Chapter 5 Remote Interface Reference

Alarm System Overview

Alarm System Overview

See also “Alarm Limits” in chapter 4 starting on page 122.

The instrument has four alarms which you can configure to alert you when a reading exceeds specified limits on a channel during a scan. You can assign a high limit, a low limit, or both to any configured channel in the scan list. You can assign multiple channels to any of the four available alarms (numbered 1 through 4). For example, you can configure the instrument to generate an alarm on the Alarm 1 output when a limit is exceeded on any of channels 103, 205, or 320.

You can also assign alarms to channels on the multifunction module. For example, you can generate an alarm when a specific bit pattern or bit pattern change is detected on a digital input channel or when a specific count is reached on a totalizer channel. With the multifunction module, the channels do not have to be part of the scan list to generate an alarm. For complete details, see “Using Alarms With the Multifunction Module” on page 130.

Alarm data can be stored in one of two locations depending on whether

a scan is running when the alarm occurs.

 

5

1. If an alarm event occurs on a channel as it is being scanned, then

 

that channel’s alarm status is stored in vy” z

as the

 

readings are taken. Each reading that is outside the specified alarm

limits is logged in memory. You can store up to 50,000 readings in

 

memory during a scan. You can read the contents of reading memory

at any time, even during a scan. Reading memory

cleared when

you read it.

 

 

2. As alarm events are generated, they are also logged in an v z

,

which is separate from reading memory. This is the

place where

non-scanned alarms get logged (alarms during a monitor, alarms generated by the multifunction module, etc.). Up to 20 alarms can be logged in the alarm queue. If more than 20 alarm events are generated, they will be lost (only the first 20 alarms are saved). Even if the alarm queue is full, the alarm status is still stored in reading memory during a scan. The alarm queue is cleared by the *CLS (clear status) command, when power is cycled, and by reading all of the entries.

A Factory Reset (*RST command) yz

clear the alarm queue.

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HP 34970A manual Alarm System Overview, See also Alarm Limits in starting on