Section 5. Programming
5-29
The Custom Stack format gives you the ability to send several pages from one capcode. The
number of pages per stack is determined by the number of capcodes and messages that may
be in the stack, which is limited the block of memory reserved for each stack. There is a
worksheet at the end of Section 7 that can be used to determine whether or not all the
pages/messages you wish to send can be fit into a single stack. Stacks may be linked if
additional capacity is needed for a single transmission. Formats may be mixed within a stack
and display formats may be sent with or without messages.
x
Each Custom Stack capcode may be from 1 to 4 digits long, and one unnumbered stack
can be programmed for each leading digit assigned this format.
x
Formats may be freely mixed within a stack and numerical messages may be stored in a
stack for display paging formats.
x
Up to 41 Custom Stacks can be entered. Available memory sets the real limit on the
number of stacks. Use the worksheet in Section 7.
x
Each stack can have one of the four Alert tones assigned to follow the stack page, as
well as Talk time. These may both be disabled.
The process of programming a fixed stack starts at the “St” prompt. The number entered at
this prompt identifies the fixed stack in the same way a cap code identifies an individual
page. (To program an unnumbered stack, for single key stack paging, press the “*” key
instead of entering a number.) Next, the encoder will prompt for which Alert tone to use and
whether or not a Talk time will be provided at the end. The prompt “CAP” indicates that the
encoder is ready for the first pager capcode. Enter the leading digit for the format required
followed by the individual capcode, then press ENTER. To fill out the rest of the stack after
entering the first capcode, you continue entering leading digits and capcodes, pressing
ENTER after each one. You can string stacks together by placing the leading digit and stack
number of the next stack to be sent in the last capcode position of the stack you are
programming. Pressing the CLEAR key at any time during this process will cancel all
programming done up to this point and return the encoder to the “St” prompt.
To terminate the programming of a stack while there are still capcode positions left open,
press the ENTER key at the “CAP” prompt without entering a capcode first. The encoder
will return to the “St” prompt.
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