assigned the name "DPn" (English language) or
"TPn" (German language) (n = sequence power of the daily program) if no name is
assigned by the user or, if the program is generated on the XI581 (not with
XCL5010, Excel 100C), XI582, or the Excel 50 MMI. Once selected, program
names can be changed via the XL-Online.
Application
Daily programs are used in the following sections of time programs:
•
•
•
To generate weekly programs
For direct entries in annual programs
For holidays in the special day list
Deleting a daily program
If a daily program is to be deleted, the system will check whether this program is
still required in the time program. This daily program cannot be deleted if it is still
contained in the time program.
Weekly Program
A separate weekly program is generated for each time program. The weekly
program defines which daily program is to be used for which weekday. A daily
program is assigned to each day of the week (Monday to Sunday). It is also
possible to assign the same daily program to several weekdays. The weekly
program, if defined, is automatically copied for each week in the annual program.
If a change is made to a weekday in a weekly program, this change will affect the
weekday in every week of the year. If a daily program is entered directly in the
annual program, this daily program will have priority over the daily program from the
weekly program. The definition of a weekly program forms the basis of the annual
program.
Annual Program
The annual program is structured like a calendar and consists of successive weekly
programs. It provides an overview of which daily programs are valid on which
calendar days. If the daily program in a weekly program does not apply on a
particular calendar date, another daily program can be entered for it directly in the
annual program.
The annual program starts on the current day. Each day, the time frame shifts one
day. Days added at the end are automatically assigned the daily program from the
weekly program. This ensures that every day is assigned a daily program.
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TIME PROGRAMS
Entries in the annual program must therefore be made only if a daily program
differing from the one selected is to be used. An undefined daily program to be
inserted in the annual program can be defined in the daily program.
Special Day List
One special day list exists per time program. It makes a number of holidays and
special days available to which a daily program can be assigned. This daily pro-
gram will then apply to this holiday or special day every year. The date of floating
holidays is calculated automatically by the Excel 500. If no daily program is entered
on certain holidays, the special day list is not taken into account on this day.
The following holidays and special days are contained in the list:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
New Year's Day (1st of January)
Epiphany (6th of January)
Monday before Ash Wednesday
Shrove Tuesday
Ash Wednesday
Good Friday
Easter Sunday
Easter Monday
Labor Day (1st of May)
Ascension Day
Whit Sunday
Whit Monday
Corpus Christi
Assumption Day (15th of August)
Day of German Unity (3rd of October)
Reformation Day (31st of October)
All Saint's Day (1st of November)
Day of Prayer and Repentance
1st to 4th Sundays in Advent
Christmas Eve (24th of December)
Christmas Day (25th of December)
Boxing Day (26th of December)
New Year's Eve (31st of December)
First Saturday in the month (Germany)
If a daily program that has not yet been defined should be entered in the special
day list, it must first be defined in the "Daily program" section of the time program.
NOTE:
To activate the special day list, you must set the special day status to
ON.
The "TODAY" Function
Using the "TODAY" function, it is possible to perform on/off changes to setpoint
values or control states without having to access the annual program or to define a
new daily program. New setpoint values or control states and the period of validity
(i.e. start and end) for a specific user address are defined. These changes are
carried out at operator level 2 of the XI581 (not with XCL5010, Excel 100C), XI582,
and XL-Online operator interfaces or the Excel 50 MMI. The start time must be
within 24 hours from the entry time. The end time must be within 24 hours from the
start time. The duration of the change can thus amount to a maximum of 24 hours.
The entry is deleted automatically after the end time point is exceeded.
Generating a Time Program
A new time program is defined at operator level 4 (programming level) of XL-Online
or on the Excel CARE engineering system. The new time program is given a name
43
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TIME PROGRAMS
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
and assigned a user address. This process thus defines which user addresses are
to be referenced by the time program.
Up to 20 time programs can be defined for each Excel 500. The time programs are
extremely flexible. The switching points for a section of the system or building are
usually combined in one time program. It is also possible to combine all datapoints
in one time program.
The following steps can also be carried out at operator level 2 (read and limited
changes) of the XI581 (not with XCL5010, Excel 100C), XI582, and XL-Online
operator interfaces and the XL50-MMI.
1) Daily programs are generated and given a name.
2) User addresses with a switching time and setpoint value or control state are
entered in the daily program.
3) A daily program is assigned to each weekday in the weekly program section
after the daily programs have been generated.
4) This weekly program is automatically copied for each week in the annual
program.
The generation of an executable time program is now complete.
If, on a certain day in the annual program, a daily program differing from the one
specified in the weekly program is to be used, this new daily program can be
entered directly in the annual program. The defined weekly program is not modified
and continues to be used on those days which have not been modified, in any way,
in the annual program.
Any changes to be made to switching times, setpoint values, or control states must
be carried out in the daily programs.
The special day list is available. It contains a number of holidays; a different daily
program can be assigned to each holiday. Once assigned to a holiday, the daily
program will apply on this holiday every year. That is valid for holidays with fixed
date (for example New Year’s Day or Christmas Eve) as well as for floating holidays
(Ascension Day, Good Friday). The dates of floating holidays will be calculated
automatically by Excel 500. If there are no entries, then the existing daily program
of the annual program remains valid on that holiday.
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
ALARM HANDLING
The Excel 50/100/500/600/800 alarm handling facility offers a high degree of
security by both storing and immediately displaying all alarms that occur at the
operator interfaces. The user chooses whether an alarm is critical or non-critical.
The user can also create personalized alarm texts, if required.
If your Excel 50/100/500/600/800 is connected to a front-end or a modem, critical
alarms are transmitted as high priority.
Point Alarms
The type of alarm generated by a datapoint depends on the type of datapoint
involved. Furthermore, there are alarm types which are valid for all datapoints or
which refer to system alarms in the control unit.
Limit monitoring
In the case of an analog input or pseudo analog point, two maximum limits (limit
Max. 1, limit Max. 2) and two minimum limits (limit Min 1, limit Min 2) can be set for
a particular value. The limit values are entered in the datapoint description. Each
time this limit value is reached, irrespective of the direction, an alarm is triggered. If,
for example, a measured value takes on a value that exceeds a maximum limit or
drops below a minimum limit, an alarm is generated (alarm reached).
If the value returns from the alarm range to the normal range and, in doing so,
reaches a limit value in the opposite direction, an alarm signal is given in the same
way (alarm reached).
Since this sequence is identical for all four limit values, a total of eight different
alarm signals are possible for one analog datapoint. These eight alarm signal texts
are programmed permanently, and require no input from the user.
Alarm status
In the case of a digital input or pseudo digital point, a decision can be made
whether or not an alarm check is desired. The entry is made in the datapoint
description.
Prior to V.2.04.x
Alarm Check
Enter "Yes"
No Alarm Check Enter "No"
If an alarm check is desired, an alarm signal is produced if the digital point changes
from Active State to Passive State (alarm reached). When the digital point returns
to Active State, an additional signal is generated (alarm going). The two alarm
signal texts are permanently programmed and require no input from the user.
The fixing of active and passive states must be carried out in the datapoint
description under the attribute "Active State".
0 = Active state with "0" signal
1 = Active state with "1" signal
V.2.04.x
The attribute "Active State" is fixed to “1”. This means that the alarm status is no
longer dependant upon the attribute "Active State", but rather only upon the
physical contact status and upon the logical status as defined in the online attribute
"Normally Open/Normally Closed".
Maintenance Alarm
Totalizer
In the case of a digital input, a digital output, or a pseudo digital point, the hours run
time entry can be activated and a maintenance interval can be fixed. If the latter is
exceeded, an alarm signal is generated. The text of this signal is permanently
programmed and requires no input from the user. If a check is to be skipped, a "0"
is entered in the datapoint descriptor under the attribute "Maintenance Interval".
A pulse input signal interval can be fixed for a totalizer input that, if exceeded,
triggers an alarm signal. The alarm signal text is permanently programmed and
requires no input from the user. If a check is not desired, a "0" is entered in the
datapoint description under the attribute "Interval Count".
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ALARM HANDLING
Operational status
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
All datapoints can be switched from the 'automatic' to the 'manual' operational
mode. Each time the operating mode is changed, irrespective of the direction
involved, a critical alarm signal is generated. Both alarm signal texts are
preprogrammed and require no input from the user.
Remote (V2.0.x) (not with Excel 100C) If a manual override control is changed on a Distributed I/O module, an alarm
“overr.switch_manu” or “overr.switch_auto” is generated and the “manu” value is
transmitted.
Alarm suppression in manual mode
Under controller firmware 2.06.02 and higher, the following datapoint alarms can be
suppressed for as long as the corresponding datapoints are in the 'manual override'
mode:
•
•
min. and max. limit alarms (of analog datapoints, only);
status alarms (of digital datapoints, only).
This alarm suppression is activated during CARE engineering by inserting the "at"
sign ("@") at the beginning of the descriptor text of the pseudo datapoint "Startup".
Benefits:
As long as this alarm suppression is in effect, the repair or replacement of defective
and/or malfunctioning (flickering) inputs (resulting e.g. from sensor breakage,
sensor short-circuiting, defective alarm switches, etc.) can be performed while the
corresponding datapoint is in the "manual override" mode.
