background image

HID Corporation, 9292 Jeronimo Road, Irvine, CA 92618-1905, USA  •  Tel: (949) 598-1600, (800) 237-7769, Fax: (949) 598-1690 

http://www.hidcorp.com 

MaxiProx DFM Reader Installation Manual 5375-901 Rev D 

Page 

13 of 20

 

 

 

Chapter 3  Installation Notes and Guidelines 

3.1 

3.1   Power Supply

Power Supply  

The recommended power supply is 12 or 24VDC, nominal, 2.0A current rating, linear regulated.  The 
MaxiProx cycles through varying power stages and has a peak current demand of approximately 1.2A 
when in long range read mode.  Average current consumption is about 260mA. 

Failure to provide an 

adequate current capacity power supply will result in reduced read range.  

CAUTION! 

The shunt jumper P2 is not installed as the factory default for +24VDC operation.  If the jumper is in the 
+12 VDC position and +21 to +28.5 VDC is applied, circuit damage can result. 

The use of a Power Switching Supply is not recommended for two reasons: 

(1)  This type of supply does not provide adequate response to rapid transient current loads and also 

generates radio frequency (RF) interference in the same band that the Reader receives data and; 

(2)  The power supply may generate noise that is large enough to be transmitted or conducted to the 

MaxiProx that interferes with the reception of a card signal. Some switching power supplies are not 
able to provide adequate regulation to the MaxiProx Reader. 

3.2 

3.2   Installation near Metal

Installation near Metal  

Read range will be reduced if located on metal surfaces or in the vicinity of metal objects. The amount 
of reduction will be a factor of the amount of metal and the distance the Reader is from the metal. Metal 
near the Reader absorbs energy from the Reader excite field and affects the signal being received from 
the card by re-directing excite field transmissions into the receiver circuitry. Moving the Reader away 
from the metal objects reduces energy loss. 

Try to limit the amount of metallic materials installed near the MaxiProx. Use a plastic electrical box if 
possible. Avoid installing conduit and other metal hardware within 2-inches of the back of the Reader 
or closer than 4-inches from large metal surfaces. The typical read distance specification (24-29 inches 
at 21-28.5 VDC or 21-26 inches at 12 VDC) refers to operation without metal in the vicinity of the 
Reader. The read distance will be reduced if metal is installed nearby. 

The MaxiProx generates a magnetic field on all sides of the Reader. Any metal that conducts electricity, 
especially metal that contains iron, steel or copper will interfere with the field and reduce the effective 
read range (this will happen even if the metal is behind the Reader). It helps to put a non-metallic 
spacer between the Reader and the metal object.  

3.3 

3.3   Radio Fre

Radio Fre quency Interference

quency Interference  

Motors and electronic devices generate RF noise that may interfere with the reception of the signal 
from a transponder. The affect of RF noise is typically a reduction of read range. The MaxiProx is 
susceptible to RF interference, as are all devices that receive RF signals. The read range is affected by 
the amount of interference (noise) in the area. Common sources of RF interference are power supplies, 
electrical and electronic equipment, some types of lighting, computers and monitors,  motors and 
generators. Moving the Reader to a location known to be free of interference and testing read range 
there will help to isolate RF interference as a factor in low read range situations.  

Проектирование

Монтаж

Продажа

. - http://vskd.ru

Summary of Contents for MaxiProx 5375A

Page 1: ...Irvine CA 92618 1905 USA Tel 949 598 1600 800 237 7769 Fax 949 598 1690 http www hidcorp com MaxiProx DFM Reader Installation Manual 5375 901 Rev D Page 1 of 20 Installation Manual 5375 901 Rev D Maxi...

Page 2: ...WER SUPPLY 10 2 12 AUTOTUNE OPERATION 10 2 13 READER TESTING 10 2 14 POWER UP TUNE 10 2 15 PERIODIC AUTOTUNE 10 2 16 SUPERVISOR MODE 10 2 17 INSTALL COVER 10 CHAPTER 3 INSTALLATION NOTES AND GUIDELINE...

Page 3: ...598 1690 http www hidcorp com MaxiProx DFM Reader Installation Manual 5375 901 Rev D Page 3 of 20 FIGURES FIGURE 1 MAXIPROX FRONT VIEW 11 FIGURE 2 MAXIPROX INTERIOR VIEW SHOWING MOUNTING HOLE LOCATIO...

