will try to detect a service button press before declaring the attempt unsuccessful and returning to the main screen. To commission the device, the Neuron ID must be sent during the Wait Time duration.

After you enter a wait time in hours:minutes:seconds format and press , the Wait Time duration begins.

All that is left to do is to press the service button on the device to be commissioned.

CAUTION: When the E2’s Wait Time dura- tion begins, the E2 will accept the first Neuron ID code it receives. Be sure that no other ser-

vice buttons on any devices on the network are being pressed during the Wait Time. Since the service button on the CC-100 is its Hand-held Terminal jack, be sure that no one has a Hand-held Terminal plugged into a CC-100 other than the one being commissioned.

The location of the service button and the method of pressing it depends on the device or controller being com- missioned.

The CC-100’s Service Button

Since the CC-100 is meant to remain in an enclosure, the CC100’s Hand-Held Terminal jack has been config- ured to act as the service button. Plugging a Hand-Held Terminal into the jack simulates a service button press.

The Hand-Held Terminal Jack is on the left side of the case controller next to the power cable harness connec- tion. To send the Neuron ID, plug a Hand-Held Terminal into the jack and hold it in for five seconds.

The TD3’s Service Button

Figure 10-29- TD3 Service Button Location

The service button on the TD3 is located on the front panel (Figure 10-29). Of the two buttons on the face, the commissioning button is the one on the right. To send the Neuron ID, press and hold this button down for five sec- onds.

The ESR8’s Service Button

(DISCONTINUED)

Figure 10-30- ESR8 Service Button Location

The service button on the ESR8 is located on the right hand side of the board directly below the termination jumper (Figure 10-30). To send the Neuron ID, press and hold this button down for five seconds.

Commissioning the EC-2

The EC-2 can be commissioned by pressing the UP ARROW key on the EC-2 front panel and holding it for five seconds.

10.14.2.2 The Manual ID Entry Method

The Manual ID Entry Method involves entering each device’s twelve-digit ID number by hand. When entered, the E2 searches the network and tries to match the ID number to the device. When the E2 finds this device, the commissioning process is completed.

The easiest way to set up a multiple-node store using the Manual ID Entry Method is to arrange all network devices into a list that shows each device’s name, subnet and node address, controller type, and corresponding Neu- ron ID number. Once this list is complete, each device may be commissioned one at a time from the E2 front panel.

To make a list of network devices, follow the steps below:

1.For each record set up in the Controller Network Configuration/Status Screen, write down the con- tents of each device’s Controller Name, Model, Subnet, and Node fields on a sheet of paper. If desired, you may also include the model or serial numbers of the units that will be controlled, as well as a physical location.

2.When step 1 is complete, go to where each device on the list is installed and locate each device’s Neuron ID sticker. Every Echelon-compatible device available from Emerson Retail Solutions has a sticker on its enclosure that shows the unit’s Neuron ID number. Each sticker also has a perfo-

10-18 E2 RX/BX/CX I&O Manual

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Emerson E2 operation manual Manual ID Entry Method, CC-100’s Service Button, TD3’s Service Button, ESR8’s Service Button