NOTE:
Only when using XFI 2.1.0 SIM1 will the event behavior and visualization
behavior be identical to that of Honeywell Deltanet controllers.
System Alarms
Operating errors that occur in a control unit or during communication with other
Excel 50/100/500/600/800 units are recognized and displayed by the computer
module. These alarm signals can relate, for example, to a defective module, the
need to change the buffer battery (data protection), or the presence of one digital
output module too many (maximum 10). These alarm signal texts are
preprogrammed. They are always critical alarms.
Table 20. System alarms
Alarm alarm text
cond. cause/reason
code #
no.
English)
1
AI Module Defect
25
Maximum conversion time was exceeded while testing ADC (defect on an AI card).
While measuring GND voltage on an AI card, one value greater than 0.5 V was measured
(AI card defect).
2
3
AI 0 Volt Error
24
23
While measuring the 5-V reference voltage on an AI card, one value greater than 5 V or
smaller than 4.5 V was measured (AI card defect or incorrect power supply of AI card).
AI 5 Volt Failure
4
MAX 2 alarm
MAX 2 normal
MAX 1 alarm
MIN 2 alarm
MIN 2 normal
MIN 1 alarm
MAX 1 normal
MIN 1 normal
2
Alarm limit for AI-, PA points
Alarm limit for AI-, PA points
Alarm limit for AI-, PA points
Alarm limit for AI-, PA points
Alarm limit for AI-, PA points
Alarm limit for AI-, PA points
Alarm limit for AI-, PA points
Alarm limit for AI-, PA points
5
76
1
6
7
4
8
78
3
9
10
11
75
77
1) After starting the Field I/O Task with the parameter "INIT", the default datapoint
description couldn't be installed because USX didn't provide enough storage space for
sending CNAP telegrams.
12
13
Alarm memory full 22
2) Alarm send buffer full.
Alarm
6
Alarm condition control for DI , PD points.
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ALARM HANDLING
Alarm alarm text
cond. cause/reason
code #
no.
14
15
16
English)
Return to normal
79
Alarm condition control for DI, PD points.
Hware clock failed 61
Error while initializing the system clock.
Battery low
17
Battery voltage too low or battery not existent.
Battery voltage back to normal again (alarm occurs only after alarm message "Battery
low").
17
18
19
Battery status OK
87
An invalid module ID is read (error on internal I/O or defect module or the module has an
as-yet unspecified module ID).
Wrong Module ID
71
60
Too Many DO
Module
Too many modules of the same type (XF521, XF522, ...).
20
21
22
23
24
Contr. w/o Flash
FLASH Mem Full
Link Point Alarm
Link Comm Down
No characteristic
81
82
-
Error occurred when burning the Flash EPROM.
Not enough Flash memory space to save application.
Xlink alarm.
-
Xlink alarm.
57
The application part "Characteristics" is defect.
RCL Submod
missing
25
26
27
-
RACL sub-module missing.
Xlink alarm.
Download SSI Now -
Download CPU
Now
-
Xlink alarm.
Incompatible version numbers of RACL program and RACL parameter files and/or
datapoint description.
28
29
30
31
32
RACL inconsistent 29
Nested
30
RACL program contains errors (MCAL from submodule).
Alarm not used.
submodules!
alarm message
158
-
RACL undef.
32
RACL program contains errors (undefined Operation code).
RACL program contains errors (Checksum changed).
OpCode
RACL program
fault
33
1) During RACL run, datapoint contains errors or point is locked.
2) An unrecognized (missing) characteristic in the datapoint editor has been used.
Check if the default file set of the controller is different from the set used in CARE.
Xlink alarm.
33
Unknown datapoint 34
SSI Points Active
34
35
36
37
Non-valid arithmetical operation during RACL performance (e.g. division by zero or RACL
statements LN with input value 1.0 ).
Invalid operation
36
37
38
RACL overflow
Arithmetic overflow at RACL performance "+infinite".
RACL neg.
overflow
Arithmetic underflow at RACL performance "-infinite".
RACL inval.
OpCode
38
39
RACL program contains errors (invalid Operation Code).
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
Z-Reg. index error 40
Access to non-existing Z register (e.g.: RACL statements ISTO and IRCL).
Too many statements (exits) in one column.
Attempt to use non-existent P register.
Attempt to use non-existent T register.
Attempt to use non-existent Z register.
Xlink alarm.
Invalid Y-Register
Invalid P-Register
Invalid T-Register
Invalid Z-Register
SSI Interface Up
No parameter file
No Z file
41
42
43
44
-
-
RACL parameter file missing.
-
RACL Z register file missing.
No T file
-
RACL time register file missing.
47
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
Alarm alarm text
cond. cause/reason
code #
no.
English)
46
47
48
49
52
1) No RACL program.
2) No parameter file.
3) No Z register file.
4) No T register file.
5) No datapoint description.
48
Part applic. miss
26
27
28
31
34
1) Submodule does not exist.
2) Parameter file missing.
3) No M0 module.
4) Invalid SKIP destination.
49
RACL environ fault
INIT div. by zero
5) Info points STARTUP, SHUTDOWN, or EXECUTING_STOPPED are missing or
6) During RACL start datapoint contains errors.
7) freely programmable application loaded into Excel 50 controller (system alarm
parameters set to 0,0,0).
1
50
51
52
53
14
Reason of new start: Division by zero.
INIT under OpCode 15
Reason of new start: the system software contains an undefined Operation Code.
Reason of new start: power failure, data in RAM ok.
Xlink alarm.
Power failure
16
-
Link Config Bad
The required configuration contains at least one module which is not included in the
hardware configuration.
54
55
I/O board missing
Unused I/O board
19
18
The hardware configuration contains at least one module that is not needed (can be taken
out).
1) Hardware Configuration file (.kfx file) not complete loaded.
2) Different modules are plugged under the same address (set using the rotary HEX
switch) in the required configuration and in the hardware configuration.
56
HW Config. failure 20
Wrong version no. 21
3) An application containing NV-mapping is rejected by the target controller because the
hardware does not have the 3120E5 Neuron® chip.
57
58
The version number of the application files and the configuration file are not the same.
Overflow operation hours counter, point value of counters and interval impulse counter.
Totalizer overflow
5
Course of a service interval for digital points or course or the message/calling interval for
counters. Call intervals for counters.
59
60
Maintenance alarm
7
Undef. RACL input 62
Too many Globals 63
Undefined RACL errors.
The loaded application contains too many remote points. An application with more than 46
NVs has been rejected for download into an Excel 50 freely programmable controller
located on a LONWORKS network.
61
Communication defect/disturbance between Excel 500 and C-Bus submodule. Logical
modem device in controller has gotten a C-Bus # already in use for a C-Bus controller.
62
63
C-Bus error
64
9
No Globals
memory
No remote storage; the remote controller has no storage left for requested remote points.
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
Global pnt missing 10
Glob Pnt Occupied 11
The user address of the remote point was not found in the remote controller.
A remote output to a remote controller is already assigned to another controller.
The remote controller is in stopped condition.
CPU stopped
12
CPU not available 13
The remote controller is switched off or does not respond to C-Bus communication.
Floating outputs (3-position outputs) are synchronized.
Init. actuators
65
66
67
68
69
WARM START
COLD START
Point in manual
Report too large
Reason of new start: watchdog.
Reason of new start: power failure, data in RAM destroyed.
When falling back to password level 3 there are still points in manual override.
Not enough space in the report file for initialization.
After a download, an entry is demanded in the initializing phase of the ASPECD
application. This can happen only with XI581 emulation.
73
74
XI 581 required
70
New appli. loaded 74
Download of a new application part or entire application.
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ALARM HANDLING
Alarm alarm text
cond. cause/reason
code #
no.
75
76
77
78
79
English)
Auto operation
Manual operation
80
8
Point is in automatic mode.
Point is in manual override mode.
Too many trend pnt 73
No C-BUS refresh 110
Template too long 85
Too many points in trend.
No memory to execute refresh / trend functionality.
Template for wildcard search too long.
Used only for MCR200 controllers. MCR200 rejects the setting of summer time if it is done
with corresponding function of XBS or XL-Online.
80
206
207
83
Used only for MCR200 controllers. A weekday is allocated to the daily programs of
another weekday by copying the corresponding data. While copying, the name of the daily
programs (weekday) remains whereas it would be exchanged by allocation.
81
Only used for MCR200 controllers. Texts from XIP100 or MCR200 Fax were not able to be
loaded into the MCR200.
82
83
84
85
86
Download was done via B-Port. In addition to this alarm, one of the following alarms is
displayed: 88 to 98.
B-Port Download
C-Bus Download
B-Port change
C-Bus change
100
101
102
103
Download was done via C-Bus. In addition to this alarm, one of the following alarms is
displayed: 88 to 98.
Online changes were done via B Port. In addition to this alarm, one of the following alarms
is displayed: 88 to 93.
Online changes were done via C-Bus. In addition to this alarm, one of the following alarms
is displayed: 88 to 93.
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
Device logged
DDC Parameter
DDC Z-Register
DDC T-Register
Datapoints
84
-
Operator has logged himself in with MMI via C-Bus (Remote Login). Not sent on C-bus.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 83 to 86.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 83 to 85.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 83 to 84.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 83 to 86.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 83 to 86 and 101.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 83 to 85.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 83 and 84.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 83 and 84.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 83 and 84.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 83 and 84.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 83 and 84.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 101.
