63230-300-212 Listof Figures
April 2001
vii
© 2001 Schneider Electr ic All Rights Reser ved
Figure 31: Arrowonthedisplayscreen........................ 10
Figure 32: Displaybuttons.................................. 10
Figure 33: Partsofamenu................................. 11
Figure 34: MenuoptionsontheMainMenu.................... 12
Figure 35: Menusthatcanbepasswordprotected............... 27
Figure 36: PerformingresetsfromtheResetmenu .............. 37
Figure 37: Viewing metered data on the Meters and Min/Max
menus......................................... 38
Figure 38: ViewAlarmsmenu............................... 41
Figure 39: DiagnosticsMenuaccessedfromtheMain Menu....... 44
Figure 310: Wiring Error Test option on the Diagnostics menu. ...... 45
Figure 41: Powerfactormin/maxexample..................... 54
Figure 42: Reactive PowerVARsignconvention............... 55
Figure 43: BlockIntervalDemandExamples ................... 58
Figure 44: ThermalDemandExample......................... 60
Figure 45: PredictedDemandExample........................ 60
Figure 46: Channel pulse metering example. . .................. 63
Figure 47: Reactive energyaccumulatesinfourquadrants........ 65
Figure 51: Demandsynchpulsetiming........................ 72
Figure 52: Analoginputexample............................. 74
Figure 53: Two-wirepulsetrain.............................. 79
Figure 54: Three-wirepulsetrain............................. 79
Figure 55: Analogoutputexample............................ 82
Figure 61: Samplealarm logentry........................... 86
Figure 62: How the circuit monitor handles setpoint-drivenalarms . . . 86
Figure 63: Two alarms set up for the same quantity with different
pickup and dropoutset points 87
Figure 71: Memoryallocationexample....................... 104
Figure 72: MemoryallocationinSMS........................ 105
Figure 81: Event capture initiated from a high-speed input. . ...... 112
Figure 91: A fault can cause voltage sag on the whole system. . . . . 115
Figure 92: Waveform showing voltage sag, which was caused by a
remote faultand lasted five cycles. 115
Figure 93: OnboardFilestab............................... 118
Figure 94: OnboardAlarms/Eventstab....................... 118
Figure 95: Eventlogentriesexample........................ 119
Figure 96: Samplealarm logentry.......................... 119
Figure 101: Memorychiplocationinthecircuitmonitor ........... 123
Figure A1: Bitsinaregister................................ 128
Figure A2: Powerfactorregisterformat....................... 128
Figure B1: CommandInterfacePointerRegisters............... 182
Figure B2: IdentifyingI/Os for the command interface............ 186
Figure B3: IncrementEnergyExample ....................... 189
LIST OF FIGURES