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11.. . A
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NOTE: After changing any of the following settings,
the Tracking session must be Stopped (click on the
Stop Sign Button) and restarted (Green Flag).
Changing any of the following settings during a
Tracking session will result in a refresh of the
display and clearing of buffered data.
DIALOG CONFIGURATION OPTIONS:
Time Display Formats
Time is displayed on the horizontal axis and can be set for either Elapsed time since the
start of the Track session (the default), or Absolute, in which the absolute calendar date
and time is displayed. To select Absolute, click on the Display Absolute Date/Time
check-box.
Channel Ranges
The data channels are scaled and plotted per a single amplitude axis on the left edge of
the plot. Upon start of a Trend Tracking session, the range for all channels defaults to +/-
1000.
A Min. and Max. value for each channel can be set by editing the appropriate text boxes.
If all of the channels have the same Min/Max values, then the vertical axis will reflect this
range. For example if 4 channels of room temperature are being logged, all of the 4
channels could be set for 50 to 70 and the vertical axis would reflect this approximate
range.
If the Channels have different Min/Max settings, the vertical axis will default to display as
0 to 100% of the range specified.
Sample Buffer
As data is received by the Trending icon, it is buffered temporarily in PC memory.
Eventually, the buffer fills and the oldest data is deleted as new data is added (FIFO). The
amount of data that is buffered in the PC is set in the Trending Configuration dialog by
editing the Sample Buffer text box.
Plot Period
The amount of data that is displayed in the Trending Window is set by editing the Plot
Period setting in the Configuration Dialog. Older data (that has not rolled out of the
buffer... see above) is still accessible after it has scrolled out of the window by clicking on
the scroll bar buttons on the lower edge of the window.
Summary of Contents for OMP-MODL
Page 1: ......
Page 9: ...1 INTRODUCTION USING THE MODULOGGER 1 7 13 ...
Page 23: ...2 OMP MODL System Base Using the OMP MODL 2 14 NOTES ...
Page 24: ...2 ModuLogger System Base Using the ModuLogger 2 1 ...
Page 30: ...3 INTERFACE MODULES USING THE OMP MODL 3 6 NOTES ...
Page 70: ...3 INTERFACE MODULES USING THE OMP MODL 3 46 NOTES ...
Page 76: ...3 INTERFACE MODULES USING THE OMP MODL 3 52 NOTES ...
Page 82: ...3 INTERFACE MODULES USING THE OMP MODL 3 58 NOTES ...
Page 83: ...3 INTERFACE MODULES USING THE MODULOGGER 3 1 ...
Page 105: ...5 HYPERCOMM COMMUNICATIONS USING THE OMP MODL 5 18 NOTES ...
Page 106: ...5 HYPERCOMM COMMUNICATIONS USING THE MODULOGGER 5 1 ...
Page 117: ...6 PCMCIA CARD CONFIGURATION AND USE USING THE MODULOGGER 6 1 ...
Page 134: ...7 HYPERNET ICON BASED PROGRAMMING USING THE OMP MODL 7 17 NOTES ...
Page 141: ...8 P P C D U OMP MODL ...
Page 149: ...9 HYPERPLOT GRAPHIC DATA DISPLAY USING THE OMP MODL 9 8 ...
Page 161: ...10 HYPERTRACK REAL TIME DATA DISPLAY USING THE OMP MODL 10 12 NOTES ...
Page 162: ...10 HYPERTRACK REAL TIME DATA DISPLAY USING THE OMP MODL 10 1 ...
Page 163: ...11 APPENDICES USING THE OMP MODL 11 1 11 APPENDICES ...
Page 164: ...11 APPENDICES USING THE OMP MODL 11 2 NOTES ...
Page 270: ...11 APPENDIX A MASTER ICON FILE REFERENCE USING THE OMP MODL 11 108 ...
Page 276: ...11 APPENDIX C HYPERWARE FILE LISTING USING THE OMP MODL 11 114 NOTES ...
Page 278: ...11 APPENDIX C HYPERWARE FILE LISTING USING THE OMP MODL 11 116 NOTES ...
Page 279: ......
Page 282: ...11 APPENDIX E CHANGING THE OMP MODL EPROM USING THE OMP MODL 11 120 NOTES ...
Page 288: ...11 APPENDIX G HYPERNET THEORY OF OPERATION USING THE OMP MODL 11 126 NOTES ...
Page 290: ...11 APPENDIX I RS 232 CABLE PORT AND ADAPTER USING THE OMP MODL 11 128 NOTES ...
Page 297: ...11 APPENDIX K MODEM CONFIGURATION USING THE OMP MODL 11 135 ...