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 101.
-
-
-
Time Program
ASPECD Program
Alarm Texts
-
-
-
Characteristics
Descriptors
-
-
Engineering Units
State Texts
-
-
Field I/O
-
Glob.Pnt.Transfer
-
104
105
106
107
Application task was stopped. This alarm, together with one of the following alarms, is
shown: 92, 99, 100, 102.
101
Applic. stopped
102
103
DDC Program
-
This alarm is shown in addition to one of the following alarms: 83 to 86 and 101.
A module which is part of the required configuration but was missing in the hardware
configuration has been added to the hardware configuration again.
I/O board present
108
104
105
106
107
Time dev. > 2 min 98
Manual time sync. 99
A time deviation greater than 2 minutes has been detected on a device on the C-Bus.
Somebody has changed the system time of the C-Bus devices via a local MMI.
Application error: An XL50 DO is using a triac already in use by a 3-position output.
Manual override switches on Distributed I/O output modules are reset to automatic mode.
Dig.Out.Conflict
109
Overr. switch auto 111
Manual override switches on Distributed I/O output modules are set into override mode
(values coming from the XL controller will be overwritten by the switches).
108
Overr. switch manu 112
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Alarm alarm text
cond. cause/reason
code #
no.
English)
A Distributed I/O module was removed from the LONWORKS network or a sensor break or a
sensor short-circuit or missing NV update from a bound NV was detected on a Distributed
I/O module.
109
Hardware Failure
88
89
A missing Distributed I/O module was reconnected to the LONWORKS network or a missing
sensor was reconnected on a Distributed I/O module or a sensor break / short-circuit was
repaired or a missing NV update from a bound NV was supplied.
110
Hardware OK
111
112
113
114
M-Bus (XL50, only)
OVFL crit. alarms
OVFL non-crit. al.
OVFL trend
-
Used only in Excel 50 fixed applications. Shown together with M-Bus-related alarms.
Critical alarm buffer full.
113
114
115
Non-critical alarm buffer full.
Remote trend buffer full.
If the network interface has been changed in CARE and the changed application has been
downloaded, all bindings will be lost.
115
116
117
NV Bindings lost
116
The remote trend buffer has reached its notification level and should be uploaded in order
to avoid trend buffer overflow.
pls upload trends! 117
config data def. 118
Configuration data for the remote communication lost or corrupt due to power failure,
EEPROM fault or uncharged gold cap.
118
119
unauthorized acc. 119
out of memory 120
Unauthorized telephone number and/or unauthorized password tried to dial in.
No more memory available for alarm handling.
Front-end X is online while remote trend buffer for front-end Y exceeds the notification
level. Terminate dial-up connection with the controller in order to allow it to transmit its
remote trend buffer to front-end Y.
120
Please disconnect! 121
121
122
123
front-end not avail. 122
Front-end could not be reached. Line occupied or disconnected.
Configuration for the remote communication received, accepted and complete.
Response message to the XBS life check.
config complete
123
modem device OK 124
No C-Bus communication between remote communication device number and application
device number. Probably the application device number is missing.
124
C bus error
125
126
125
126
127
128
LON- I/O init start
Initialization start of the Distributed I/O modules.
LON- I/O init done 127
Initialization of the Distributed I/O modules finished.
IP-DIO conflict
Invalid user ID
128
212
Standard I/O module XF5xx plugged with address of already-used DIO module XFL5xx.
CARE license key tag in the application is incorrect.
The user has tried to make more “many-to-one-bindings” during controller runtime than
were specified during CARE engineering. The “many” relation of a “many-to-one-binding”
(MTO) is specified during CARE engineering. (The entered “many” relation will be used to
calculate the memory space taken from the controller's application memory for the “many-
to-one-binding”.)
129
MTO Binding failed 155
In the event of a module defect or power failure (initialization), this alarm is related to the
datapoints on this board. The required configuration contains at least one module not
included in the hardware configuration.
130
131
board missing
board present
19
In the event of a module defect or power failure (initialization), this alarm is related to the
datapoints on this board. A module which is part of the required configuration but was
missing in the hardware configuration has been added to the hardware configuration
again.
108
System Alarms Suppression (V. 2.04.xx or higher)
System alarms can be suppressed during CARE engineering by inserting the "at"
sign ("@") at the beginning of the corresponding alarm text in the alarm text file.
In order to avoid alarm showers at power failure and power return, separate system
alarms are provided for module power failure and for input failures on the modules
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ALARM HANDLING
Table 21. Avoiding alarm datapoint showers
Reason for fault
defective module or power failure
Module alarm
Point alarm
"I/O board missing" (54)
"I/O board present" (103)
"hardware failure" (109)
"hardware OK" (110)
Care 3.x applications
for controller
firmware V. 2.04.xx
sensor break / short-circuit or
missing NV update from bound NV
"hardware failure" (109)
"hardware OK" (110)
"I/O board missing" (54)
"I/O board present" (103)
"board missing" (130)
"board present" (131)
defective module or power failure
Care 4.x applications
for controller
firmware V. 2.04.xx
sensor break / short-circuit or
missing NV update from bound NV
"hardware failure" (109)
"hardware OK" (110)
Due to open LON, module
alarms are no longer possible! "board present" (131)
"board missing" (130)
defective module or power failure
Care 4.x applications
for controller
firmware V. 2.06.xx
sensor break / short-circuit or
missing NV update from bound NV
"hardware failure" (109)
"hardware OK" (110)
Procedure
Engineer CARE 4.x applications for controller firmware version 2.04.xx, and then
suppress the datapoint system alarms 109 and 110 by placing the @ character at
the first position of the corresponding alarm text.
User Program Alarms
It is possible to generate alarm signals at any point in the user program by using a
special program command.
The alarm text can be individually created and may contain up to 18 characters.
Data Storage
Each alarm is stored in the alarm memory that can hold up to 99 alarms. Alarm sig-
nals in the alarm memory contain neither an indication of the nature of the alarm
signals in the alarm (critical/non-critical) nor an acknowledgment of the alarm on the
operator interface.
The alarm memory entry contains user address, alarm text, date, and time. If the
memory capacity is exceeded, new alarm signals are accepted, such that the last
99 alarms always remain in the alarm memory.
The alarm memory can be viewed on the XI581 (not with XCL5010, Excel 100C),
XI582 and XL-Online operator interfaces and the Excel 50 MMI.
Alarms Sent across the System Bus
Alarm recovery
Once the capacity of the temporary alarm buffer for system alarms is reached (max.
99 alarms for firmware 2.03.xx or lower, and max. 50 alarms for firmware 2.04.x),
then any additional alarms cause the datapoint to be labeled "in alarm" and given a
description of the type of alarm that has occurred. Labeling is carried out only for
the last occurring alarm for that datapoint.
When a C-bus connection to a front-end has been established, then all alarm
messages of the temporary system alarm buffer are sent to the front-end. After-
wards, alarms for datapoints that are labeled “in alarm” are sent directly to the C-
bus (except those that are in alarm suppression).
If the controller’s alarm history buffer still contains information related to such an
alarm, then this information is sent to the front-end. Otherwise, only the alarm type
(without data or time) is sent. In this case, the datapoints appear at the front-end
with an asterisk indicating that the data and time shown do not correspond to the
generation of the alarm.
Refresh list deletion (V1.5.x)
If an XBS or XL-Online is disconnected from the bus/controller, then the refresh list
is deleted after a period of 2 minutes. This allows point values to be updated that
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are set in refresh after a short-time interruption (maximum: 2 minutes) due to a
communication error.
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
TEST MODE (V2.03.X)
General
Excel 50/100/500/800 controllers feature a special test mode intended specifically
for troubleshooting or system checkout and which allows manually setting outputs
and verifying inputs. When entering the test mode, a set of default datapoints is
generated corresponding to the physical I/O of the controller. The default user
addresses are coded to correspond with the physical I/O in the following way:
AI0101: Analog input, module 1, input 1
AO0201: Analog output, module 2, output 1
DI0301: Digital input, module 3, input 1
DO0401: Digital output, module 4, output 1
3P0101: Motor output, module 1, output 1
NOTE:
Excel 50/100 controllers do not have I/O modules, but their technical
addresses follow the same pattern, with module numbers referring to
internal I/O boards. For details, see the Excel 50 and Excel 100
Installation Instructions.
Excel 800 supports the test mode for the Panel Bus I/O Modules, only
(XF8xxxx).
Values are displayed (0/1 for digital points) for each of the default datapoints, and
the values are refreshed in this screen as they change. Outputs can be set manual-
ly via MMI. The alarm buffer records all system alarms and all changes of state of
inputs.
Distributed I/O testing
(V2.04.xx or higher)
Beginning with controller firmware V2.04.x, Distributed I/O modules can be checked
out in the same way as described above. For details, see the Software Release
Bulletin for XL500, controller firmware version 2.04.00.
COMMUNICATION
General
Control systems often need to carry out complex monitoring and control functions
as part of their building management task. This is difficult if individual subsystems
cannot exchange data with one another. Control applications using such equipment
soon reach the performance limits of their controllers. This is because there is only
a limited number of inputs and outputs available and it is difficult for the controller to
monitor several processes simultaneously. In addition, it may not be economical to
connect different parts of a plant because they are too far away from one another.
Equipment that has been specially designed to implement only a particular
application has the disadvantages of being more expensive in the first place and
inflexible to future needs.
The Excel 50/100/500/600/800 have a modular structure, so they can be tailored to
match the plant they are controlling. The individual Excel controllers are able to
communicate with one another, so that the configuration of one section of your
system does not limit the overall size of your building management system.
LONWORKS communication
(V2.04.xx or higher)
Excel 50 and Excel 500 controllers equipped with 3120E5 Neuron chips (date code
0044 or higher) are capable of communicating with devices on an Echelon®
LONWORKS® network. For more information, see Excel 50/500 LONWORKS
Mechanisms Description, EN0B-0270GE51.
System Bus
Up to 30 Excel controllers can be connected to one another via a System Bus (C-
bus). Other C-bus compatible components can be substituted for any of the 30
Excel controllers. Examples of C-bus compatible components are Excel IRC Multi-
controllers, the Excel EMC, and Excel Building Supervisors. The C-bus allows con-
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
trollers and devices to exchange data such as measured values, alarms log, and
trends. This means that values from one controller or device can be sent to the
entire system.
Besides allowing communication between controllers and devices, the C-bus also
enables the entire system to be connected to PC front-ends.
When a controller does not have a modem directly connected, the C-bus also
allows controllers to communicate with other controllers that do have a modem
connected, so that data can be transmitted via the public telephone network.
Access
The C-bus supports multi-master communication using the token passing pro-
cedure. A bus master is a controller governing communication between bus
devices. The master asks for data and then distributes the data on the bus. Con-
trollers transmit data only when asked for it by the master or when they assume the
function of the master.
Multi-master communication means that all controllers in the system can function as
the master, so the right to request and transmit data is not permanently assigned to
a specific controller. This has the advantage that a part of the system can still
continue working even if one of the controllers is defective.
The flow of data between devices can be structured hierarchically as part of the
software in the user program. Structuring data exchange means defining what infor-
mation can be exchanged between which bus devices. Communication is still
carried out on the multi-master principle, but bus access time is reduced by con-
centrating specific data in specific controllers.
Bus Initialization
When your system first starts up, the software runs a check to see what devices are
connected to the C-bus. This process is called initialization. The software stores the
information as the Device Type List in the controllers.
During initialization, the bus master requests information about global datapoints
from each controller. At the same time, the controllers store the address of the
device making the request so that the controllers can subsequently transmit the
appropriate data to the appropriate device.
After initialization, each controller knows the address of the next controller with the
right to transmit data. If a controller now stops communication, the bus master
recognizes that this controller is no longer online and interrupts token passing. As a
result, the C-bus reinitializes automatically and also updates the Device Type List,
excluding controllers that are no longer online. This ensures continuous bus
communication even when individual controllers go off line.
Bus Communication
The Excel 50/100/500/600/800 controller does not transmit any plant-specific data
before the C-bus has been initialized. Controller communication depends on the
user program stored in each controller. Bus-wide communication occurs when
global datapoints have been defined in the user program.
During normal operation, the bus master transmits active values. The bus master
transmits only values which have changed or which have been requested by
another device on initialization or when a device has been offline.
This method of exchanging data reduces the load on the bus and means controllers
store only the data they need for their own communication.
I/O Runtime Synchronization
XF525
After application download and after a power failure a runtime synchronization takes
place which takes the complete runtime as defined in the datapoint description plus
an additional 10%.
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COMMUNICATION
Calculated Runtime
>100%
>96%
Actual Runtime
permanently open
96% plus 100% of defined runtime (Excel 500)
96% plus 200% of defined runtime (Excel 50)
2% minus 100% of defined runtime (Excel 500)
2% minus 200% of defined runtime (Excel 50)
permanently closed
<2%
<0%
Internal hysteresis is 2 to 3.125% and 95 to 96% of defined runtime.
XF825
Synchronization will take place in the following situations:
Calculated position < Lower sync threshold
The floating actuators will be synchronized when the associated input signal drops
below the lower synchronization threshold, which is 2% by default.
In order to avoid any logical interlock problems, this type of synchronization will
immediately be finished when the input signal exceeds the lower synchronization
threshold + sensitivity hysteresis. The actuator will drive to –“Synchronization Time”
in this case.
An additional synchronization with -20 % is done after half an hour and one hour in
order to compensate temperature drifts of the valve.
Example:
A cooling valve is closed. The valve is cold at the time it is closed. The valve will get
warm and expand. This may result in leakage.
Calculated position > Upper sync threshold
The floating actuators will be synchronized when the associated input signal
exceeds the upper synchronization threshold, which is 98% by default.
In order to avoid any logical interlock problems, this type of synchronization will
immediately be finished when the input signal drops below upper synchronization
threshold – sensitivity hysteresis.
Synchronization after power-up / 24 hours
The floating actuators will be synchronized in the following situations:
•
•
Always after power-up or reset of the Excel 800 controller
Optionally, once every 24 hours the actuator will be driven towards the “closed”
position.
Initialization of Distributed I/O Modules
XFL52x V1.02 with Excel 500 V2.01.03 During and after initialization of the Distributed I/O modules, the output of the
Remote Override Modules XFR522/XFR522A and XFR524/XFR524A will remain
unchanged. This means that the output status will always remain unchanged as
long as the 24 Vac power supply is applied and as long as there is no manual
change at the XFRxxxx modules.
New Bus Devices
The system automatically detects new devices. When it has detected a new device,
the system reinitializes so the new device is included in the Device Type List.
Network-Wide Controller Time Synchronization
Network-wide time synchronization is carried out automatically once each hour by
the designated synchronization master. Each controller with firmware V2.0.xx or
higher can act as a synchronization master. If the time is manually changed on any
of the connected system bus controllers, then this time is adopted for synchroni-
zation. If the controller on which the time was changed is eligible as a synchroni-
zation master, then it will become the synchronization master on the bus.
Synchronization is based on date, hours, minutes, and seconds to an accuracy of
± 120 seconds across the system bus (detected after no more than 1 hour). If this
time is exceeded, an alarm is generated. Daylight saving time is included in the
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synchronization process. Any new device added to the system bus will adopt the
bus system time.
NOTE:
If you enter the time on the local MMI of an older device (prior to
V2.0.xx), synchronization will not be carried out. Even the locally entered
time might be overwritten by a synchronization coming from a newer
device (V2.0.xx or higher).
Point Refreshing
Excel controllers provides a refresh mechanism (that is adapted to the Token
timing) for sending the values of the attributes "Value", "Manual Value", "Operating
Mode", and "Alarm Status" to either an MMI interface or to a front-end. (A maximum
of two point refresh messages can be sent while the controller is holding the
Token.)
PC Communication
An Excel 50/100/500/600/800 system can also accommodate a PC connected to
the C-bus. Multi-master communication is still supported and token passing
continues between the individual bus devices. The C-bus treats controllers as being
equal in rank to a PC.
Excel IRC
Excel controllers support communication with the Excel IRC control system. This
system monitors and controls individual rooms within a building. The Excel IRC
system communicates on the C-bus via its Multicontroller (MC). The Application
control functions for Excel IRC, called ACFs, are all processed by the MC.
See EXCEL 5000 IRC Integration System Overview and Application Guide,
EN3R-1182GE51, for additional information.
Remote Communication
Excel 50/100/500/600/800 controllers are all able to communicate to remote
building supervisors via an analog or ISDN modem connected to them. This allows
two-way communication between the building supervisors and the controllers. The
Excel 100/500 controllers can store the numbers and passwords for up to three
supervisors and can call them in response to critical alarms or other programmed
triggers, or the supervisor can call at any time for status, trend, or alarm
information.
Disable dial-out (V2.04.xx or higher)
Automatic upload of the remote trend buffer can be disabled by a remote front-end
(XBS 1.6.0 or higher). In this case, remote trend values are stored in the buffer, with
newest values overwriting oldest when the buffer is full, but the controller does not
dial out to send remote trend buffer level alarms or to flush the buffer. The controller
will still dial out for critical and uncritical alarms.
Excel 100 and 600 controllers and Excel 500 controllers with V1.5.xx firmware or
earlier can, when operating as stand-alone controllers, make use of the XDM506
modem submodule mounted on the CPU board. The XDM506 can perform all of the
functions of the XM100A in providing remote communication capability with up to
three building supervisors.
Direct modem connection
(Excel 50/500,
V2.01.xx or higher and
Excel 800, V3.00.xx or higher)
Excel 50/500 controllers with firmware version V2.01.xx or higher, Excel 100C
controllers, as well as Excel 800 controllers with firmware version V3.00.xx or higher
have the advantage of allowing direct connection of a modem or ISDN terminal
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COMMUNICATION
adapter to the controller for either C-Bus systems or stand-alone controller
applications. No additional hardware is necessary. Excel 50/100/500/800 controllers
can store 100 trend values (by default) for the connected EBI/SymmetrE, in addition
to handling normal building control functions. Data transmission rates up to 38.4
Kbaud are supported with modem/ISDN terminal adapter attached.
If no special modem behavior is needed, it is not necessary to set up or initialize the
modem/ISDN terminal adapter. The Excel 50/100/500/800 controller will detect the
modem attached to the serial port and set the communication speed to the default
value of 9.6 Kbaud. The Excel 50/100/500/800 controller will also detect whether
the modem/ISDN terminal adapter is initialized in auto-answer or manu-answer
mode, and it will initialize the modem for manu-answer mode (S0=0).
NOTE:
Remote communication to XBSi building supervisors is not supported by
direct modem connection.
NOTE:
IRC alarming can be accomplished only indirectly with firmware version
V2.01.xx by using a separate Excel 500 controller with special operating
system firmware (XL IRC V1.03.x) which allows mapping between it and
an IRC Multicontroller. In that case, the IRC alarms are treated like
normal C-Bus data.
Fig. 23. Remote Modem Connection
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Remote Trending (dial-up)
General
Per front-end (XBS, EBI), trend values for a total of 20 data points can be stored
(via dial-up) in the remote trend buffer of the controller to which the modem has
been connected. These 20 data points can come from the controller to which the
modem has been connected, or they can come from various other controllers on
the same C-Bus or LONWORKS bus.
Controller Firmware 2.03.xx and Higher
Per front-end (XBS, EBI), trend values for a total of 100 data points can be stored
(via dial-up) in the remote trend buffer of the controller to which the modem has
been connected. These 100 data points can come from the controller to which the
modem has been connected, or they can come from various other controllers on
the same C-Bus or LONWORKS bus. Unused application memory can be used as
additional remote trend buffer.
Controller Firmware 2.04.xx and Higher
In combination with the large RAM controllers XD52-FC, XD52-FCS, XC5210C, a
total of 384 KB of additional trend buffer is available. This increase in the trend
buffer size reduces the number of times the controller must dial-up the front-end
and lowers the risk of trend values being overwritten due to a full buffer.
By exploiting this feature, it is possible, when no application is downloaded, to use
the EXCEL controller as a pure trending device.
The amount of additional memory available for the remote trend buffer is deter-
mined by the value for “Application Memory Size” entered with the MMI during the
start-up sequence of the controller. This number is subtracted from the total
application memory, and the resulting number, in Kbytes, is the additional remote
TOTAL APPLICATION MEMORY
REMOTE TREND BUFFER
UNUSED APPLICATION MEMORY
e.g. 58 KB
58 KB
= 1263 ADDITIONAL TREND SAMPLES
APPLICATION
e.g. 70 KBYTES
+ 100 TREND SAMPLES (DEFAULT)
= 1363 T0TAL TREND SAMPLES
Fig. 24. Adjustable remote trend buffer example
The maximum number of trend values will be displayed on the MMI once a value for
application memory size is entered. The adjustment range for the application
memory size is the following:
Table 22. Adjustment range for application memory size
application memory size
maximum (default): 128 Kbyte
example: 120 Kbyte
trend values in remote trend buffer
42 per front-end
100 per front-end
minimum: 38 Kbyte
100 per front-end; PLUS “N” for front-end A
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COMMUNICATION
For XD52-FC, XD52-FCS, and XC5210C controller (512 Kbytes of RAM):
Remote trend buffer size formula
N = (128 Kbytes - appl. size (in Kbytes) + 384 Kbytes) * 1024 bytes / 47 bytes
For all other controllers equipped with Flash EPROMS:
N = (128 Kbytes - appl. size (in Kbytes)) * 1024 bytes / 47 bytes
Hence, the maximum value of N is 10,327 trend values for large RAM controllers
and 1,960 trend values for all others containing Flash memory. This means that for
all Flash memory-equipped modules with a minimum application size of 38 Kbytes,
there will be 2,064 (1,960 + 104) trend values for front-end A and 104 trend values
each for front-end B and front-end C.
If an application being downloaded exceeds the application memory size, a warning
message will be displayed on the MMI, and the download will not be executed.
Excel 800
Excel 800 controllers provide a reserved Remote Trend Memory of 60Kbytes, which
allows a total of 2591 trend entries to be stored – see also diagram below:
2391 trend entries for front-end A
Plus 100 trend entries for front-end B
Plus 100 trend entries for front-end C
--------------------------------------------------
TOTAL = 2591 trend entries
TOTAL APPLICATION MEMORY
REMOTE TREND MEMORY:
60 KBYTES = 2501 TREND ENTRIES
REMOTE TREND BUFFER
60 KBYTES
= 2591 TREND ENTRIES
= 2391 PER FRONT-END A
APPLICATION (excluding RACL)
+
100 PER FRONT-END B
= max. 100 KBYTES
+
100 PER FRONT-END C
Fig. 25. Adjustable remote trend buffer example (Excel 800)
Unused application memory can be used for storing additional remote trend entries.
In order to do so, the adjustment range for the application memory size is the
following.
Table 23. Adjustment range of application memory size
application memory size
maximum (default): 100 Kbyte
example: 80 Kbyte
trend values in remote trend buffer
2501
2936
3851
minimum: 38 Kbyte
MODEMFAQ
Detailed information and guidance can be obtained from the MODEMFAQ
document, which can be found on the following servers:
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MISCELLEANOUS
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
MISCELLEANOUS
Customize Windows Default Regional and Language Settings
In order to setup an Excel 5000 system that uses any language other than the
respective Windows default language, you must customize the Regional and
Language Options Settings in Windows as a prerequisite before working with
CARE / COACH and Excel Online / COACH Online. In addition, for a successful
application engineering, the controller must be equipped with the appropriate
firmware and XI582 with the appropriate EPROM.
For all settings to be done, please refer to the country and language settings table
that lists the settings for:
•
•
•
•
•
Windows
CARE / COACH
Excel Online / COACH Online
XI852 EPROM
Controller firmware
For information on coding special characters in Western, Eastern and Turkish
languages, please refer to the character settings tables following the country and
language settings table.
To customize Windows, refer to the procedure following the character settings
tables.
Table 24. HBS Country and Language Settings
Country
Windows Version /
CARE Country
Code / Location
Selection
Controllers with Internal Text MMI
Controllers with
Internal
Controllers with
External
XL Online
Regional and Language
Options Settings
Graphic MMI
XI581/2
XL 40
XL 50
XL 50
XL100/500/800
XL40A2MMI
XI40AI
XL50CH
XL50CY
XI581/2
XI581B/2B
(required
hardware)
XL50- MMI-xxxx
XL50D
(required
firmware)
XL50TW
XL50ACH
XL50ACY
XL50ATW
(required
firmware)
XL50A-MMI-xxxx
XL50A-UMMI-xxxx
(required
firmware)
Several
Arabic
Arabic
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
not supported
Western
Western
Western
Western
Cyrillic
(not supported)
Australia
Albania
Austria
Belgium
Bulgaria
Brazil
English (Australia)
Albanian
Australia
not supported
Austria
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
not supported
not supported
not supported
German (Austria)
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Dutch (Belgium),
French (Belgium)
Belgium
Russia
XL50L207.02C
or or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Bulgarian
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Portuguese (Brazil)
English (Canada)
Chinese (Simplified)
Brazil
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
Western
Canada
China
Canada
PR China
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-CH
CHINESE_
BIG5
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
MISCELLEANOUS
Country
Windows Version /
Regional and Language
Options Settings
CARE Country
Code / Location
Selection
Controllers with Internal Text MMI
Controllers with
Internal
Controllers with
XL Online
External
XI581/2
Graphic MMI
XL 40
XL 50
XL 50
XL100/500/800
XL40A2MMI
XI40AI
XL50CH
XL50CY
XI581/2
XI581B/2B
(required
hardware)
XL50- MMI-xxxx
XL50D
(required
firmware)
XL50TW
XL50ACH
XL50ACY
XL50ATW
(required
firmware)
XL50A-MMI-xxxx
XL50A-UMMI-xxxx
(required
firmware)
Croatia
Croatian
Czech
Slovakia
Slovakia
Denmark
Finland
France
Germany
Hebrew
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
Central
European
Czech
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Central
Republic
European
Denmark
Finland
France
Germany
Several
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Italy
Danish
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
Western
Western
Western
Western
Finnish
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
French
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
German
Hebrew
Hungarian
Icelandic
English (Ireland)
Italian
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Central
European
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
Western
Western
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Italy
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Japan
Korea
Several
Japanese
Korean
Japan
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
XI581B/2B-JP
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
Japanese
Western
Western
Korea
Several
Latin America
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Lithuania
Macedonia
Mexico
Lithuanian
not supported
Russia
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
Cyrillic
Macedonian
Spanish (Mexico)
French
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Cyrillic
Mexico
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
Western
Western
Western
Western
Morocco
France
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Nether-
lands
Dutch
Netherlands
New Zealand
Norway
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
New
English (New Zealand)
Norwegian
Polish
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Zealand
Norway
Poland
Portugal
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Slovakia
Portugal
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Central
European
Portuguese
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
61
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MISCELLEANOUS
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
Country
Windows Version /
CARE Country
Code / Location
Selection
Controllers with Internal Text MMI
Controllers with
Internal
Controllers with
External
XL Online
Regional and Language
Options Settings
Graphic MMI
XI581/2
XL 40
XL 50
XL 50
XL100/500/800
XL40A2MMI
XI40AI
XL50CH
XL50CY
XI581/2
XI581B/2B
(required
hardware)
XL50- MMI-xxxx
XL50D
(required
firmware)
XL50TW
XL50ACH
XL50ACY
XL50ATW
(required
firmware)
XL50A-MMI-xxxx
XL50A-UMMI-xxxx
(required
firmware)
Romania
Russia
Romanian
Russian
Slovakia
Russia
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
Central
European
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Cyrillic
Serbia
Serbian (Latin, Bosnia
and Herzegovina)
not supported
Slovakia
Slovakia
Spain
not supported
Cyrillic
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Slovak
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Central
European
Slovenian
Spanish
Swedish
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Central
European
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
Western
Western
Sweden
Switzerland
Sweden
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
German (Switzerland),
French (Switzerland),
Italian (Switzerland)
Switzerland
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Taiwan
Tunisia
Turkey
U.A.E.
Ukraine
Chinese (Taiwan)
Taiwan
France
Turkey
not supported
not supported
TW50L207.02C
or higher
XI581B/2B-TW
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
Thai
French
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
Turkish
Turkish
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Arabic (U.A.E.)
Ukrainian
Arabic
not supported
not supported
Cyrillic
(not supported)
Russia
EU50L207.02C
or higher
United
English (United Kingdom)
English
United Kingdom
United States
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
Western
Kingdom
United
States
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-TW
XI581B/2B-CH
XI581B/2B-JP
XI581B/2B-CY
TW50L207.02C or
higher
TW50L207.02C
or higher
XL50L207.02C or
higher
XL50L207.02C
or higher
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Table 25. CentraLine Country and Language Settings
Country
Windows Version /
Regional and Language
Options Settings
COACH
Country
Selection
Controllers with Internal Text MMI
Controllers with
Internal
Controllers with
COACH
Online
External
Graphic MMI
CLMMI00N2x
Tiger
Panther
Panther
Lion
CLTG38L11
CLTG00MMI
(required
CLPA13LC1x
CLPA13LM1x
CLPA21CM1x
CLPA21LC1x
CLPA21LM1x
(required
CLPA13LC2x
CLPA13LM2x
CLPA21LC2x
CLPA21LM2x
(required
CLMMI00N2x
(required
hardware)
firmware)
firmware)
firmware)
Several
Arabic
not supported
Australia
Albanian
Austria
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
not supported
Western
Western
Western
Western
Cyrillic
Australia
Albania
Austria
English (Australia)
Albanian
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
German (Austria)
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Belgium
Bulgaria
Dutch (Belgium),
French (Belgium)
Belgium
XL50L207.02C
or or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Bulgarian
Bulgaria
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Brazil
Portuguese (Brazil)
English (Canada)
Chinese (Simplified)
Croatian
not supported
not supported
not supported
Croatia
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
not supported
not supported
not supported
Canada
China
Croatia
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Central
European
Czech
Czech
Czech Republic
Denmark
Finland
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
Central
Republic
European
Denmark
Finland
France
Germany
Several
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Italy
Danish
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
Western
Western
Western
Western
Finnish
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
French
France
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
German
Hebrew
Hungarian
Icelandic
English (Ireland)
Italian
Germany
as desired
Hungary
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Central
European
Iceland
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
Western
Western
United Kingdom
Italy
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Japan
Japanese
Korean
not supported
not supported
Lithuania
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
not supported
not supported
Cyrillic
Korea
Lithuania
Lithuanian
EU50L207.02C
or higher
63
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
Country
Windows Version /
COACH
Country
Selection
Controllers with Internal Text MMI
Controllers with
Internal
Controllers with
External
COACH
Online
Regional and Language
Options Settings
Graphic MMI
CLMMI00N2x
Tiger
Panther
Panther
Lion
CLTG38L11
CLTG00MMI
(required
CLPA13LC1x
CLPA13LM1x
CLPA21CM1x
CLPA21LC1x
CLPA21LM1x
(required
CLPA13LC2x
CLPA13LM2x
CLPA21LC2x
CLPA21LM2x
(required
CLMMI00N2x
(required
hardware)
firmware)
firmware)
firmware)
Macedonia
Macedonian
Macedonia
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
XI581B/2B-EU
Cyrillic
Mexico
Spanish (Mexico)
French
not supported
Morocco
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
not supported
Western
Morocco
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Nether-
lands
Dutch
Netherlands
not supported
Norway
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
XI581B/2B-EU
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
Western
New
English (New Zealand)
Norwegian
Polish
not supported
not supported
Western
Zealand
Norway
Poland
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Poland
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Central
European
Portugal
Romania
Russia
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Portugal
Romania
Russia
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Central
European
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Cyrillic
Serbia
Serbian (Latin, Bosnia
and Herzegovina)
Serbia
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Cyrillic
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Slovak
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Central
European
Slovenian
Spanish
Swedish
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Central
European
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
Western
Western
Sweden
Switzerland
Sweden
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
German (Switzerland),
French (Switzerland),
Italian (Switzerland)
Switzerland
France
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
not supported
Taiwan
Tunisia
Chinese (Taiwan)
French
not supported
Tunisia
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
not supported
Western
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Turkey
U.A.E.
Ukraine
Turkish
Turkey
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
not supported
EU50L207.02C
or higher
XI581B/2B-EU
not supported
XI581B/2B-EU
XI581B/2B-EU
Turkish
Arabic (U.A.E.)
Ukrainian
U.A.E.
not supported
not supported
Cyrillic
(not supported)
Ukraine
EU50L207.02C
or higher
United
English (United Kingdom)
United Kingdom
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
Kingdom
EN2B-0092GE51 R0512
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
MISCELLEANOUS
Country
Windows Version /
Regional and Language
Options Settings
COACH
Country
Selection
Controllers with Internal Text MMI
Controllers with
Internal
Controllers with
COACH
Online
External
Graphic MMI
CLMMI00N2x
Tiger
Panther
Panther
Lion
CLTG38L11
CLTG00MMI
(required
CLPA13LC1x
CLPA13LM1x
CLPA21CM1x
CLPA21LC1x
CLPA21LM1x
(required
CLPA13LC2x
CLPA13LM2x
CLPA21LC2x
CLPA21LM2x
(required
CLMMI00N2x
(required
hardware)
firmware)
firmware)
firmware)
United
States
English
United Kingdom
XL50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C or
higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
EU50L207.02C
or higher
Western
TW50L207.02C
or higher
TW50L207.02C
or higher
TW50L207.02C
or higher
XL50L207.02C
or higher
XL50L207.02C
XL50L207.02C
Table 26. Character Settings (Western Europe)
Hex
Dec
Char Unicode
ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
20
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
2E
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
3A
40
41
42
32
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
46
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
64
65
66
32
SPACE
#
$
%
&
'
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
46
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
64
65
66
NUMBER SIGN
DOLLAR SIGN
PERCENT SIGN
AMPERSAND
APOSTROPHE
LEFT PARENTHESIS
RIGHT PARENTHESIS
FULL STOP
(
)
.
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
:
DIGIT ZERO
DIGIT ONE
DIGIT TWO
DIGIT THREE
DIGIT FOUR
DIGIT FIVE
DIGIT SIX
DIGIT SEVEN
DIGIT EIGHT
DIGIT NINE
COLON
@
A
B
COMMERCIAL AT
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER B
65
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MISCELLEANOUS
Hex
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
Dec
Char Unicode
ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
4A
4B
4C
4D
4E
4F
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
5A
5F
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
6A
6B
67
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
67
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER F
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER G
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER H
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER J
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER K
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER L
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER M
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER N
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER P
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Q
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER R
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER V
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER W
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER X
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Y
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z
LOW LINE
68
68
69
69
70
70
71
71
72
72
73
73
74
J
74
75
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
_
a
b
c
75
76
76
77
77
78
78
79
79
80
80
81
81
82
82
83
83
84
84
85
85
86
86
87
87
88
88
89
89
90
90
95
95
97
97
LATIN SMALL LETTER A
LATIN SMALL LETTER B
LATIN SMALL LETTER C
LATIN SMALL LETTER D
LATIN SMALL LETTER E
LATIN SMALL LETTER F
LATIN SMALL LETTER G
LATIN SMALL LETTER H
LATIN SMALL LETTER I
LATIN SMALL LETTER J
LATIN SMALL LETTER K
98
98
99
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
d
e
f
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
g
h
i
j
k
EN2B-0092GE51 R0512
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
MISCELLEANOUS
Hex
Dec
Char Unicode
ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
6C
6D
6E
6F
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
7A
7E
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
8A
8B
8C
8D
8E
8F
90
91
92
93
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
126
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
l
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
126
199
252
233
226
228
224
229
231
234
235
232
239
238
236
196
197
201
230
198
244
LATIN SMALL LETTER L
m
n
o
p
q
r
LATIN SMALL LETTER M
LATIN SMALL LETTER N
LATIN SMALL LETTER O
LATIN SMALL LETTER P
LATIN SMALL LETTER Q
LATIN SMALL LETTER R
s
t
LATIN SMALL LETTER S
LATIN SMALL LETTER T
u
v
w
x
y
z
~
Ç
ü
é
â
ä
à
å
ç
ê
ë
è
ï
LATIN SMALL LETTER U
LATIN SMALL LETTER V
LATIN SMALL LETTER W
LATIN SMALL LETTER X
LATIN SMALL LETTER Y
LATIN SMALL LETTER Z
TILDE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C WITH CEDILLA
LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER C WITH CEDILLA
LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH GRAVE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER AE
î
ì
Ä
Å
É
æ
Æ
ô
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER AE
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH CIRCUMFLEX
67
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MISCELLEANOUS
Hex
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
Dec
Char Unicode
ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
94
95
96
97
98
99
9A
9B
9D
9F
A0
A1
A2
A3
A4
A5
A8
B5
B6
B7
C6
C7
D0
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
DE
E0
E1
E2
E3
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
157
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
168
181
182
183
198
199
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
222
224
225
226
227
ö
ò
û
ù
ÿ
246
242
251
249
255
214
220
248
216
402
225
237
243
250
241
209
191
193
194
192
227
195
240
208
202
203
200
305
205
206
207
204
211
223
212
210
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER Y WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH STROKE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH STROKE
LATIN SMALL LETTER F WITH HOOK
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER N WITH TILDE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER N WITH TILDE
INVERTED QUESTION MARK
Ö
Ü
ø
Ø
ƒ
á
í
ó
ú
ñ
Ñ
¿
Á
Â
À
ã
Ã
ð
Ð
Ê
Ë
È
ı
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH TILDE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH TILDE
LATIN SMALL LETTER ETH
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER ETH
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER DOTLESS I
Í
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH GRAVE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S
Î
Ï
Ì
Ó
ß
Ô
Ò
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH GRAVE
EN2B-0092GE51 R0512
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EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
MISCELLEANOUS
Hex
Dec
Char Unicode
ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
E4
E5
E6
E7
E8
E9
EA
EB
EC
ED
EF
F8
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
239
248
õ
Õ
µ
þ
Þ
Ú
Û
Ù
ý
245
213
181
254
222
218
219
217
253
221
180
176
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH TILDE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH TILDE
MICRO SIGN
LATIN SMALL LETTER THORN
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER THORN
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER Y WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Y WITH ACUTE
ACUTE ACCENT
Ý
´
°
DEGREE SIGN
Table 27. Character Settings (Eastern Europe)
Hex
Dec
Char Unicode
ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
20
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
2E
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
3A
32
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
46
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
32
SPACE
#
$
%
&
'
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
46
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
NUMBER SIGN
DOLLAR SIGN
PERCENT SIGN
AMPERSAND
APOSTROPHE
LEFT PARENTHESIS
RIGHT PARENTHESIS
FULL STOP
(
)
.
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
:
DIGIT ZERO
DIGIT ONE
DIGIT TWO
DIGIT THREE
DIGIT FOUR
DIGIT FIVE
DIGIT SIX
DIGIT SEVEN
DIGIT EIGHT
DIGIT NINE
COLON
69
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MISCELLEANOUS
Hex
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
Dec
Char Unicode
ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
4A
4B
4C
4D
4E
4F
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
5A
5F
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
95
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
@
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
95
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
COMMERCIAL AT
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER B
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER F
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER G
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER H
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER J
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER K
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER L
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER M
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER N
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER P
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Q
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER R
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER V
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER W
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER X
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Y
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z
LOW LINE
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
_
a
LATIN SMALL LETTER A
LATIN SMALL LETTER B
LATIN SMALL LETTER C
LATIN SMALL LETTER D
LATIN SMALL LETTER E
LATIN SMALL LETTER F
LATIN SMALL LETTER G
LATIN SMALL LETTER H
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
EN2B-0092GE51 R0512
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MISCELLEANOUS
Hex
Dec
Char Unicode
ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
69
6A
6B
6C
6D
6E
6F
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
7A
7E
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
126
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
i
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
126
199
252
233
226
228
367
263
231
322
235
LATIN SMALL LETTER I
j
LATIN SMALL LETTER J
k
l
LATIN SMALL LETTER K
LATIN SMALL LETTER L
m
n
o
p
q
r
LATIN SMALL LETTER M
LATIN SMALL LETTER N
LATIN SMALL LETTER O
LATIN SMALL LETTER P
LATIN SMALL LETTER Q
LATIN SMALL LETTER R
s
t
LATIN SMALL LETTER S
LATIN SMALL LETTER T
u
v
w
x
y
z
~
Ç
ü
é
â
ä
ů
ć
ç
ł
LATIN SMALL LETTER U
LATIN SMALL LETTER V
LATIN SMALL LETTER W
LATIN SMALL LETTER X
LATIN SMALL LETTER Y
LATIN SMALL LETTER Z
TILDE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C WITH CEDILLA
LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH RING ABOVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER C WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER C WITH CEDILLA
LATIN SMALL LETTER L WITH STROKE
LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH DIAERESIS
ë
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH DOUBLE
ACUTE
8A
138
Ő
336
8B
8C
8D
8E
8F
139
140
141
142
143
ő
î
337
238
377
196
262
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH DOUBLE ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C WITH ACUTE
Ź
Ä
Ć
71
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MISCELLEANOUS
Hex
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
Dec
Char Unicode
ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
9A
9B
9C
9D
9F
A0
A1
A2
A3
A4
A5
A6
A7
A8
A9
AB
AC
AD
B5
B6
B7
B8
BD
BE
C6
C7
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
171
172
173
181
182
183
184
189
190
198
199
É
Ĺ
ĺ
201
313
314
244
246
317
318
346
347
214
220
356
357
321
269
225
237
243
250
260
261
381
382
280
281
378
268
351
193
194
282
350
379
380
258
259
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER L WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER L WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER L WITH CARON
LATIN SMALL LETTER L WITH CARON
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER S WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T WITH CARON
LATIN SMALL LETTER T WITH CARON
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER L WITH STROKE
LATIN SMALL LETTER C WITH CARON
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH OGONEK
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH OGONEK
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z WITH CARON
LATIN SMALL LETTER Z WITH CARON
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH OGONEK
LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH OGONEK
LATIN SMALL LETTER Z WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C WITH CARON
LATIN SMALL LETTER S WITH CEDILLA
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH CARON
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S WITH CEDILLA
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z WITH DOT ABOVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER Z WITH DOT ABOVE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH BREVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH BREVE
ô
ö
Ľ
ľ
Ś
ś
Ö
Ü
Ť
ť
Ł
č
á
í
ó
ú
Ą
ą
Ž
ž
Ę
ę
ź
Č
ş
Á
Â
Ě
Ş
Ż
ż
Ă
ă
EN2B-0092GE51 R0512
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MISCELLEANOUS
Hex
Dec
Char Unicode
ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
D0
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
DD
DE
E0
E1
E2
E3
E4
E5
E6
E7
E8
E9
EA
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
221
222
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
đ
Đ
Ď
Ë
ď
Ň
Í
273
272
270
203
271
327
205
206
283
354
366
211
223
212
323
324
328
352
353
340
218
341
LATIN SMALL LETTER D WITH STROKE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH STROKE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH CARON
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER D WITH CARON
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER N WITH CARON
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH CARON
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T WITH CEDILLA
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH RING ABOVE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S
Î
ě
Ţ
Ů
Ó
ß
Ô
Ń
ń
ň
Š
š
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER N WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER N WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER N WITH CARON
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S WITH CARON
LATIN SMALL LETTER S WITH CARON
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER R WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER R WITH ACUTE
Ŕ
Ú
ŕ
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH DOUBLE
ACUTE
EB
235
Ű
368
EC
ED
EE
F8
236
237
238
248
251
252
253
ý
Ý
ţ
253
221
355
176
369
344
345
LATIN SMALL LETTER Y WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Y WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER T WITH CEDILLA
DEGREE SIGN
°
FB
FC
FD
ű
Ř
ř
LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH DOUBLE ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER R WITH CARON
LATIN SMALL LETTER R WITH CARON
Table 28. Character Settings (Turkey)
Hex
Dec
Char Unicode ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
20
23
32
35
32
35
SPACE
#
NUMBER SIGN
73
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MISCELLEANOUS
Hex
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
Dec
Char Unicode ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
24
25
26
27
28
29
2E
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
3A
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
4A
4B
4C
4D
4E
4F
50
51
36
37
38
39
40
41
46
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
$
%
&
'
36
37
38
39
40
41
46
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
DOLLAR SIGN
PERCENT SIGN
AMPERSAND
APOSTROPHE
(
LEFT PARENTHESIS
RIGHT PARENTHESIS
FULL STOP
)
.
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
:
DIGIT ZERO
DIGIT ONE
DIGIT TWO
DIGIT THREE
DIGIT FOUR
DIGIT FIVE
DIGIT SIX
DIGIT SEVEN
DIGIT EIGHT
DIGIT NINE
COLON
@
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
COMMERCIAL AT
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER B
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER F
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER G
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER H
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER J
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER K
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER L
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER M
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER N
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER P
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Q
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
EN2B-0092GE51 R0512
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MISCELLEANOUS
Hex
Dec
Char Unicode ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
5A
5F
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
6A
6B
6C
6D
6E
6F
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
7A
82
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
_
a
b
c
d
e
f
82
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER R
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER V
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER W
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER X
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Y
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z
LOW LINE
83
83
84
84
85
85
86
86
87
87
88
88
89
89
90
90
95
95
97
97
LATIN SMALL LETTER A
LATIN SMALL LETTER B
LATIN SMALL LETTER C
LATIN SMALL LETTER D
LATIN SMALL LETTER E
LATIN SMALL LETTER F
LATIN SMALL LETTER G
LATIN SMALL LETTER H
LATIN SMALL LETTER I
LATIN SMALL LETTER J
LATIN SMALL LETTER K
LATIN SMALL LETTER L
LATIN SMALL LETTER M
LATIN SMALL LETTER N
LATIN SMALL LETTER O
LATIN SMALL LETTER P
LATIN SMALL LETTER Q
LATIN SMALL LETTER R
LATIN SMALL LETTER S
LATIN SMALL LETTER T
LATIN SMALL LETTER U
LATIN SMALL LETTER V
LATIN SMALL LETTER W
LATIN SMALL LETTER X
LATIN SMALL LETTER Y
LATIN SMALL LETTER Z
98
98
99
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
o
p
q
r
s
t
u
v
w
x
y
z
75
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MISCELLEANOUS
Hex
EXCEL 50/100/500/600/800
Dec
Char Unicode ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
7E
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
8A
8B
8C
8D
8E
8F
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
9A
9B
9D
9E
9F
A0
A1
A2
A3
126
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
~
Ç
ü
é
126
199
252
233
TILDE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C WITH CEDILLA
LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER C WITH CEDILLA
LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN SMALL LETTER DOTLESS I
âyyy 226
ä
à
å
ç
228
224
229
231
234
235
232
239
238
305
196
197
201
230
198
244
246
242
251
249
304
214
220
248
216
350
351
225
237
243
250
ê
ë
è
ï
î
ı
Ä
Å
É
æ
Æ
ô
ö
ò
û
ù
İ
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER AE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER AE
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH GRAVE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH DOT ABOVE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH STROKE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH STROKE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S WITH CEDILLA
LATIN SMALL LETTER S WITH CEDILLA
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH ACUTE
Ö
Ü
ø
Ø
Ş
ş
á
í
ó
ú
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Hex
Dec
Char Unicode ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Character Name
A4
A5
A6
A7
A8
B5
B6
B7
C6
C7
D2
D3
D4
D6
D7
D8
DE
E0
E1
E2
E3
E4
E5
E6
E9
EA
EB
EC
ED
F8
164
165
166
167
168
181
182
183
198
199
210
211
212
214
215
216
222
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
233
234
235
236
237
248
ñ
Ñ
Ğ
ğ
¿
Á
Â
À
ã
Ã
Ê
Ë
È
Í
241
209
286
287
191
193
194
192
227
195
202
203
200
205
206
207
204
211
223
212
210
245
213
181
218
219
217
236
255
176
LATIN SMALL LETTER N WITH TILDE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER N WITH TILDE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER G WITH BREVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER G WITH BREVE
INVERTED QUESTION MARK
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH TILDE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH TILDE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH GRAVE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH DIAERESIS
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH GRAVE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH ACUTE
LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S
Î
Ï
Ì
Ó
ß
Ô
Ò
õ
Õ
µ
Ú
Û
Ù
ì
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH TILDE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH TILDE
MICRO SIGN
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH ACUTE
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH CIRCUMFLEX
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH GRAVE
LATIN SMALL LETTER Y WITH DIAERESIS
DEGREE SIGN
ÿ
°
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Procedure
1. In Windows, click Start>Settings>Control panel.
2. Double-click Regional and Language Options. The Regional and Language
Options dialog box displays.
3. On the Regional Options tab under Standards and formats, select the
language for displaying standards and formats such as format numbers,
currencies, dates, and time.
4. Under Location, select the matching country for supporting you with local
services such as news and weather.
5. Select the Languages tab.
6. If you want to support Arabic, Armenian, Georgian, Thai, Hebrew, Indic, Thai
and Vietnamese languages, check Install files for complex script and right-
to-left languages (including Thai).
7. If you want to support Japanese, Chinese and Korean languages, check Install
files for East Asian languages under Supplemental language support.
8. Make sure that you have the necessary harddisk space indicated in the
message boxes displayed. Close the message boxes by clicking OK.
After confirming by clicking OK or Apply, the additional files will be installed on
the PC.
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9. After successful installation, repeat steps 1 through 5, and then proceed with
step 10.
10. Click Details button. The Text Services and Input Languages dialog box
displays. The actual input language is selected in Default input language and
the corresponding installed services are highlighted in bold under Installed
services.
11. To add a new input language, click the Add button. The Add Input Language
dialog box displays.
12. In Input Language, select the language, in this case Italian. Check/select
optional settings for Keyboard layout/IME, Handwriting recognition and Speech
if available and if desired.
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13. Click OK. The new language and its services are added to the Installed
Services list and can be selected as default input language.
14. In Default input language, select the language, in this case Italian.
15. In the Text Services and Input Languages dialog box, click the Language bar
button. The Language Bar Settings dialog box displays. Check Show the
Language bar on the desktop and Show additional Language bar icons in
the task bar. These enabled options allow toggling between several
language(s) on the desktop and in the taskbar after the customization is
finished.
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16. Click OK.
17. In the Text Services and Input Languages dialog box, click OK, and then select
the Advanced tab in the Regional and Language Options dialog box.
18. In Language for non-Unicode programs, select the language, in this case
Italian.
19. Click OK to save all settings. The Advanced message box may display.
20. Follow the instructions described in the message box, and close the message
box. The Change Regional Options message box displays.
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21. Restart the PC by clicking Yes. After restart, the new language, in this case
Italian is added to the Language bar.
22. Check the language in the Language bar.
23. For selecting the language in CARE, COACH, XL-Online respectively in
COACH Online, please refer to the corresponding Online Help and/or PDF
documentation.
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INDEX
INDEX
Status Text, 11, 24
Subtype, 31
alarms
alarm definition, 17
Suppress Alarm, 15
Suppress Point, 33
Switch Down, 29
alarm delay, 17
alarm handling, 45
alarm hysteresis, 21
Switching Down, 33
Switch-On Counter, 34
Technical Address, 11, 34
Totalizer, 16
alarm status, 45
alarm suppression, 17, 18, 33, 46, 50
alarm type, 16, 17
alarms sent across the system bus, 51
automatic/manual alarms, 30, 31, 45
data storage, 51
point alarms, 17, 31, 45
specifying a maintenance alarm, 27, 45
specifying alarm limit values, 19
system alarm Totalizer Overflow, 25
system alarms, 46
Trend Cycle, 35
Trend Hysteresis, 22, 36
Trend Logging, 34
User Address, 36
Value, 12, 13, 36, 56
Write Protection, 37
communication, 53
Excel IRC, 56
PC communication, 56
remote communication, 56
system bus, 53
user program alarms, 51
attributes
Access, 22
Access Level, 13
data-points, 9
flexible data-points, 10, 13, 18, 20, 24, 28, 29, 31, 32,
33, 36
Acknowledge Alarm, 13
Active State, 14, 16, 20, 28, 45
Alarm Delay, 15
global data-points, 11
mapped data-points, 12, 28, 34
physical data-points, 9
pseudo data-points, 10
Distributed I/O modules, 30
initialization, 55
Alarm Hysteresis, 21, 23
Alarm Status, 13, 15, 16, 31, 56
Broadcast Hysteresis, 23
Cycle Count, 18
Delay Time Switching Down, 18
Delay Time Switching Up, 18
Descriptor, 19
XFL522, 30
XFL524, 30
XFR522, 55
Engineering Unit, 19
Feedback Delay, 19
High Alarm Limit, 20
High Warning Limit, 20
Hours Run, 20
XFR522A, 55
XFR524, 55
XFR524A, 55
Hours Run Log, 20
MODEMFAQ, 59
I/O Characteristic, 25
Interval Count, 24, 45
Interval Limit, 25
Last Change, 26
Last Maintained, 20
pseudo data-points, 10
pseudo analog points, 11, 19, 21, 27, 35, 45
pseudo digital points, 11, 15, 16, 45
pseudo point multistage data-points, 11
pseudo totalizer inputs, 11
remote communication
direct modem connection, 56
disabling dial-out, 56
Low Alarm Limit, 20
Low Warning Limit, 20
Maintenance Alarm, 15, 16, 21, 27
Maintenance Interval, 45
Manual Value, 13, 56
Max. Limit, 16, 31
test mode, 53
time programs, 41
annual program, 42
Min. Limit, 16, 31
daily program, 41
Motor Run Time, 29
generating a time program, 43
special day list, 43
structure of, 41
Network Variable, 28
Normally Open/Normally Closed, 16, 24, 28, 45
Off Phase, 29
TODAY function, 43
Operating Mode, 13, 15, 16, 27, 29, 30, 56
Output Type, 31
weekly program, 42
user addresses, 36
Point in Alarm, 17
access via, 10
Pulse Duration, 32
Remote, 30
Scaling Factor, 31, 32
Sensor Offset, 33
assignable to each of 384 data-points, 19
default user addresses, 53
number of switching points per, 42
relationship between user addresses and descriptors, 19
83
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Manufactured for and on behalf of the Environmental and Combustion Controls Division of Honeywell Technologies Sàrl, Rolle, Z.A. La Pièce 16, Switzerland by its Authorized Representative:
Automation and Control Solutions
Honeywell GmbH
Böblinger Straße 17
D-71101 Schönaich
Phone: (49) 7031 63701
Fax: (49) 7031 637493
Subject to change without notice. Printed in Germany
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