Page 4: ...ual 5375 901 Rev D Page 4 of 20 TABLES TABLE 1 TB1 CONNECTOR DEFINITION 7 TABLE 2 TB2 CONNECTOR DEFINITION 7 TABLE 3 DIPSWITCH AND JUMPER SETTINGS 8 TABLE 4 INTERFACE JUMPERS DESCRIPTION P3 AND P4 8 T...

Page 5: ...Transponders Proximity Cards or ProxKeys are presented to the front of the MaxiProx The LED is red when ready to read a transponder The LED turns green and the beeper sounds when the transponder is r...

Page 6: ...meter 40 inches to another MaxiProx 2 3 2 3 Mounting Applications Mounting Applications The MaxiProx may be mounted to a gooseneck that is 1 inch in diameter with a 4 inch diameter mounting flange wit...

Page 7: ...ear of the MaxiProx Feed the cable through the cable fitting Connect the wires to the terminal strip with the minimum length necessary Do not leave extra loops of wire inside the Reader housing Connec...

Page 8: ...sh after valid card read 6 Single Dual external LED Off Off single line LED control On dual line LED control 7 Serial Baud 1 control Off See baud rate chart below 8 Serial Baud 2 control Off See Baud...

Page 9: ...e control line is necessary If ON it is in Dual Mode and the LED is normally off two control lines are necessary for host control of red and green 5 SW5 3 Terminating Resistor Some RS422 connections r...

Page 10: ...e additional flash beep is the correct sequence for Green Flash Beep on valid read SW1 5 off Three initial green flashes and beeps followed by a pause and then one additional beep indicate no Green Fl...

Page 11: ...onimo Road Irvine CA 92618 1905 USA Tel 949 598 1600 800 237 7769 Fax 949 598 1690 http www hidcorp com MaxiProx DFM Reader Installation Manual 5375 901 Rev D Page 11 of 20 Figure 1 MaxiProx Front Vie...

Page 12: ...NT TB2 9 TX TB2 8 TX 1 3 P2 5 1 TB1 9 1 TB2 P1 1 3 P4 3 1 1 3 P3 SHUNT PINS 2 AND 3 21 28 5 VDC DEFAULT SHUNT PINS 1 AND 2 11 20 VDC SW1 SW2 SW5 SW5 1 SW5 2 SW5 3 SW5 4 SW5 5 SW5 6 SW5 7 SW5 8 DATA 1...

Page 13: ...orbs energy from the Reader excite field and affects the signal being received from the card by re directing excite field transmissions into the receiver circuitry Moving the Reader away from the meta...

Page 14: ...ess control cards 3 4 3 4 Transponder Types Transponder Types The type of transponder used affects the read range of the MaxiProx The various styles of HID cards and transponders use different types o...

Page 15: ...s Code Format 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 P1 C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C P2 Parity Format 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2...

Page 16: ...Logic Levels Voltage Data Outputs Data0 and Data1 Control Inputs LED s Hold Beeper Levels Minimum Maximum Minimum Maximum Voh 3 5V 5 5V 3 5V 5 5V Vol 0 0V 0 5V 0 0V 0 5V Ioh 0 0mA 5 0mA 1 0mA 0 0mA I...

Page 17: ...ed on Track 2 are 40 this product will output less than 40 characters The data consists only of BCD digits the remaining HEX digits A to F are used for the start and end sentinel data separators and c...

Page 18: ...tripe card traveling at 8 9 inches per second The timing is to be adjustable for cards traveling at 4 inches per second to 20 inches per second This relates to bit times of 3 3 ms and 666us respective...

Page 19: ...essage iiii LRC of nibbles aaaa to hhhh start B and end sentinel F xor of the nibbles or the even parity of the respective column The output from the Reader will look like the following 1248p 1248p 12...

Page 20: ...ue 7 is sent as an ASCII character 7 or the hex value E is sent as an ASCII character E The CC field is reserved for use by HID Corporation The valid values are 00 through 7F The DDDDDDDDDD field is t...

Page 21: ...ttp www hidcorp com MaxiProx DFM Reader Installation Manual 5375 901 Rev D Page 21 of 20 The checksum was computed by adding 00 01 23 4A BC DE 208 hex The checksum is the least significant 8 bits of t...

Reviews: