4661337c.bk ITI CS 5000 Install & User Manual 1999

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In t e r a c t iv e T e c h n o l o g ie s , In c .
CS5000
In sta lla tio n /O p e ra tio n M a n u a l
CS-5000 Central Station Receiver
CS-5000
Central Station Receiver
Installation and Users
Manual
Interactive Technologies, Inc.
2266 North Second Street
North Saint Paul, MN 55109
1-800-777-1415
For reprints, order manual 86-015
which includes:
466-1337 Rev. C (Manual Text)
466-1558 (Change Pages, if applicable)
466-1336 (Release Notes, if applicable)
Copyright© 1999, ITI
Printed in the USA
i
Contents
Section 1
System Overview ........................................... 1-1
Features ..................................................................1-1
Hardware Features ..........................................1-1
Software Features ...........................................1-2
Optional Accessories .............................................1-2
Formats Compatible with the CS-5000 .................1-3
CS-5000 Supported SIA Digital I-III Levels .........1-4
Using this Manual ..................................................1-4
Basic Terms Used in this Manual ..........................1-5
What’s in the Box ..................................................1-6
Contacting ITI .......................................................1-6
Section 2
Agency Requirements ................................2-1
Telephone Requirements .......................................2-1
FCC Notice ............................................................2-1
UL Requirements ...................................................2-2
Hardware Requirements .................................2-2
Operational Requirements .............................. 2-3
Programming Requirements ........................... 2-3
Section 3
Installation .........................................................3-1
Environmental Specifications ................................3-1
Electrical Specifications ........................................3-1
Overview ...............................................................3-2
Rack Mounting ......................................................3-4
Installing Line Cards ............................................. 3-6
Removing Line Cards ............................................3-7
Telephone Line Connection .................................. 3-8
Parallel Printer Connection ....................................3-8
Printer Cable Pin-Outs ...................................3-9
Remote Alert Output ....................................3-10
AC Power Cord Connection ................................3-11
Switching to 240 VAC Power ......................3-11
How to Verify Earth Ground ........................ 3-13
Battery Connection ..............................................3-14
Automation Computer Connection ...................... 3-15
Com “Serial Communication” Ports 1 & 2 ..3-16
Computer Port Baud Rate Selection .............3-16
Direct Panel Connection ......................................3-16
Section 4
Operation ........................................................... 4-1
Touchpad Function Buttons .................................. 4-1
Displays ................................................................. 4-3
LED Indicators .............................................. 4-3
LCD Status Display ....................................... 4-3
Adjusting LCD Contrast ......................... 4-4
LCD Display Abbreviations ................... 4-5
Initial System Power Up ....................................... 4-5
Logging On and Off .............................................. 4-6
Installer Profile ............................................... 4-6
Operator Profile .............................................. 4-7
Default User Codes ........................................ 4-7
Logging On the System ................................. 4-8
Logging Off the System ................................. 4-8
Modes of Operation ............................................... 4-9
Normal Mode ................................................. 4-9
Manual Operation ................................... 4-9
How to Manually
Acknowledge Calls .......................... 4-9
Automatic Operation ............................... 4-9
Log Only ................................................. 4-9
Program Mode ................................................ 4-9
Main Menu .......................................................... 4-10
Displaying the Main Menu .......................... 4-10
Moving Around in the Main Menu .............. 4-11
Call History .................................................. 4-11
System History ............................................. 4-12
System Info .................................................. 4-12
Set Time & Date .......................................... 4-13
System Restart .............................................. 4-14
Print Menu .................................................... 4-15
Print Report ........................................... 4-16
Printing the Call History ................ 4-16
Printing the System History ........... 4-17
Printing System Configuration ...... 4-17
Printing a Test Page ....................... 4-18
Editing the Event Format ...................... 4-19
Configuring the Printer ......................... 4-20
Program Menu .............................................. 4-20
Diagnostics Menu ........................................ 4-21
Phantom Menu ...................................... 4-21
Message Queue ..................................... 4-22
Event Log .............................................. 4-23
Format ................................................... 4-23
LC Debug Mode ................................... 4-24
LC Statistics .......................................... 4-24
Port Status ............................................. 4-24
Listen-In and Hang Up ........................................ 4-25
Manual (Common) Listen-In Operation ...... 4-25
PBX Listen-In Operation ............................. 4-26
Testing the System .............................................. 4-26
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
ii
Section 5
Programming ...................................................5-1
Entering Program Mode ........................................5-1
Moving Around in Program Mode .................5-1
Programming Display Fields ..........................5-2
Programming Choices ...........................................5-2
General Options .....................................................5-3
Operation Mode ..............................................5-7
Changing the Operation Mode ................ 5-7
Display Options ..............................................5-8
Changing the Display Options ................ 5-9
ITI Flags (Set LCD and Printer
Output Options) .......................................5-9
Communications ...........................................5-10
Setting Up the Port Function .................5-13
Setting Com Port 1 Parameters .............5-14
Setting Com Port 2 Parameters .............5-14
Editing the Init String (Com 1, Com 2,
and Parallel Port) ...................................5-14
To Clear an Init String ...................5-15
Setting Automation Communication ....5-16
Setting the Format ..........................5-16
Enabling or Disabling the
HeartBeat .......................................5-16
Time (Period of HeartBeat) ........... 5-16
Ack Time (Acknowledge Time) ....5-17
ITI Options ..................................... 5-17
Log Recs (For ITI Formats) ...........5-18
XID (Extended ID for ITI Panels) .5-18
SupCh (Supervisory Character) .....5-18
NoDataCh (No Data Character
for Automation Record) .................5-18
Generic (& ITIComp) Revision .....5-18
Configuring the On-board
Annunciator Outputs .............................5-19
Configuring the Auxiliary
Relay Outputs ........................................5-19
System Options ............................................ 5-20
Changing the Backup Battery Setting ...5-20
Setting the Receiver ID Number ...........5-21
Setting to Strip or Send Bad Data .........5-21
Setting the Auxiliary Relay Contact
Normal State .........................................5-21
Message Queue Options ...............................5-22
Setting the Message Queue
Warning-On Level ................................5-22
Setting the Message Queue
Warning-Off Level ................................5-22
Set the Maximum Buffer Limit .............5-23
Line Card Menu ...................................................5-23
Adding a Line Card ......................................5-27
Edit Line Card .............................................. 5-28
Handshake Sequence .............................5-29
Changing the Handshake
Sequence Number .......................... 5-29
Changing the Format Group ......... 5-30
Changing the Handshake
Delay Time .................................... 5-30
Changing the Handshake
Duration Time ................................ 5-30
Changing the Maximum
Handshake Wait Time ................... 5-30
Changing the Acknowledgment
Tone Duration Time ...................... 5-31
Line Options ......................................... 5-31
Setting the Line Card for a Direct
Panel Connection ........................... 5-31
Changing the Number of Rings ..... 5-32
Changing the Ring On Time .......... 5-32
Changing the Ring Off Time ......... 5-32
Changing the Ring Threshold
Voltage ........................................... 5-32
Changing the Phone Line
Sample Rate ................................... 5-33
Listen-In ................................................ 5-33
Changing the Listen Mode ............ 5-33
Changing the PBX String .............. 5-33
Changing the Listen-In Timeout .... 5-34
Editing the Listen-In
Accounts Lists ............................... 5-34
Adding a Listen-In Account .......... 5-35
Editing a Listen-In Account .......... 5-35
Clearing a Listen-In Account ........ 5-35
Trap List ................................................ 5-36
Adding an Account to the Trap List 5-36
Editing an Account in the Trap List 5-36
Clearing an Account from the
Trap List ........................................ 5-36
Miscellaneous Line Options ................. 5-36
Changing the Echo Suppress
Setting ............................................ 5-37
Setting Caller ID ............................ 5-37
Changing the Billing Delay Setting 5-38
Changing the Hunt Group .............. 5-38
ITI Options Menu ......................................... 5-38
ITI SCode (Security Code) Menu ......... 5-38
Adding an Account/SCode ............ 5-39
Editing an Account/SCode ............ 5-39
Clearing (Deleting) an
Account/SCode .............................. 5-39
Adding an SCode to the Table ....... 5-40
Clearing an SCode from the Table 5-40
Date/Time Flag ..................................... 5-40
Changing the Date/Time Flag ........ 5-40
ITI 300 Baud ......................................... 5-40
Changing the ITI 300 Baud Enable 5-41
Audio Mode .......................................... 5-41
iii
Copying Line Cards .....................................5-41
Clearing (Deleting) Line Cards ....................5-42
To Clear or Delete a Line Card
From the Receiver ..........................5-42
Viewing Line Cards ..................................... 5-42
User List ..............................................................5-43
Adding a User ...............................................5-44
Editing a User ...............................................5-45
Clearing (Deleting) a User ........................... 5-46
Section 6
Compatible Reporting Formats ............6-1
Formats By Communication Group ...................... 6-1
Format Numbers Used In Printer Output ..............6-3
Section 7
Troubleshooting ............................................7-1
Error Messages ......................................................7-1
Troubleshooting Process .......................................7-5
Removing the Power Supply/Mother
Board Assembly .............................................7-5
Replacing the Mother Board/Power
Supply Assembly ............................................7-6
Safe Mode .............................................................. 7-6
Updating the Receiver Software ............................ 7-6
Section 8
Automation
Communication Formats ..........................8-1
Introduction ...........................................................8-1
Section Terms and Conventions .....................8-1
SIA-CIS (Computer Interface Standard) Format .8-2
Data String Description And
Special Characters .......................................... 8-3
Basic Message Format ...................................8-4
Modifier Codes ............................................... 8-6
Long Calls ......................................................8-6
System Status Messages .................................8-8
HeartBeat ........................................................ 8-9
Communication from a
Computer to the CS-5000 ...............................8-9
ACKing and NACKing Data ..................8-9
Link Test ...............................................8-10
SIA-2000 Format ................................................ 8-11
ITI Generic Computer Format ............................. 8-11
Convention Used In This Subsection ........... 8-11
Report Record .............................................. 8-11
Control Panel Type and Zone
Attribution Byte .................................... 8-12
Extended Panel ID Codes ..................... 8-13
Alarm Codes ......................................... 8-14
Log Record ................................................... 8-15
Test Record .................................................. 8-16
Okay Record ................................................ 8-16
ACKing and NACKing Data ....................... 8-17
ITI Comp (Computer Interface) Format .............. 8-17
Convention Used In This Subsection ........... 8-17
General Record Structure ............................. 8-18
Report Record .............................................. 8-19
Information Field Identifiers ................. 8-20
Panel Type Characters .......................... 8-21
Condition Codes ................................... 8-22
Test Record .................................................. 8-23
Supervisory Record ...................................... 8-24
Log Records ................................................. 8-25
Checksum/Control Field .............................. 8-25
ITI METERMINDER Format ............................. 8-26
Meter Format ................................................ 8-26
Output Record Format ................................. 8-28
Meter Test Record ........................................ 8-29
Commands Initiated by the
Automation Computer ......................................... 8-29
Remote Log-on/Log-off ............................... 8-30
Force Hang-up Request ................................ 8-31
Add or Delete a Listen-in Account .............. 8-31
Common Listen-in Extend/End Request ...... 8-33
PBX Listen-in String .................................... 8-34
Add or Delete a Trap Account ..................... 8-34
Glossary
Appendix A
Programming Quick Chart
Appendix B
US ASCII Character Code
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
iv
Appendix C
CS-5000 Central Station
Receiver Menu Map
Appendix D
CS-5000 Specifications
Appendix E
Automation Output Version Control
Index
v
List of Tables
Table 1-1: Optional Accessories for the CS-5000 Receiver .........................1-2
Table 1-2: Formats Compatible with the CS-5000 .......................................1-3
Table 1-3: CS-5000 and SIA Levels I-III Comparison .................................1-4
Table 3-1: External Printer Cable Pin Description .......................................3-9
Table 4-1: Touchpad Buttons Description ....................................................4-2
Table 4-2: LED Description ..........................................................................4-3
Table 4-3: LCD and Printer Abbreviations ...................................................4-5
Table 4-4: Main Menu Option Items by Profile ...........................................4-7
Table 4-5: Default User Codes ......................................................................4-7
Table 4-6: Main Menu Controls ..................................................................4-11
Table 4-7: Printer Menu Choices ................................................................4-15
Table 4-8: Event Format Choices and Meaning .........................................4-19
Table 4-9: Phantom Signals Formats List ...................................................4-21
Table 5-1: Main Menu Controls ....................................................................5-1
Table 5-2: Types of Programming Fields .....................................................5-2
Table 5-3: General Options Items and Description .....................................5-3
Table 5-4: Operation Mode Choices and Descriptions .................................5-7
Table 5-5: Display Options and Descriptions ..............................................5-8
Table 5-6: Communications Options and Descriptions .............................5-10
Table 5-7: Initialization String Characters ..................................................5-15
Table 5-8: ITI Automation Format Options ................................................5-17
Table 5-9: On-board Annunciator and Auxiliary Relay Options ................5-19
Table 5-10: System Options .........................................................................5-20
Table 5-11: Line Card Menu Options ..........................................................5-24
Table 5-12: Edit Line Card List Items and Description ...............................5-28
Table 5-13: Valid Programmable String Characters ....................................5-34
Table 5-14: Account Characters ...................................................................5-35
Table 5-15: User List Menu Items and Steps ................................................5-43
Table 5-16: Available Characters .................................................................5-44
Table 6-1: CS-5000 Compatible Formats ....................................................6-1
Table 6-2: Formats By Report Number .......................................................6-3
Table 7-1: Error Messages ...........................................................................7-1
Table 8-1: Data String Description ...............................................................8-3
Table 8-2: Special Characters .......................................................................8-4
Table 8-3: Modifier Codes Used With The CS-5000 ...................................8-6
Table 8-4: System Status Messages ..............................................................8-8
Table 8-5: Number and ITI Digit Equivalent ..............................................8-11
Table 8-6: Report Record Components ......................................................8-12
Table 8-7: Upper Nibble Description ..........................................................8-12
Table 8-8: Non-ITI Formats Lower Nibble Description .............................8-13
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
vi
Table 8-9: Pulse Formats Lower Nibble Description .................................8-13
Table 8-10: Extended Panel ID Codes (XID) ..............................................8-13
Table 8-11: Alarm Codes and Descriptions .................................................8-14
Table 8-12: Log Record Components and Description ................................8-16
Table 8-13: Test Record Components and Description ................................8-16
Table 8-14: Okay Record Components and Description .............................8-17
Table 8-15: Number and ITI Digit Equivalent ..............................................8-17
Table 8-16: Type of Record Identifiers .........................................................8-18
Table 8-17: Record Components ..................................................................8-18
Table 8-18: Report Record Components and Description ...........................8-19
Table 8-19: Information Field Identifiers ....................................................8-20
Table 8-20: Panel Type Characters ..............................................................8-21
Table 8-21: Condition Codes and Descriptions ...........................................8-22
Table 8-22: Test Record Information Fields and Descriptions .....................8-24
Table 8-23: Supervisory Record Information Fields And Descriptions .......8-24
Table 8-24: Log Record Information Fields And Descriptions ....................8-25
Table 8-25: Checksum Verification Process .................................................8-26
Table 8-26: METERMINDER (COM 2) Reports ........................................8-27
Table 8-27: Response Messages by the CS-5000 Receiver ..........................8-29
Table 8-28: Command Requests by Identifiers ............................................8-30
Table 8-29: Log-in Request Components ....................................................8-30
Table 8-30: Log-off Request Components ....................................................8-31
Table 8-31: Force Hang-Up Request Components .......................................8-31
Table 8-32: Add Listen-in Account Request Components ...........................8-32
Table 8-33: Delete a Listen-in Account Request Components .....................8-32
Table 8-34: Extend Listen-in Period Request Components ..........................8-33
Table 8-35: End Listen-in Period Request Components ...............................8-33
Table 8-36: Create PBX Listen-in String Request Components ...................8-34
Table 8-37: Add Trap Account Request Components .................................8-34
Table 8-38: Delete Trap Account Request Components ..............................8-35
Table A-1: Programming Quick Chart .......................................Appendix A-1
Table B-1: US ASCII Character Codes ...................................... Appendix B-1
Table E-1: New Event Codes ...................................................... Appendix E-1
Table E-2: Panel ID Characters ................................................... Appendix E-2
Table E-3: SIA-DCS Format ...................................................... Appendix E-4
Table E-4: ITI Contact ID Table .............................................. Appendix E-14
1-1
Section 1
S
y
stem Overview
This manual describes installation, operation, and programming of the Model CS-5000
Central Station Receiver.
This section lists features, optional accessories, compatible formats, and SIA options
supported. This section also contains conventions held throughout the manual, terminology
relevant to this product, and other information.
Features
Hardware Features
Supports both 120 and 240 VAC, 60 Hz installations
External annunciation with auxiliary Form C dry contact relay (programmable)
On-board PZT alert (programmable)
1 parallel port
2 serial ports
2 SBUS future expansion connectors
Modular configuration for easy replacement and repair
4 line, back-lit LCD Display with 20 characters for each line
On-board touchpad for manual operation and programming
LEDs to indicate system operations
Rack mountable design
One line card will communicate with all supported formats
Supports up to 12 line cards which operate independent of each other
Line card parameters are stored on the MCPU for faster removal and replacement
Line cards support Caller ID and Caller Name Delivery
Line cards are individually programmable for format priority and ring parameters
Line cards support direct connect phone line monitoring
Note
Although the CS-5000 can be used as a desk-top receiver,
it must be rack-mounted for UL-listed installations.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
1-2
Software Features
Programmable display options for time and date information
View or print the history information by priority, call, or event
Two user profiles to control user access to the receiver
Supports up to 40 users
Listen-in and trap accounts support wild card variables. Up to 20 accounts available per
line card (20 for listen-in and 20 for trap accounts)
Listen-in selectable for direct, hook flash, or PBX phone system
Programmable port configuration for automation, printer, and backup support
500 event history buffer
Optional Accessories
Unless otherwise indicated, the following accessories for the Model CS-5000 receiver are
available from the ITI Order Processing Department. You can contact ITI Order Processing
by phone or by mail. The toll free number is 1-800-777-4841. Our mailing address is 2266
North Second Street, North Saint Paul, MN 55109.
Table 1-1: Optional Accessories for the CS-5000 Receiver
Item ITI Model Number
(if applicable) Description/Comments
Line card ITI 13-417 The line card monitors the phone line, detects ring and processes
the message from the communicating panel.
Backup battery ITI 60-680 A 12VDC 7ah battery which will provide a minimum 4 hours of
backup power during an AC power loss. (See Agency
Requirements section for UL backup power requirements. See
Installation section for installation instructions.)
Printer cable Not available from ITI A standard 25-pin cable used to connect the CS-5000 receiver to
an external parallel printer.
Rack-mounting
cabinet
Not available from ITI Used to rack mount the CS-5000 receiver as required by UL. (See
Agency Requirements section for specifications and vendor
information.)
Blank filler panels Not available from ITI Used to fill up any unused cabinet spaces as required by UL.
Parallel printer Not available from ITI
(Okidata Microline
320 Turbo, 9-pin)
ITI Model CS-5000 receiver requires the parallel printer to
generate report history hardcopy.
System Overview
1-3
Formats Compatible with the CS-5000
Table 1-2 shows the formats that the CS-5000 receiver can decode and the handshake
frequency groups which accommodate that format (see “Line Card Menu” in Section 5 for
line card programming). Each line card can decode every format listed below. Setting the
handshake order only prioritizes the type of communication done by each line card. Section 6
of this manual describes the formats in greater detail.
Table 1-2: Formats Compatible with the CS-5000
Format Name Handshake
BFSK 1400 or 2300 Hz
4+2 1400 Hz
3+1/3+1 Extended 1400 or 2300 Hz
Sescoa 3+1/Franklin 3+1 2300 Hz
Radionics 3+1 Checksum 1400 or 2300 Hz
4+1 Extended 1400 or 2300 Hz
SX-III, SX-IVA 2225 Hz
SX-IVB 2225 Hz
ITI SX-V 2225 Hz
ITI SX-V Special 2225 Hz
ITI Commander 2225 Hz
ITI RF Commander, Harbor Gard 2225 Hz
ITI Commander 2000, LifeGard 2225 Hz
ITI CareTaker+, SecurityPro 4000,
MeterMinder
2225 Hz
ITI UltraGard 2225 Hz
ITI SIMON 2225 Hz
ITI FONSAFE, PhoneWatch 2225 Hz
SIA DCS 2225 Hz
SIA 2000 (pending approval) 2225 Hz
Ademco Contact ID 1400 and 2300 Hz
Ademco Super Fast 1400 and 2300 Hz
Acron Touch Tone 1400 and 2300 Hz
Ademco Express 1400 and 2300 Hz
DTMF 4+2 1400 and 2300 Hz
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
1-4
CS-5000 Supported SIA Digital I-III Levels
Table 1-3 compares the CS-5000 receiver to SIA Digital Compatibility Levels I, II, and III
and indicates compliance.
Using this Manual
This manual contains information on how to install, program, and operate the CS-5000
receiver. ITI strongly suggests you review this manual in its entirety to become familiar with
product procedures and parameters. Once you are familiar with the product, you can use this
manual as a reference document.
This manual uses the following conventions:
5, ENTER, , These bold typefaces and symbols represent touchpad buttons.
LCD display
This typeface represents LCD display messages.
Manual pages are numbered by section. For example, “5-1” is page 1 of section 5.
When this manual refers to default settings, it means programmable options set at the fac-
tory. Any programming after the receiver is powered up will change these settings.
Table 1-3: CS-5000 and SIA Levels I-III Comparison
CS-
5000 Function/Capability Transmitter Receiver
Support Tonal Acknowledgments required required
Support N Blocks with Zone Numbers Only required required
Support Single Account Block per Call required required
Support O Blocks (optional) required
Support X Blocks (optional) required
Support 300 Baud (Fast) (optional) required
Support Configuration Block required required
Support Data Acknowledgments required required
Support Modifier Codes id, da and ti.(optional) required
Support Multiple Account Blocks per Call (optional) required
Support E Blocks (optional) required
Support Data Codes with Units Numbers (optional) required
Support RECEIVER Call Out and Access Passcode required required
Support Reverse Channel C Blocks required required
Support Reverse Channel P Blocks required (optional)
Support Reverse Channel A Blocks (optional) required
Support Dynamic Block and Group Sizes (optional) required
Support Listen-in (optional) required
Support A Blocks to RECEIVER (optional) required
Support V-Channel communication (optional) (optional)
Level I
Level II
Level III
System Overview
1-5
Basic Terms Used in this Manual
This section lists some basic terms specific to this product and their meaning. (Refer to the
Glossary for a complete list of terms.)
Term Meaning
Communication Group ITI has separated the different types of communication by handshake type. These handshake types
can be assigned in a numbered order (see “Formats Compatible with the CS-5000” in Section 1).
Listen-in Listen-in is the ability to listen in to what is happening in real-time from the central station to a
remote location. This can help the central station operator determine if he or she should dispatch
for a particular alarm situation.
PZT PZT is an abbreviation for a piezo alert sounder.
PIN An abbreviation for Personal Identification Number. PINs are used to log in and out of the
receiver.
SBUS Serial Bus interface for future expansion.
MCPU Master Central Processing Unit.
Main Menu The main menu will be displayed as either <Installer Menu> or <Operator Menu> . However,
this manual will refer to them as the main menu.
ACK Stands for acknowledgment.
NACK Stands for no acknowledgment.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
1-6
What’s in the Box
This section contains a list of the parts that are shipped with the CS-5000 receiver and a brief
description of their intended use.
Contacting ITI
If you have a question or encounter a problem not covered in this manual, contact ITI
Technical Support by telephone at 1-800-777-2624. To order parts, contact ITI Order
Processing at 1-800-777-4841 or fax in your question to 1-800-777-4842.
Item Quantity Description
Battery/alert relay wiring harness
1
Wiring harness used to connect the CS-5000 receiver to a backup
battery. It also provides a normally open or normally closed output
for an alert sounder.
CS-5000 Installation/Operation
Manual 1A manual covering installation and operation information related to
the CS-5000 receiver.
Central station receiver 1 The central station receiver assembly.
Line card 1 Line card for phone lines.
Strain relief tie wrap 1Tie wrap used as a strain relief on the phone cord. See Figure 3-3 for
location of strain relief tabs.
Receiver mounting screws
4
#10-32 x 3/8 flat head screws used to mount the receiver to a UL
listed rack. (See Section 3, “Installation,” for rack mounting
instructions.)
Telephone cord 1 A 7 foot long telephone cable with RJ-11 connectors.
Power cable 1AC power cable used to connect the CS-5000 receiver to an AC wall
plug.
2-1
Section 2
A
g
enc
y
Requirements
Telephone Requirements
If requested by the telephone company, the following information must be provided before
connecting this device to the phone lines:
This device may not be connected directly to coin telephones or party line services.
This device cannot be adjusted or repaired in the field. In case of trouble with the device,
notify the installing company or ITI for an RMA and then return it to:
Interactive Technologies, Inc.
2266 North Second Street
North Saint Paul, MN 55109
Telephone: 1-800-777-2624
The telephone company may make changes in its facilities, equipment, or procedures that
could affect the operation of the equipment. If this happens, the telephone company will
provide advance notice to allow you to make the necessary modifications to maintain
uninterrupted service.
FCC Notice
This device complies with FCC Rules Part 68.
This device has been verified to comply with FCC Rules Part 15. Operation is subject to the
two following conditions: (1) This device may not cause radio interference, and (2) This
device must accept any interference received including interference that may cause undesired
operation.
A. Manufacturer: Interactive Technologies, Inc. (ITI)
B. Model Number: CS-5000
C. FCC Registration Number: AC6USA-31519-AL-E
D. Type of jack (to be installed by the
telephone company): RJ31X
E. Ringer Equivalence Number (REN): 0.1B
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
2-2
UL Requirements
Follow the procedures outlined in the sections below for listing as an NFPA 72 Central Station
Service installation. The CS-5000 is also suitable for household and commercial burglary
service. Note that installation regulations are subject to the jurisdiction of a local authority.
Hardware Requirements
See Figure 3-4 and Figure 3-5 for diagrams of a suggested installation.
1. A second CS-5000 must be installed as a back-up in case the primary CS-5000 fails. The
back-up system must be able to take over within 30 seconds.
(Note: This requirement does not apply to burglary-only installations.)
2. The CS-5000 must be housed in a UL listed for fire protective signaling use, metal rack-
mounting cabinet. A recommended enclosure is a listed control unit accessories system
cabinet manufactured by Atlas/Soundelier. (The WA200 series, intended for 19-inch rack
mount panels, can be used.) A taller cabinet could be used to house additional units.
3. Back-up battery does not provide standby time required for UL and NFPA standards. A
UPS (uninterruptable power supply), listed for Fire Protection Signaling Use, must be
utilized when standby power is required.
4. Any unused front panel rack space must be filled with blank panels so that all wiring
remains enclosed.
5. The external conduit must exit through the knockouts in the cabinet or go directly through
the floor.
Agency Requirements
2-3
Operational Requirements
1. The transmitters reporting to the CS-5000 must be UL Listed DACTs (digital alarm com-
municator transmitters).
2. The central station must provide a minimum of 24 hours of back-up power within 30
seconds of an AC power loss. The back-up must either be in the form of a UL listed UPS
or electrical generator.
3. If the CS-5000 is not automated, the central station operator must check for the 24 hour
test signals from the communicators.
(Note: This requirement does not apply to burglary-only installations.)
4. The connection between the CS-5000 and the UL listed computer should be according to
the pin configuration for Com port 1 as shown in the Installation section of this manual.
5. If a computer is used, the computer and its accessories must be installed in the same room
as the receiver.
6. If the listen-in feature is used the receiver must meet the loading requirements specified in
NFPA 72 paragraph A-4-5.3.2.2.2.3. Additional line cards can be installed to meet this
requirement; however, the additional line cards can not be programmed for listen-in.
Programming Requirements
In a UL listed installation, the Model CS-5000 receiver must be programmed according to the
following procedure:
Do NOT use the alarm output relay in UL installations.
Each log-on code must have at least four digits.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
2-4
3-1
Section 3
Installation
This section contains information necessary to install a CS-5000 Central Station Receiver.
Environmental Specifications
Operating temperature range is 32° to 120° F.
Indoor use only.
Maximum 85 percent non-condensing relative humidity.
Non-corrosive environment.
For detailed specifications, see Appendix D.
Electrical Specifications
Line voltage 120VAC ± 10% 60Hz, 100VA
240VAC ± 10% 60Hz, 100VA
Fuse 3A Slow Blow
Back-up battery connection
(Back-up battery does not provide standby time required for
UL and NFPA standards. A UPS (uninterruptable power
supply), listed for Fire Protection Signaling Use, must be
utilized when standby power is required.
Input 10.2 to 14.0 VDC 3 Amp Max.
Output 13.65 VDC 1 Amp charging current
Auxiliary relay contacts 2.5 Amp @ 48VDC Resistive Power Limited
2.5 Amp @ 48VAC Resistive Power Limited
Important!
Do not connect power to the system until you
have read these instructions carefully.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
3-2
Overview
The CS-5000 is assembled at the factory. One line card is shipped with the CS-5000 receiver.
Follow the procedures described in “Installing Line Cards” in Section 3 to install additional
line cards.
Figure 3-1 Model CS-5000 Front View
Figure 3-2 Model CS-5000 Front View (Front Plate Removed)
OPERATOR
HOME HANGUP LISTEN
PREV
LOGGED IN
CALL PENDING
SYSTEM
FAULT
AC
POWER
NEXT EVENT
NEXT
CALLCALL
12
*
3
654
789
PREV EVENT
FAULT
ACTIVE
LISTEN
ACK
ENTER
MENU
123456789101112
LOG
STATUS
0
#
Face Plate Screws
P5P4P3P2
Main Power Switch
Phone Line Connector
Inserted Line Card
Phone Line Slots Line Card Guides
OPERATOR
HOME HANGUP LISTEN
PREV
LOGGED IN
CALL PENDING
SYSTEM
FAULT
AC
POWER
NEXT EVENT
NEXT
CALLCALL
12
*
3
654
789
PREV EVENT
ACK
ENTER
MENU
LOG
STATUS
0
#
Installation
3-3
Figure 3-3 Model CS-5000 Rear View
B
N.C.
REMOTE ANNUNCIATOR RELAY
RATING: 2.5A, 48VAC/DC
C
N.O.
UNUSED
EXTERNAL
BATTERY
FUSE
1.5A SLOW
BLOW
REPLACE ONLY
WITH A FUSE
OF SAME TYPE
AND RATING
SBUS
COM 1
COM 2 PARALLEL PORT
AC
100 VA
120 VAC ± 10%
240 VAC ± 10%
50-60 Hz
B+
WARNING!
HIGH VAOLTAGE PRESENT
DISCONNECT AC LINE AND
ALL OTHER CONNECTORS
PROIR TO SERVICING
This device complies with FCC Rules Part 68.
This device has been verified to comply with FCC Rules Part 15.
Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This
device may not cause radio interference, and (2) This device must
accept any interference received including interference that may
cause undesired operation.
FCC Registration No. AC6USA-31519-AL-E R.E.N. 0.1B
Silent Knight Security Systems
Model: 9800
Phone Line Slots Phone Line
Strain Relief
Tie Wrap Holders
SBUS Connectors Serial Ports Parallel
Printer Port
Remote Relay/
Battery Connector
Fuse
AC Power
Cord Connector
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
3-4
Rack Mounting
This diagram shows how to mount the model CS-5000 in a UL-listed rack enclosure.
Figure 3-4 Rack Mount Enclosure (Front View)
Note: All wiring that exits cabinet must be in a electrical conduit.
Receiver
Mounting
Screws
(Flat Head
supplied
with receiver)
Model
CS-5000
Receiver
OPERATOR
HOME HANGUP LISTEN
PREV
LOGGED IN
CALL PENDING
SYSTEM
FAULT
AC
POWER
NEXT EVENT
NEXT
CALLCALL
12
*
3
654
789
PREV EVENT
FAULT
ACTIVE
LISTEN
ACK
ENTER
MENU
123456789101112
LOG
STATUS
0#
P5P4P3P2
OPERATOR
HOME HANGUP LISTEN
PREV
LOGGED IN
CALL PENDING
SYSTEM
FAULT
AC
POWER
NEXT EVENT
NEXT
CALLCALL
12
*
3
654
789
PREV EVENT
ACK
ENTER
MENU
LOG
STATUS
0
#
Back-up
Model CS-5000
Receiver
(Shown With
Face Plate
Removed)
Blank
(Filler)
Panels
Installation
3-5
Figure 3-5 Rack Mount Enclosure (Rear View)
Note: All wiring that exits cabinet must be in a electrical conduit.
B
N.C.
REMOTE ANNUNCIATOR RELAY
RATING: 2.5A, 48VAC/DC
C
N.O.
UNUSED
EXTERNAL
BATTERY
FUSE
1.5A SLOW
BLOW
REPLACE ONLY
WITH A FUSE
OF SAME TYPE
AND RATING
SBUS
COM 1
COM 2 PARALLEL PORT
AC
100 VA
120 VAC
± 10%
240 VAC
± 10%
50-60 Hz
B+
WARNING!
HIGH VAOLTAGE PRESENT
DISCONNECT AC LINE AND
ALL OTHER CONNECTORS
PROIR TO SERVICING
This device complies with FCC Rules Part 68.
This device has been verified to comply with FCC Rules Par t 15.
Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This
device may not cause radio interference, and (2) This device must
accept any interference received including interference that may
cause undesired operation.
FCC Registration No. AC6USA-31519-AL-E R.E. N. 0.1B
Silent Knight Security Systems
Model: 9800
B
N.C.
REMOTE ANNUNCIATOR RELAY
RATING: 2.5A, 48VAC/DC
C
N.O.
UNUSED
EXTERNAL
BATTERY
FUSE
1.5A SLOW
BLOW
REPLACE ONLY
WITH A FUSE
OF SAME TYPE
AND RATING
SBUS
COM 1
COM 2 PARALLEL PORT
AC
100 VA
120 VAC
± 10%
240 VAC
± 10%
50-60 Hz
B+
WARNING!
HIGH VAOLTAGE PRESENT
DISCONNECT AC LINE AND
ALL OTHER CONNECTORS
PROIR TO SERVICING
This device complies with FCC Rules Part 68.
This device has been verified to comply with FCC Rules Par t 15.
Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This
device may not cause radio interference, and (2) This device must
accept any interference received including interference that may
cause undesired operation.
FCC Registration No. AC6USA-31519-AL-E R.E. N. 0.1B
Silent Knight Security Systems
Model: 9800
Power/non-power limited and
high/low voltage wiring lines must
be separated by 1/4" spacing
Low voltage
power limited
Shelf or support
bracket (under
each unit)
Incoming
Telephone
Lines
Power limited
wires for SBUS
and Com ports.
Tie wrap wire
to the enclosure.
Rear Cabinet Door
(not shown)
Listed receptable
(rated 15A 125VAC)
Incoming line
power 120VAC, 60Hz
Tie-wrap groups
of wires to the
enclosure
Model
CS-5000
Receiver
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
3-6
Installing Line Cards
1. Open the CS-5000's front panel by unscrewing the four front plate retaining screws
located on the front of the panel (Figure 3-1).
2. Turn off the CS-5000’s AC power switch (Figure 3-2).
3. When the front panel is removed, you can see that there are 12 slots for line cards. The
receiver recognizes each slot by number 1 through 12 (slot one is closest to the keypad and
display). It is not necessary to put line cards in numbered order because the receiver con-
tinually polls each slot to see if existing line cards are functioning and if it is still in its
slot. The receiver also looks to see if a new line card has been added. Figure 3-6 shows
line card placement.
Figure 3-6 Line Card Locations
4. Position the line card as shown in Figure 3-7.
Figure 3-7 Line Card Position and Components
Caution
To reduce the risk of electrical shock and/or damage
to the receiver, follow these steps in order.
P5P4P3P2
Phone Line Connector
Phone Line Slots
Line Card Guides
PREV
NEXT EVENT
NEXT
CALLCALL
PREV EVENT
ENTER
MENU
Model 9810
Top of Line Card
Insert from
front in this
direction Line Card
Display
LEDs
Phone Line Connector
Installation
3-7
5. Carefully slide the card into its guides (both top and bottom) until it fits into its connector
at the back of the receiver. Gently push the card completely into the connector. The card
is now in place.
6. Connect telephone line. (See “Telephone Line Connection” in Section 3.)
Note: Use the tie wrap (provided with each line card) on the tie wrap holder to add strain relief to the telephone
lines. (See Figure 3-3.)
7. Power up the CS-5000.
8. Close the CS-5000's front panel and tighten the front plate retaining screws to hold the
front plate in place. If you are simply replacing a line card with another card of the same
type and are using the same format settings, your installation is now complete. If not con-
tinue to the next step.
9. Enter programming mode to select the appropriate handshake configuration. (See “Enter-
ing Program Mode” in Section 5 for programming procedures.)
Removing Line Cards
If you need to remove a line card:
1. Open the CS-5000's front panel by unscrewing the four front plate retaining screws
located on the front of the panel (Figure 3-1).
2. Turn off the CS-5000’s AC power switch (Figure 3-2).
3. With the front panel removed, you can see that there are 12 slots for line cards.
4. Locate the line card to be removed.
5. Unplug the telephone line (Figure 3-6, Figure 3-7).
6. From the front side of the receiver pull the line card straight forward. This will pull the
card free from the connector.
7. When the card is free, slide it carefully out of the receiver.
Note: If replacing a line card with a new one, see “Installing Line Cards” in Section 3.
8. Power up the CS-5000.
9. Close the CS-5000's front panel and tighten the front plate retaining screws to hold the
front plate in place.
10. Enter programming mode to clear the line card from the system. (See “Entering Program
Mode” in Section 5 for programming procedures.)
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
3-8
Telephone Line Connection
See Figure 3-6 for the location of the phone line inputs. Connections to the CS-5000 phone
jacks are made with a standard 7-foot phone cord (provided with each line card).
Use the following procedure to connect phone lines to the line cards:
1. Remove the front panel of the CS-5000 receiver by loosening the front plate retaining
screws (Figure 3-1).
2. From the back side of the receiver insert the telephone line through the corresponding slot
for the desired line card (Figure 3-6, Figure 3-7).
3. Gently push it all the way through to the front side of the receiver.
4. Plug the RJ-11 phone connector into the connector on the line card (Figure 3-6, Figure 3-
7).
Note: Use the tie wrap (provided with each line card) on the tie wrap holder to add strain relief to the telephone
lines (Figure 3-3.)
5. Replace the front panel of the CS-5000 receiver by tightening the front plate retaining
screws (Figure 3-1).
Parallel Printer Connection
The CS-5000 Receiver connects to a parallel printer for UL applications. To connect the
printer to the CS-5000 receiver follow these steps:
1. Connect the standard parallel printer cable to the parallel printer port on the back of the
CS-5000 receiver (Figure 3-8).
2. Connect the other end to the printers parallel printer port connector.
Note: Make sure that printer power is turned off.
3. Turn on printer power.
Installation
3-9
Figure 3-8 Parallel Printer Cable Connection to CS-5000
Printer Cable Pin-Outs
25 pin (Centronics type) printer cables are a standard items at most electronic stores.
However, if you create your own cable, use the pin description in Table 3-1.
Table 3-1: External Printer Cable Pin Description
CS-5000
Pin # Signal Direction Description
1 Data Strobe (Low) Out A low strobe pulse to read data in the pulse width is greater than 0.5
microseconds.
2 Data Bit 1 Out These signals represent information of the first to eighth bits of parallel
data. Each signal is at high level when the data is logic 1 and low when
it is logic 0.
3 Data Bit 2 Out
4 Data Bit 3 Out
5 Data Bit 4 Out
6 Data Bit 5 Out
7 Data Bit 6 Out
8 Data Bit 7 Out
9 Data Bit 8 Out
10 AckNlg In A low pulse from the printer signals the control that the printer is ready
for additional data.
11 Busy In A high level indicates that the printer is busy.
B
N.C.
REMOTE ANNUNCIATOR RELAY
RATING: 2.5A, 48VAC/DC
C
N.O.
UNUSED
EXTERNAL
BATTERY
FUSE
1.5A SLOW
BLOW
REPLACE ONLY
WITH A FUSE
OF SAME TYPE
AND RATING
SBUS
COM 1
COM 2 PARALLEL PORT
AC
100 VA
120 VAC ± 10%
240 VAC ± 10%
50-60 Hz
B+
WARNING!
HIGH VAOLTAGE PRESENT
DISCONNECT AC LINE AND
ALL OTHER CONNECTORS
PROIR TO SERVICING
This device complies with FCC Rules Part 68.
This device has been verified to comply with FCC Rules Part 15.
Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This
device may not cause radio interference, and (2) This device must
accept any interference received including interference that may
cause undesired operation.
FCC Registration No. AC6USA-31519-AL-E R.E.N. 0.1B
Silent Knight Security Systems
Model: 9800
To Printer
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
3-10
Figure 3-9 shows the connector pin numbering.
Figure 3-9 Parallel Printer Port Connector Pins
Remote Alert Output
1. Plug the battery/relay wiring harness onto the connector on the back of the CS-5000
receiver (Figure 3-10).
Note: The remote alert output is a “form C” relay with normally open or normally closed contacts.
2. Connect the white wire to circuit common.
3. Use the yellow wire for a normally closed circuit, or
Use the brown wire for a normally open circuit.
12 Paper Empty In A high level indicates that the printer is out of paper.
13 Select In A low level indicates the printer is off-line or in an error condition.
14 Not used - -
15 Not used - -
16 Logic ground - Logic ground for printer
17 Not used - -
18 to 25 Logic Ground - Ground return for data lines.
Table 3-1: External Printer Cable Pin Description
Pin 1 Pin 13
Pin 25
Pin 14
10.0'
Receiver Printer
Installation
3-11
Figure 3-10 CS-5000 Remote Alert Output/Backup Battery Connection
AC Power Cord Connection
1. Before the AC power cord is connected, make sure that the power switch is off (down).
2. Connect the power cord into the receptacle on the back of the CS-5000.
3. Plug the power cord into a 120 VAC 60 Hz outlet (three-prong type only). The outlet
should be unswitched, so that power remains on 24 hours a day. The outlet must also be
earth grounded. See “How to Verify Earth Ground” in Section 3 if you need to measure
for proper earth grounding.
Switching to 240 VAC Power
1. Remove the front plate by unscrewing the front plate retaining screws (Figure 3-1).
2. Turn the main power switch off (Figure 3-12).
3. Disconnect AC power cable.
4. Disconnect the back-up battery (Figure 3-14).
5. On the back of the receiver remove the four screws that hold the mother board/power sup-
ply assembly to the chassis (Figure 3-11).
White: Relay Common
Brown: Relay N.O.
Black: Battery Negative
Red: Battery Positive
Yellow: Relay N.C.
Power limited
Non-power Limited
SBUS
COM 1
COM 2 PARALLEL PORT
Note:
A 1/4 inch spacing must be
maintained between the battery
wires and the relay wires. If this
spacing cannot be maintained, use
non-power limited wiring methods
as described in NFPA 70 National
Electrical Code.
The relay can only be used with
a listed power limited resistive
load, class 2 or class 3 supply.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
3-12
Figure 3-11 Mother Board/Power Supply Assembly Retaining Screw Locations
6. From the front of the receiver pull the mother board/power supply assembly out.
7. Switch the power supply select switch to the up position. The switch will show 240VAC
(Figure 3-12).
8. Slide the mother board/power supply assembly back into the receiver chassis.
9. On the back of the receiver replace the four screws that hold the mother board/power sup-
ply assembly in place (Figure 3-11).
10. Reconnect the AC power cable.
Note: Make sure to plug the AC power cable into a grounded 240VAC outlet.
11. Reconnect the back-up battery (Figure 3-14).
12. Turn the main power switch to the “on” position (Figure 3-12).
13. Replace the front plate by screwing in the front plate retaining screws (Figure 3-1).
Figure 3-12 Side View of Mother Board/Power Supply Assembly
B
N.C.
REMOTE ANNUNCIATOR RELAY
RATING: 2.5A, 48VAC/DC
C
N.O.
UNUSED
EXTERNAL
BATTERY
FUSE
1.5A SLOW
BLOW
REPLACE ONLY
WITH A FUSE
OF SAME TYPE
AND RATING
SBUS
COM 1
COM 2 PARALLEL PORT
AC
100 VA
120 VAC ± 10%
240 VAC ± 10%
50-60 Hz
B+
WARNING!
HIGH VAOLTAGE PRESENT
DISCONNECT AC LINE AND
ALL OTHER CONNECTORS
PROIR TO SERVICING
This device complies with FCC Rules Part 68.
This device has been verified to comply with FCC Rules Part 15.
Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This
device may not cause radio interference, and (2) This device must
accept any interference received including interference that may
cause undesired operation.
FCC Registration No. AC6USA-31519-AL-E R.E.N. 0.1B
Silent Knight Security Systems
Model: 9800
Screw Locations
115V
230V
Power supply select switch
Power
s
witch
Power supply
Mother board
Fuse
holder
Power
cord
connector
Mother board/power
supply assembly
Installation
3-13
How to Verify Earth Ground
To verify earth ground at the AC outlet from which the CS-5000 receiver is powered, use the
following steps:
1. Measure the AC voltage between the center ground post and each side of the outlet.
On a 120 VAC outlet:
Ground post to larger hole (A) should give a nominal reading.
Ground post to smaller hole (B) should give a reading of 110 to 120 VAC.
If the voltage on A is not nominal, the outlet does not have proper ground.
If the voltage on B is not 110 to 120 VAC, the outlet is incorrectly connected.
On a 220 VAC outlet:
Ground post to left hole (A) should give a reading of 110 to 120 VAC.
Ground post to right hole (B) should give a reading of 110 to 120 VAC.
If A and B voltage measurements are not equal, the outlet does not have a proper earth
ground or one of the wires is incorrectly connected.
Figure 3-13 Outlet Voltage Measurement Points
2. Ground the outlet by running a solid wire (14 gauge or larger) to a good earth ground such
as a metal water pipe or ground rod.
The wire should be of equal or greater diameter to the wires used to feed the outlet. It may
be necessary to have a licensed electrician ground the outlet.
Larger hole
Center ground post
ABAB
120 VDC OUTLET 220 VDC OUTLET
Center ground post
Reading should
be nominal Reading should
be 120
Smaller hole
Reading should
be 120
Reading should
be 120
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
3-14
Battery Connection
To install the back-up battery, follow these steps:
Note: The 12VDC 7ah battery will provide a minimum of 4 hours of battery back-up power. (See “UL Require-
ments” in Section 2.)
1. Plug the battery/relay wiring harness onto the connector on the back of the CS-5000
receiver (Figure 3-14).
Figure 3-14 Battery Connections
2. Connect the red wire to the positive (+) side of the battery.
3. Connect the black wire to the negative (-) side of the battery.
Note: Shorting or reversing battery connections can damage the battery and/or the CS-5000.
SBUS
AC
Black: Battery Negativ
e
Red: Battery Positive
Model 6712
+
-
COM 1
COM 2 PARALLEL PORT
100 VA
120 VAC ± 10%
240 VAC ± 10%
50-60 Hz
B
N.C.
REMOTE ANNUNCIATOR RELAY
RATING: 2.5A, 48VAC/DC
C
N.O.
UNUSED
EXTERNAL
BATTERY
FUSE
1.5A SLOW
BLOW
REPLACE ONLY
WITH A FUSE
OF SAME TYPE
AND RATING
B+
This device complies with FCC Rules Part 68.
This device has been verified to comply with FCC Rules Part 15.
Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This
device may not cause radio interference, and (2) This device must
accept any interference received including interference that may
cause undesired operation.
FCC Registration No. AC6USA-31519-AL-E R.E.N. 0.1B
Silent Knight Security Systems
Model: 9800
Installation
3-15
Automation Computer Connection
An automation computer can be connected to Com port 1 on the CS-5000 receiver. Com port
1 is a 9-pin DTE port. Refer to the Section 8, “Automation Communication Formats” for
details on automation communication protocols. The diagrams below describe some of the
cable options.
Figure 3-15 25-Pin Null Modem Cable Connection
Figure 3-16 9-Pin Null Modem Cable Connection
4 DTR
6 DSR
7 RTS
8 CTS
1 DCD
3 TXD
2 RXD
DTR 20
DSR 6
RTS 4
CTS 5
DCD 8
TXD 2
RXD 3
GND 7
9800 9-PIN DTE 25-PIN DT
E
5 GND
4 DTR
6 DSR
7 RTS
8 CTS
1 DCD
3 TXD
2 RXD
DTR 4
DSR 6
RTS 7
CTS 8
DCD 1
TXD 3
RXD 2
GND 5
9800 9-PIN DTE 9-PIN DT
E
5 GND
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
3-16
Com “Serial Communication” Ports 1 & 2
A standard null modem cable can be used to connect com port 1 or 2 to another serial device
such as a printer or a PC. Com port one is the only serial communications port that can be
used with the automation computer (see Section 8, “Automation Communication Formats”).
Figure 3-15 and Figure 3-16 shown the pin-outs for a null modem cable. See
“Communications” in Section 5 to configure the ports.
Computer Port Baud Rate Selection
The computer (Com) port baud rate is selectable from 110 to 19200 (see Table 5-6).
Direct Panel Connection
Any panel can be connected directly to a CS-5000 line card when wired as shown in
Figure 3-17. The line card monitors the loop voltage and goes off-hook when the voltage
across the loop drops below four volts. The card will then output 440 Hz for three seconds to
simulate a dial tone for the panel. This is done because some panels have dial-tone detection
and will not start the dialing sequence until a dial tone in detected. The panel doesn’t need to
dial any digits–it can simply wait for the receiver to output the proper handshake and then
start sending data.
Loop supervision is accomplished by sampling the loop current at programmed intervals. The
sample interval and direct connection mode is programmed in the Line Option display menu
(see “Line Card Menu” in Section 5).
Figure 3-17 Direct Panel Connection
Reporting Panel CS-5000 Line Card
Tip (3)
Ring (4)
Listen Tip (2)
Listen Ring (5)
Manual Ring (6)
Manual GND (1)
Tip
Ring
+10-14 VDC
GND
1K ohm 1/4W
330 ohm 1/4W
4-1
Section 4
Operation
This section covers information on how to operate the CS-5000 Receiver.
Touchpad Function Buttons
The front panel of the CS-5000 is made up of a touchpad containing numbers, arrows and
buttons; an LCD display; and an array of LED indicators (Figure 4-1.)
Figure 4-1 Model CS-5000 Front Panel
The touchpad on the CS-5000 Receiver is used in all operating modes (normal and
programming mode).
Figure 4-2 Touchpad Layout
OPERATOR
HOME HANGUP LISTEN
PREV
LOGGED IN
CALL PENDING
SYSTEM
FAULT
AC
POWER
NEXT EVENT
NEXT
CALLCALL
12
*
3
654
789
PREV EVENT
FAULT
ACTIVE
LISTEN
ACK
ENTER
MENU
123456789101112
LOG
STATUS
0
#
Touchpad
Ke
y
sLCD Display
LED Displays
OPERATOR
HOME HANGUP LISTEN
PREV
LOGGED IN
CALL PENDING
SYSTEM
FAULT
AC
POWER
NEXT EVENT
NEXT
CALLCALL
12
*
3
654
789
PREV EVENT
ACK
ENTER
MENU
LOG
STATUS
0
#
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-2
Table 4-1 displays each individual touchpad key and describes its function in each operating
mode.
Table 4-1: Touchpad Buttons Description
Key Name Operating Modes
Normal Programming
Up Arrow Display previous event. Go back to previous choice or
character.
Down Arrow Display next event. Move to next choice or character.
Left Arrow Display previous call. Exit the current menu. Move to
previous programming field.
Right Arrow Display next call. Select menu item indicated by equal
sign (Figure 4-6). Move to next
programming field.
Enter/Menu
Button
Bring up Main Menu. Select menu item indicated by equal
sign (Figure 4-6). Enter chosen
parameter.
Acknowledge
Button
Manually Acknowledge a call or event.
(Used only if receiver is in manual mode.)
Used in log mode to acknowledge
and silence system troubles.
Log Button Pressed to log on or off the system. Pressed to
view system status messages.
N/A
Digit Keys Used to enter numeric inputs. Numeric input, option selection.
Star or Home Key Will return display to the oldest
unacknowledged event.
Enters a * Character when
programming in an “Edit” field. See
Table 5-2, “Types of Programming
Fields.
0 or Hangup key In manual (common) mode, the 0/hangup key
is used to hangup line card when the listen
feature was activated, or to end a runaway
call from a panel.
Used to enter numeric inputs.
Pound Key or
Listen Key
In manual (common) mode, this key is used
to extend the listen- in feature.
Enters a # Character when
programming in an “Edit” field. See
Table 5-2, “Types of Programming
Fields.
ENTER
MENU
ACK
LOG
STATUS
19
HOME
*
HANGUP
0
LISTEN
#
Operation
4-3
Displays
This section describes the CS-5000 receiver indicators and displays.
LED Indicators
LCD Status Display
The status display is a 20-character by 4-line, back-lit LCD that shows the various alarm and
function messages. It functions in all modes of operation (normal and programming mode).
As the CS-5000 acknowledges calls and messages, it updates the calls on the LCD and
silences the alert tone.
Figure 4-3 LCD Display
Table 4-2: LED Description
LED Indicator Meaning
On Off Flashing
Touchpad
LEDs
AC Power AC power is on. No AC or DC power to the
receiver
No AC power and the
system is operating on the
back-up battery.
System Fault A fault condition exists that
has been acknowledged but
not cleared.
The system is operating
normally.
A fault condition exists
that has not been
acknowledged.
Operator Logged In An operator is logged on. No operator is logged on.
Call Pending The acknowledge key was
pressed at least once, but not
all the events in a call were
acknowledged.
No calls pending or all calls
have been acknowledged.
Calls pending.
Line Card
LEDs
Fault N/A The line card is operating
normally.
Trouble or fault condition
exists.
Active The line card is in active
communication.
No Activity. Indicates the line is
ringing.
Listen Comes on when operator
acknowledges the listen-in
call.
No listen-in occurring. N/A
CS5000 Receiver
Interactive Tech Inc
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-4
Adjusting LCD Contrast
The LCD display is factory set at the highest contrast level and for most installations will not
need to be adjusted. Use these steps to change the LCD contrast if the brightness of the room
or the location in which the receiver is located should require a contrast change:
1. Press and hold both the up arrow and the left arrow keys at the same time (Figure 4-4).
Figure 4-4 Contrast Adjustment
2. Release the up and left arrow keys when you reach the desired contrast level.
OPERATOR
HOME HANGUP LISTEN
PREV
LOGGED IN
CALL PENDING
SYSTEM
FAULT
AC
POWER
NEXT EVENT
NEXT
CALLCALL
12
*
3
654
789
PREV EVENT
ACK
ENTER
MENU
LOG
STATUS
0
#
Operation
4-5
LCD Display Abbreviations
Many of the words used on the LCD are abbreviated to accommodate 20 characters per line.
Table 4-3 compares the event that is reported to how it is output to the LCD and printer.
Initial System Power Up
Apply power to the CS-5000 by plugging in the AC power cable and then turning the main
power switch “on” (Figure 3-2.) When the CS-5000 powers up, the display will go through
the routine shown in Figure 4-5.
Table 4-3: LCD and Printer Abbreviations
Event LCD Printer
Alarm Alrm Alarm
Trouble Trbl Trouble
Restore Rstr Restore
Supervisory Sprv Superv
Opening Open Opening
Closing Clos Close
Remote Rmot Remote
Disable Dsbl Disable
Bypass Byps Bypass
Unbypass Ubyp Unbypass
Test Test Test
Listen-in Lstn Listen
System Sytm System
Access Accs Access
Report Rprt Report
Cancel Cncl Cancel
Zone Number Z# Zone
Door Number D# Door
User Number U# User
Area Number A# Area
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-6
Figure 4-5 Power-up Routine
The system defaults in the manual operation. To select automatic operation, see “Changing
the Operation Mode” in the Section 5.
Note: Any time the main power switch is turned off the time and date will have to be reprogrammed on power-up.
Logging On and Off
Persons operating the CS-5000 must log on and off the system. This is a way of keeping track
of who is operating the system at any given time. You can program a total of 40 codes. Each
code will be assigned to one of two user profiles—installer profile or operator profile. (See
“Default User Codes” in Section 4.)
Installer Profile
The Installer profile will have access to all options on the main menu.
#098005004 Beep=0
123039A 05/05/99
(c)
Bus 1
11:04:23
May 5 1999
00 System
00 System
Engaged
#050005004 Beep=0
123039A 05/05/99
Model 5000 Receiver
Man: Scanning...
06/27/99 08:32:44
Normal Operation
Line Card Initialization (No events)
Lines 1 & 2 Model and Manufacturer banner
Line 3 System Status
Line 3 Date and Time
Operation
4-7
Operator Profile
The Operator profile has access to fewer main menu options than the Installer profile. These
options allow the operator to perform basic operation of the CS-5000. Both profiles can
acknowledge all calls and events.
Note: See “Main Menu”in Section 4 for detailed information on the main menu options.
Default User Codes
At initial power up, the system provides two default user codes. User code 1 defaults with an
Installer profile and user code 2 defaults with an Operator profile. Table 4-5 shows the default
codes and their profiles.
* Note: User code 1 can be changed but not deleted. User code 1’s profile will always remain as “installer”.
Table 4-4: Main Menu Option Items by Profile
Installer
Profile Operator
Profile Menu Options
✔✔
Call History
✔✔
System History
✔✔
System Info
✔✔
Set Time & Date
System Restart
Print Menu
Program Menu
Diagnostics
Table 4-5: Default User Codes
User Number Default Code
(PIN) Default Profile
*1 5000 Installer
2 1111 Operator
Note
You must have at least one Installer Profile
Code programmed in the system at all times.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-8
Logging On the System
Follows these steps to properly log on to the system:
1. Press the LOG/STATUS button.
The LCD will display Enter Log In Code:
[ ]
2. Enter your PIN code. (See Table 4-5 for default codes.)
Note: This screen will time-out after 15 seconds.
3. Press the ENTER/MENU button.
If the correct PIN is entered, the LCD will display Installer # XX
User Name.
The “Operator Logged In” LED will also turn on.
If an invalid code is entered, the LCD will display Access code not verified.
Note: If the previous user has not logged off, a new user can still log on by entering a PIN code.
This will automatically log off the previous user and log in the new user.
Logging Off the System
Follows these steps to properly log off the system:
1. Press the LOG/STATUS button while in the <Main Menu>.
The LCD will display #nn User Name
Log Out
[ ]
Note: This screen will time out after 15 seconds.
2. Enter your PIN code. (See Table 4-5 for default codes.)
3. Press the ENTER/MENU button.
If the correct PIN is entered, the LCD will display User Name Logged out.
The “Operator Logged In” LED will also turn off.
If an invalid code is entered, the LCD will display Access code not verified.
Operation
4-9
Modes of Operation
This section describes the receivers normal and programming modes of operation and the
options available.
Normal Mode
Normal mode consists of three options; one if the receiver is intended to be used with an
automation system, one for manual operation, and one to just log the events without manual
acknowledgments or automation communication.
Manual Operation
Requires a manual acknowledgment of each call or event from an operator.
How to Manually Acknowledge Calls:
When the call pending LED is flashing and the on-board annunciator is beeping:
1. Press the STAR/HOME button to display the oldest event that has not been acknowl-
edged.
2. Press the ACK button to acknowledge the call.
3. Repeat step 2 until all calls are acknowledged and the display shows No More Data.
Automatic Operation
Event information is sent directly to the automation computer.
Note: If the automation system fails, the receiver will automatically switch to manual mode in less than 30
seconds. The switching time is twice the value set in Ack Timeout (Table 5-6). The receiver will return to
automatic mode after communication to the automation computer is restored.
Log Only
Log only mode will log event data without manual acknowledgments or communications with
the automation computer. All event information is intended for printer output.
Note: On initial power-up the receiver will default in manual operation. The receiver can be set to automatic or
log only operation in program mode.
Program Mode
In program mode all general, line card, and user profile options can be changed. See Section
5 for more detailed information on programming the receiver or refer to the Quick Chart in the
appendix for programming overview.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-10
Main Menu
This section gives detailed information about the items available in the installer/operator
menu options, which this manual will refer to as the main menu. The menu items available to
each logged on user is dependent on the profile assigned to that user. (See Table 4-4 for menu
items for each profile.) The user profile is assigned to each user through programming. (See
“User List” in Section 5 for programming user profiles.)
Displaying the Main Menu
Once a user has logged on to the system, follow these steps to view the main menu options.
(See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
1. Press the ENTER/MENU button.
The LCD display will show the main menu options.
Figure 4-6 Main Menu Display
Note: The main menu display will remain visible for 15 minutes of idle time after which it will revert back to the
manual or automatic display window (Figure 4-3).
2. Choose the desired menu item (Figure 4-6).
<Operator Menu>
1=Call History
2 System History
3 System Info
â
<Operator Menu>
4=Set Time & Date
á
5 System Restart
< Exit Menu >
The profile assigned
to the user will appear
in display title as either
Operator or Installer
Equal sign indicates the item that will be
chosen if enter key or right arrow is pressed
Down arrow indicates
additional menu items
Display after
Down arrow
pressed 3 times
Indicates that pressing
a left arrow will exit
Main Menu
Option 5 is a
non-editable field
Operation
4-11
Moving Around in the Main Menu
Table 4-6 indicates the buttons used to move around in the <Main Menu>.
Call History
Call history displays the calls that are in the history buffer (memory).
Figure 4-7 View of a Call History Screen
Note: The letter preceding the linecard number may appear as a “G” if the linecard that the call came in on is
programmed for a hunt group. (See “Miscellaneous Line Options” in Section 5.)
Table 4-6: Main Menu Controls
To accept a menu item press.
Or press.
Or press the number key corresponding to
the desired menu option.
Number can also be used
to enter numeric
information where
needed.
To Choose the next menu item press.
Go back to previous choice.
Exit current menu or menu item.
Move back to previous entry.
ENTER
MENU
1
R0083 L01 #12345
Trbl
Z# 42
01/01 10:26P *E1/1
Event reference
number (0001-9999)
Number and orde
r
of events for this
report
Star indicates that the
call was acknowledged
Time
Reason for call
Zone number
Month and day
Account number
(up to nine digits
)
Line card number
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-12
To display a specific event enter the reference number then press the ENTER/MENU button.
Press the STAR/HOME button to go to most recent call. (See Table 4-3 for display
abbreviations.)
S
y
stem Histor
y
System History displays any events that are stored in the history buffer. System events are
any events related to the receiver operation such as line card faults, low backup battery, AC
power loss, log in, log out, system program change, communication failure to a printer or
automation system, etc.
Fi
ure 4-8 S
stem Histor
Dis
la
Se
uence
Note: Up arrow moves back to the previous event that occurred.
To display a specific event enter the event number (Figure 4-8) then press the ENTER/MENU
button. Press the STAR/HOME button to go to most recent call.
S
y
stem Info
System Info is a non-editable screen that displays the model number, the software revision,
software date code, receiver ID number. If a down arrow is pressed, the display will show the
line card firmware information, which includes the model number, the software revision, the
software date code, and letter revision.
Fi
g
ure 4-9 S
y
stem Information Dis
p
la
y
2
<Installer Menu>
2=System History
á
3 System Info
4 Set Time & Date
â
SysEvent 22 of 22
User Log In
#11
05/03/99 09:56AM
SysEvent 21 of 22
User Log Out
#02
05/03/99 09:56AM
Event number
View after
2 pressed
Up arrow
displays
previous event
Model 5000
Version: X.XX
Date: MMM X 1999
Rcvr ID: 01
â
LineCard Firmware:
124047
Date: 2/28/99
Rev: A
â
Model number
Date code
Letter rev.
Version
number
Firmware part number
Operation
4-13
Set Time & Date
If Set Time & Date is selected, the operator can change the time and date currently
displayed on the receiver. (See Figure 4-10 for setting time and date procedure.)
Figure 4-10 Setting Time and Date Program Sequence
Time: 12:00AM
Date: 01/01/99
Offset: -05:00
<Hour 1 to 12>
Time: 12:00AM
Date: 01/01/99
Offset: -05:00
<Hour 0 to 59>
Time: 12:00AM
Date: 01/01/99
Offset: -05:00
<Change AM/PM>
Time: 12:00AM
Date: 01/01/99
Offset: -05:00
<Month 1 to 12>
Time: 12:00AM
Date: 01/01/99
Offset: -05:00
<Day 1 to 31>
1. Press the Menu button.
2. Press the 4 button to
select the Time and
Date menu.
3. Set the Hour (1 to 12).
The field to be
changed flashes.
4. Set the Minutes.
The field to be
changed flashes.
5. Set time to AM or PM.
The field to be
changed flashes.
6. Set the Month. The
field to be changed
flashes.
7. Set the Day. The
field to be changed
flashes.
Time: 12:00AM
Date: 01/01/99
Offset: -05:00
<Year 0 to 99>
Time: 12:00AM
Date: 01/01/99
Offset: -05:00
<Greenwich +/->
Time: 12:00AM
Date: 01/01/99
Offset: -05:00
<Hour 0 to 12>
Time: 12:00AM
Date: 01/01/99
Offset: -05:00
<10 Min 0 to 5>
Time: 12:00AM
Date: 01/01/99
Press ENTER at
exact time to set.
8. Set the Year (0 to 99).
The field to be
changed flashes.
9. Set Greenwich Mean Time
offset (+ or –). The field
to be changed flashes.
10. Set the number of hours
offset from Greenwich
Mean Time. The field to
be changed flashes.
11. Set the number of minutes
(in 10 minute increments)
offset from Greenwich
Mean Time. The field to
be changed flashes.
12. Press Enter button to
synchronize the set
time to the correct
time.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-14
System Restart
System Restart allows the operator or installer to restart the receiver. An installer has the
option to set the receiver back to factory default settings, while an operator can only restart the
receiver.
Note: The time and date set in the receiver will be saved. However, all of the call history will be lost.
Figure 4-11 System Restart Display
Follow These Steps to restart the receiver:
Note: All messages must be acknowledged before a system restart procedure can be performed. If all messages
are not acknowledged, cycle the receiver’s power to restart the system. If the power is cycled all
unacknowledged messages will be lost.
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press the ENTER/MENU button to view the Installer Menu.
3. Press 5 for System Restart.
The display reads Do you wish to
shutdown & restart
system? No
4. Press or button to toggle No to Yes.
5. Press ENTER/MENU button. Users with an operator profile are done at this point.
The display reads Do you wish to set
to factory default
settings? No
Note: This display will only appear if the logged on User has an Installer Profile.
6. Press the or button to toggle between No and Yes.
Note: If you choose Yes all linecard and user custom programming will be lost.
If the message “System Busy. Unresolved Messages. Restart Aborted.” is displayed, the system is
indicating that there are messages that need to be acknowledged. (See “Operation Mode” in Section 5.)
ENTER
MENU
<Installer Menu>
5=System Restart
á
6 Printer Menu
7 Program Menu
â
Operation
4-15
Print Menu
In the print menu you can print customized reports by the type of alarm (as defined by UL
864, Section 72.15F), edit the desired print output, and configure output for your printer.
Figure 4-12 Print Menu Items
Table 4-7: Printer Menu Choices
Printer Menu Choice 1 Choice 2 Comments
Print Report
Call History
Priority 1
(Life safety signals-Fire, Duress)
Y Indicates that this item will print on this
report.
N Indicates that this item will not print on this
report.
The call History print will execute once you exit
from “Choice 2”.
Note:
Choice 2 settings are not retained in flash
memory and have to be chosen for each
call history printing.
Priority 2
(Property safety signals-Burg.)
Priority 3
(Supervisory signals)
Priority 4
(Trouble signals)
Priority 5
(All other signals)
System History This option prints all the system events in the
event history buffer.
System Config
Print All, Y or N Print all of the receiver and line card data.
Program Data, Y or N Print just the systems programmed data.
User List Y or N Print user list.
Line Card #, Y or N Print line card configurations per line card.
Test Page Print a test page.
Edit Evnt Format
Datetime Y or N Y Indicates that this item will print on a report.
N Indicates that this item will not print on a
report.
Default setting is Y for all edit event format
options.
These settings are saved to flash memory.
Format Type Y or N
Ref Number Y or N
Call Sep Y or N
Device Num Y or N
<Printer Menu>
1=Print Report
2 Edit Evnt Format
3 Config Printer
â
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-16
Print Report
Through the print report option you can choose to print the call history, system history, system
configuration information, or just print a test page.
Figure 4-13 Print Report Menu Items
Printing the Call History
Follow these steps to print the call history:
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press the ENTER/MENU button to view the Installer Menu.
3. Press 6 for the <Printer Menu> (Figure 4-12).
4. Press 1 for <Print Report Menu> (Figure 4-13).
Config Printer
Line
Terminator
CR or CRLF CR = Carriage return.
CRLF = Carriage return and Line feed.
Off-line Time
0 - 60 seconds Off-line time is how long the receiver will wait
before giving a trouble indication after
communication is lost with the printer. The
default setting is 2 seconds. (30 second maximum
for UL applications.)
Switch Delay
Time
0 - 60 seconds Switch delay time is the duration the receiver will
wait before switching to the backup printer after
communication is lost with the primary printer.
The default setting is 20 seconds.
Table 4-7: Printer Menu Choices
Printer Menu Choice 1 Choice 2 Comments
<Printer Menu>
1=Print Report
2 Edit Evnt Format
3 Config Printer
â
<Print Menu>
1=Call History
2 System History
3 System Config
â
<Print Report>
4=Test Page
< Exit menu
á
1
Operation
4-17
5. Press 1 for Call History options.
Fi
g
ure 4-14 Call Histor
y
O
p
tions
6. Press the or button to move through the call history menu choices (Figure 4-14).
7. When the equal sign highlights the call history items you desire to print for this report,
press ENTER/MENU or to toggle the setting between Y (print) or N (don’t print).
8. Press left arrow button to exit menu.
Printin
g
the S
y
stem Histor
y
Follow these steps to print the system history:
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press the ENTER/MENU button to view the Installer Menu.
3. Press 6 for the <Printer Menu> (Figure 4-12).
4. Press 1 for <Print Report Menu> (Figure 4-13).
5. Press 2 to print the System History.
6. Press left arrow button to exit menu.
Printin
g
S
y
stem Confi
g
uration
Follow these steps to print the system configuration:
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press the ENTER/MENU button to view the Installer Menu items.
3. Press 6 for the <Printer Menu> (Figure 4-12).
4. Press 1 for <Print Report Menu> (Figure 4-13).
<Call History>
01=Priority #1 [Y]
02 Priority #2 [Y]
03 Priority #3 [Y]
â
<Call History>
04=Priority #4 [Y]
á
05 Priority #5 [Y]
< Exit Menu>
ENTER
MENU
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-18
5. Press 3 to view System Configuration options (Figure 4-15).
Fi
g
ure 4-15 S
y
stem Confi
g
uration Print Items
6. Press the or button to move through the system configuration print choices.
7. When the equal sign highlights an option, press ENTER/MENU or to toggle the setting
between Y (yes print) or N (don’t print).
8. Press the left arrow button to print the data and exit menu.
Note: These choices are not saved to flash memory and will have to be chosen each time that print system
configuration is entered.
Printin
g
a Test Pa
g
e
Follow these steps to print a test page:
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press the ENTER/MENU button to view the Installer Menu items.
3. Press 6 for the <Print> menu (Figure 4-12).
4. Press 1 for <Print Report> menu (Figure 4-13).
5. Press 4 to print a test page.
6. Press the left arrow button to exit menu.
<Print Report>
3=System Config
á
4 Test Page
< Exit Menu
<System Config>
01=Print All [N]
02 Program Data [N]
03 Users List [N]
â
<System Config>
04=Line Card # 1[N]
05 Line Card # 2[N]
06 Line Card # 3[N]
â
3
First item 04 down is
a list of exiting line card
numbers from 1 to 12
Operation
4-19
Editing the Event Format
Edit event format allows you to configure what information will print on reports to the
receiver.
Follow these steps to configure the report format:
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press the ENTER/MENU button to view the Installer Menu items.
3. Press 6 for the <Print> menu (Figure 4-12).
4. Press 2 for <Edit Format Menu:> items (Figure 4-16).
Figure 4-16 Event Format Menu Items
5. Press the or button to move through the event format choices. (See Table 4-8 for
choice definitions.)
6. When the equal sign highlights each option press ENTER/MENU or to toggle the set-
ting between Y (yes print) or N (don’t print).
Note: These settings are saved to flash memory.
7. Press the left arrow button to exit menu.
Table 4-8: Event Format Choices and Meaning
Menu Options Choices Meaning
Edit Event
Format
Date/Time Y (Yes) Y = date and time will print for each report message to the printer.
N = Date and time will not print for each report message to the printer.
N (No)
Format Type
Y (Yes) Y = The reporting format type of the calling control panel will print for each
report message to the printer.
N = The reporting format type of the calling control panel will not print for
each report message to the printer.
Note:
The Format Type will be listed as a number, which represents the
format used for that communication.
N (No)
Edit Event
Format
(Continued)
Reference
Number
Y (Yes) Y = The reference number will print for each report message to the printer.
N = the reference number will not print for each report message to the printer
(Figure 4-7).
N (No)
Call Separator Y (Yes) Y = Print a dashed-line between each message report to the printer.
N = Do not print a dashed-line between each message report to the printer.
N (No)
Device Number Y (Yes) Y = Print the device number of the reporting message to the printer.
N = Do not print the device number of the reporting message to the printer.
N (No)
<Event Format Menu:>
01=Date/Time [Y]
02 Format Type [Y]
03 Ref Number [Y]
â
<Event Format Menu:>
04=Call Sep [Y]
á
5 Device Num [Y]
< Exit Menu
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-20
Configuring the Printer
Either a carriage return or carriage return with a line feed setting may be required depending
on the printer you are using.
Follow these steps to configure the printer:
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press the ENTER/MENU button to view the Installer Menu items.
3. Press 6 for the <Printer Menu> (Figure 4-12).
4. Press 3 for <Configure Printer Menu> items.
The display will be flashing on the line terminator field.
5. Press the or button to toggle between CR or CRLF (Table 4-7).
6. When the desired setting is flashing press ENTER/MENU.
The display will now flash on the off-line time field.
7. Enter the desired time (from 01-60 seconds), 30 second maximum in UL applications.
8. Press ENTER/MENU.
The display will now flash on the switch delay time field.
9. Enter the desired time (from 01-60 seconds).
10. Press ENTER/MENU.
11. Press the left arrow button to exit menu.
Program Menu
If Program is selected from the main menu the system will enter into “Program Mode.” (See
Table 5-4 for information on modes of operation.) In program mode you can program all the
general options, line card options, and user list. (See the “Quick Chart” in Appendix A.)
Figure 4-17 Program Menu Items
<Program Menu>
1=General Options
2 Line Card Options
3 User List
â
Operation
4-21
Diagnostics Menu
The Diagnostics Menu items can be used while testing and troubleshooting the system.
Figure 4-18 Diagnostics Menu Items
Phantom Menu
The phantom menu contains list of various communication format phantom signals that can
be used to test the receiver or automation software configurations. For example, you set a line
card’s parameters for a particular communications format and would now like to verify that
this new configuration will communicate with other communication formats. You can send
phantom signals in the formats you wish to test with that linecard.
Table 4-9: Phantom Signals Formats List
Choice Format
01 DCS DCS
02 CID Contact ID
03 ITI ITI format
04 BFSK BFSK
05 A31 Task 1 3/1 format
06 A31 Checksum 3/1 format w/checksum
07 A41 4/1 format
08 A42 4/2 format
09 FSK0 FSK 0
10 FSK1 FSK 1
11 FSK2 FSK 2
12 SIA D1 SIA D1
13 ADM42 Checksum Ademco 4/2 format w/checksum
14 SIA D1 Checksum SIA D1 w/checksum
15 ACRON TOUCH TONE Acron Touch Tone
16 ADM41 Checksum Ademco 4/1 format w/checksum
8
<Diagnostics>
1 Phantom Menu
2 Message Que
3 Event Log
â
<Diagnostics>
4=Format-Raw Hex
á
5 LC Debug Mode
6 LC Statistics
â
<Diagnostics>
7=Port Status
á
< Exit Menu
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-22
Note: If printing any of these formats lists, please note that lists can be quite lengthy (50+ pages).
Message Queue
Message Que (Queue) gives a visual indication of how full the message que is. It does this
with both a percentage indication and a bar graph (made of *s). Each * is approximately 5%.
Figure 4-19 Message Que Level
17 FBI 4+3+1 FBI 4+3+1
18 MeterMinder ITI Custom format
19 MODEM IIE Radionics format
20 SIA-2000 (pending)
21 VEMS Silent Knight format
Table 4-9: Phantom Signals Formats List
Choice Format
<Diagnostics>
2=Message Que
á
3 Event Log
4 Format-Raw Hex
â
<Diagnostics>
Msg Que Stat = 16%
***
<=Exit>
2
Operation
4-23
Event Log
Event Log allows you to print out a certain range of reference numbers to the port designated
to diagnostics. This can be used as a troubleshooting tool while correlating alarm messages
from the receiver to the automation computer.
Figure 4-20 Event Log Display
For example, if the automation computer indicated a report that you are not familiar with, you
would enter the reference number for that report in the event log and the raw data would be
output to the diagnostic port. From the raw data you could determine what the signal was and
make adjustment to the automation computer for similar signals in the future.
Format
Format designates the type of output you wish for the Event Log report. The output format
can be in raw ASCII, a printer format, or one of the receivers automation communication
formats. (See Table 5-6 for automation protocols.)
Figure 4-21 Formatting the Event Log Report
<Diagnostics>
3=Event Log
á
4 Format-Raw Hex
< Exit Menu
<Reference #>
Starting:0001
Range :0001
<=Exit>
3
Enter the reference number you
wish to start at here
And the range of event here
<Diagnostics>
4 Format-Raw Hex
á
< Exit Menu
<Diag Format>
1=Raw Hex
2 Printer
3 3000
4
Information after the dash indicates
t
he format presently chosen
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-24
LC Debug Mode
LC Debug Lets you choose the line card to be debugged. (See Section 7,
“Troubleshooting.”)
LC Statistics
The Line Card Statistics submenu allows you to view line card call statistics such as total
calls (all cards), total line card calls, today’s calls, and bad calls.
To view the line card statistics:
1. Log on to the receiver by pressing the LOG/STATUS button and then entering your
installer PIN code.
2. Press the ENTER/MENU button to view the Installer Menu items.
3. Press 8 for the <Diagnostics Menu>.
4. Press
6 for <LC Statistics>.
5. Press the or arrow buttons to move through the line card list.
6. When the equal sign highlights the line card you wish to view, press ENTER/MENU.
7. The display will indicate:
TOTAL CALLS: XX
LC#XX TOTAL: XX
TODAY: XX
BAD: XX
8. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
Port Status
The Port Status submenu is a diagnostic tool to monitor port status (Com Port 1, Com Port
2, Para Port), therefore, it contains no changeable settings. The arrows indicate high and low
voltage.
Operation
4-25
Listen-In and Hang Up
Note: See “UL Requirements” in Section 2 for UL requirements on listen-in.
This section explains how to operate the receiver for listen-in calls. Some panels that perform
listen-in send a listen-in indicator included in the reported message to the receiver. Any panel
that does not send this message must be added to the Listen-In Account List. (See “Listen-In”
in Section 5.)
When a listen-in call is received by the CS-5000, the LCD display will indicate the account
number and (depending on the panel) the listen-in timeout period. The listen-in LED on the
line card will be illuminated to confirm the line card indication.
Manual (Common) Listen-In Operation
Follow these steps to manually handle the listen-in call:
1. Press #/LISTEN button.
2. Enter the line card number.
3. Pick up the telephone the listen-in call is on. See Figure 4-22 for a diagram of how the lis-
ten-in phone should be connected (in parallel) with the phone line of the line card.
4. Perform the listen-in procedures for that panel (refer to panel operation manual).
Figure 4-22 Phone Connector Pin-Out and Listen-in Wiring Diagram
1 Manual Answer
2 Listen-In Tip
4 Telco Ring
5 Listen-In Ring
6 Manual Answer
3 Telco Tip
Phone line connector
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
4-26
PBX Listen-In Operation
Prior to performing listen-in functions on a PBX phone line system the receiver must be set up
with the proper listen-in mode and PBX string. Refer to Section 5, “Operation Mode” and
“Listen-In” to properly program the receiver to handle PBX listen-in calls.
Testing the System
Because there are so many variations in dialer parameters and phone line conditions, the only
way to be absolutely certain that all subscribers can communicate with the CS-5000 is to test
every subscriber's dialer individually. Subscribers must test their communicators every 30
days to make sure the CS-5000 receives the information.
When you install a new CS-5000, test every manufacturers' panels for each format. This is
necessary because different manufacturers' panels may operate differently even if all panels
use the same format.
Important!
The CS-5000 should be tested regularly
to ensure complete and proper operation.
5-1
Section 5
Pro
g
rammin
g
This section lists the programmable features in programming mode and the procedures for
each of them. The options available are general options, line card options, and user options.
Entering Program Mode
Follow these steps to enter into program mode:
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press the ENTER/MENU button.
3. Press the 7 button.
The display will briefly display Initializing
Please wait . . .
4. Select the option you wish to program.
(See “Programming Choices” in this section for options.)
Moving Around in Program Mode
Table 5-1 shows the buttons used for moving around in program mode.
Table 5-1: Main Menu Controls
To accept a menu item press.
Or press.
Or press the number key corresponding to
the desired menu option.
Number can also be used
to enter numeric
information where
needed.
To Choose the next menu item press.
Go back to previous choice.
ENTER
MENU
1
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-2
Programming Display Fields
In program mode there are three types of programming fields into which data can be entered.
Table 5-2 list the three types of fields and the various associated parameters.
Programming Choices
In programming mode, your first set of choices are general options, line card options, and user
list. Figure 5-1 shows what the display will look like before and after the down arrow is
pressed.
Figure 5-1 Program Menu Choices
Exit current menu or menu item.
Move back to previous entry.
Table 5-2: Types of Programming Fields
Field Type Control Buttons Comments
Numeric through or
These fields require a numeric entry only.
List keys
Predefined choices are put in a list and can be
selected by pressing the up or down arrow buttons.
Edit through or
Enter a number from the numeric keypad or enter
any special characters by pressing the up or down
arrow buttons.
Table 5-1: Main Menu Controls
<Program Menu>
1=General Options
2 Line Card Options
3 User List
â
<Program Menu>
2=Line Card Menu
á
3 User List
< Exit
Programming
5-3
General Options
The features available for programming under <General Options> are operation mode,
display options, communications, system, and message queue options.
Figure 5-2 General Options Display
Table 5-3 list the available choices under General Options and gives a description of those
choices.
Table 5-3: General Options Items and Description
General
Options
Items Level 1 Choices Level 2 Choices Level 3
Choices Comments
Operation Mode
Manual See “Operation Mode” in Section 5.
Automatic
Log Only
Display Options
Language English See “Display Options” in Section 5.
español Not available at this time
Time Display
AM/PM AM/PM is used for 12 hour time clock
displays. See “Display Options” in
Section 5.
24 Hour
Date Format
M/D/Y M = month, D = day, and Y = year. See
“Display Options” in Section 5.
D·M·Y
Y-M-D
Daylight Savings Y (Yes) See “Display Options” in Section 5.
N (No)
<General Options>
1=Operation Mode
2 Display Options
3 Communications
â
<General Options>
2=Display Options
á
3 Communications
4 System Options
â
<General Options>
5=Msg Queue Opt.
á
< Exit Menu
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-4
Display Options
ITI
(Flags)
Attempts Y (Yes) Show number of dialing attempts made
by the reporting panel before
communication was successful.
N (No) Default
CPU Time Y (Yes) Show the CPU time reporting.
N (No) Default
CPU Type Y (Yes) Show the CPU type reporting.
N (No) Default
Panel Rev Y (Yes) Show the software revision of the
reporting panel.
N (No) Default
Arming Level Y (Yes) Show the arming level of the reporting
panel.
N (No) Default
Meter Account 5 Y (Yes) Enables special 5-digit account no.
N (No) Default
Meter Account 12 Y (Yes) Enables special 12-digit account no.
N (No) Default
Hold Last Event
Yes LCD will display the last or oldest
unacknowledged event instead of the
date/time display. See “Display Options”
in Section 5.
No
Communication Port Functions
Com1 Unused/
Automation/
Printer/
Rules for Port Configuration:
1. Functions in Brackets [ ] will not
appear unless “Automation” is
selected for Com1 function.
2. Functions in { } will not appear unless
“Printer” is selected in Com1 or Par.
3. A function may be selected only once
in the 3 ports (only one printer, only
one Diag, and so on).
4. All ports may be configured
“Unused”.
See “Communications” in Section 5.
Com2 Unused/[Auto
Bkp]/[Auto Bkp
Prn]/{Print
Bkp}/Diag/
MeterMinder/
Printer
Par (parallel) Unused/Diag/
Printer
Table 5-3: General Options Items and Description (Continued)
General
Options
Items Level 1 Choices Level 2 Choices Level 3
Choices Comments
Programming
5-5
Communication
Com Port 1
Baud Rate 19200/9600/
7200/4800/2400/
1200/600/300/
110
See “Communications” in Section 5.
D (# Data Bits) 7, 8
S (# Stop Bits) 1, 2
P (Parity) Even, Odd,
Space, Mark, No
F (Flow Control) Hdwr, None None = no supervision
Init String See “Communications” in Section 5.
Com Port 2 Same as Com Port 1 See “Communications” in Section 5.
Par Port Init String See “Communications” in Section 5.
Automation Config
Format SIA CIS,
SIA 2000
(pending), ITI
Gen, ITIComp
See “Communications” in Section 5.
HeartBeat Y = Enabled
N = Disabled
Time (of HeartBeat) 10-600 Seconds* * HeartBeat must be Y for Time to
work.
AckTimeout 01-600 Seconds
ITI Log Records Displayed only if ITI Gen or ITI Comp
automation formats are selected. See
Table 5-8 for details.
XID
SupSync[ ] Char.
No Datach[ ]
Char.
GenericRev
Communication Annunciator
Configuration
Printer Yes or No See “Communications” in Section 5.
Bkp Printer Yes or No
Auto Comp Yes or No
Bkp Auto Comp Yes or No
MeterMinder Yes or No
Battery Yes or No
Line Card Yes or No
Line Fault Yes or No
AC Power Yes or No
Buffer Full Yes or No
Listen-In Yes or No Must be set to No for UL installations.
Call Pending Yes or No
Table 5-3: General Options Items and Description (Continued)
General
Options
Items Level 1 Choices Level 2 Choices Level 3
Choices Comments
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-6
Communication Aux Relay Cfg
Printer Yes or No See “Communications” in Section 5.
Bkp Printer Yes or No
Auto Comp Yes or No
Bkp Auto Comp Yes or No
MeterMinder Yes or No
Battery Yes or No
Line Card Yes or No
Line Fault Yes or No
AC Power Yes or No
Buffer Full Yes or No
Listen-In Yes or No Must be set to No for UL installations.
Call Pending Yes or No
System Options
Battery Backup Cfg
No Battery Bkp See “System Options” in Section 5.
Battery Bkp
DC Bkp
Receiver ID No. 01-99
Strip/Send Bad Strip Bad (default) Strip bad data before sending.
Send Bad Send bad data along with good.
Auxiliary Relay
Normal State
De-energized See “System Options” in Section 5.
Energized
Message Queue
Options
% Warning Lvl On: 10 to 99% 75% The percentage of how full the message
queue can get before a trouble indication
occurs.
Off: 01 to 90% 50% What percentage the message queue must
go back down to in order to clear a
trouble indication.
Max Buf Limit 500 to 5000 1000 Used to set the maximum number of
bytes in a call. This number is used to
determine if a call is a runaway call.
Table 5-3: General Options Items and Description (Continued)
General
Options
Items Level 1 Choices Level 2 Choices Level 3
Choices Comments
Programming
5-7
Operation Mode
Operation mode chooses how the receiver will operate in normal mode (manual, automatic or
log only operation).
Figure 5-3 Normal Operating Mode Display Indicating Manual Operation
Table 5-4 breaks down the choices available under operation mode menu item.
Note: Defaults refer to settings from the factory. Once the receiver is programmed, the system will power up in
the programmed operation mode.
Changing the Operation Mode
Follow these steps to change the operation mode of the receiver:
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press ENTER/MENU button.
3. Press 7 for <Program Menu>.
The display will briefly display Initializing
Please wait . . .
4. Press
1 to choose General Options.
5. Press 1 to choose Operation Mode.
The current operation mode will flash in the display.
6. Press the or button to move through the operation mode choices.
Note: Each additional press of the up or down arrow key will toggle the operation mode setting to the next choice.
7. When the display flashes on the desired operation mode, press ENTER/MENU.
Table 5-4: Operation Mode Choices and Descriptions
Choices Description Default
Manual Requires manual acknowledgments of each call or event from an operator.
Automatic All event information is sent directly to the automation computer and must be
acknowledged by the automation software.
Log Only All event information is internally acknowledged and put into event history buffer.
Model 5000 Receiver
ITI
Man: Scanning...
01/01/99 08:32:44
In normal operating mode the display
indicates the current operation mode
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-8
Display Options
Display options lets you customize the visual outputs of the receiver. These items include
language formats, the time display, how events are sorted to the LCD display, and whether or
not to hold unacknowledged events.
Figure 5-4 View of Display Options
Table 5-5 lists the available choices and gives a description of those choices.
Table 5-5: Display Options and Descriptions
Display Menu
Items Choices Default Comments
Language English
español Not available at this time.
Time Display AM/PM AM/PM is used for 12 hour time clock displays.
24 hour Military time standard.
Date Display
m/d/y m = month, d = day, and y = year.
d·m·y
y-m-d
Daylight Savings Yes
No
ITI Flags
Attempts Y (Yes) Show number of dialing attempts made by the reporting panel before
communication was successful. See “ITI Flags (Set LCD and Printer
Output Options)”for step-by-step instructions.
N (No) Def
CPU Time Y (Yes) Show the CPU time reporting.
N (No) Def
CPU Type Y (Yes) Show the CPU type reporting.
N (No) Def
Panel Rev Y (Yes) Show the software revision of the reporting panel.
N (No) Def
<General Options>
2=Display Options
á
3 Communications
4 System Options
â
English AMPM m/d/y
DayLtSv=Y
HoldEvt=N
<Language <=Exit>
2
Programming
5-9
Changing the Display Options
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” for instructions.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 2 for Display Options.
4. Press until the display flashes on the desired display menu item:
Language Format
Time Format
Date Format
Daylight Savings
ITI Flags (see “ITI Flags (Set LCD and Printer Output Options)”)
Hold Last Event
5. Press the or button until the display flashes on the desired setting.
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
ITI Flags (Set LCD and Printer Output Options)
1. At the flashing <ITI> field press the or button until the display flashes on the desired
setting.
2. Press ENTER/MENU.
3. Repeat steps 1 and 2 for each option. (See Table 5-5 for options definitions.)
Note: Setting CPU Time option to “Y” will enable sending a test record to automation port whenever panel clock
is updated.
4. Press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
ITI Flags Arming Level Y (Yes) Show the arming level of the reporting panel.
N (No) Def
Meter Acct 5 Y (Yes) Use special 5-digit MeterMinder account number.
N (No) Def
Meter Acct 12 Y (Yes) Use special 12-digit MeterMinder account number.
N (No) Def
Hold Last Event
Yes LCD will display the last acknowledged event instead of the date/time
display in the auto mode. In manual mode the display will show the oldest
unacknowledged event.
No
Table 5-5: Display Options and Descriptions (Continued)
Display Menu
Items Choices Default Comments
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-10
Communications
In the <Communications> options, the installer can configure the communication ports,
automation configuration, annunciator configurations, and the auxiliary relay configurations.
Figure 5-5 Communications Options Menu
Table 5-6 lists the available choices and gives a description of those choices.
Table 5-6: Communications Options and Descriptions
Communica-
tions Menu Choices Options De-
fault Comments
Port Functions
Com1
Unused Rules for Port Functions:
1. Functions in Brackets [ ] will not appear unless Automation is
selected for Com1 function.
2. Functions in { } will not appear unless “Printer” is selected in
Com1 or Par.
3. A function may be selected only once in the 3 ports (only one
printer, only one Diag, and so on).
4. All ports may be configured “Unused.”
5. Only Com port 1 can be set as the primary automation port.
Automation
Printer
Com2
Unused
Diagnostics Would output raw Hex-ASCII code.
Printer English output to a printer.
[Auto Bkp] Would act as a backup automation port if a fault occurred with
the primary automation port.
[Auto Bkp Prn] Would act as a backup print output port if a fault occurred with
the automation port.
{Print Bkp} Would act as a backup printer port if a fault occurred with the
primary printer port.
MeterMinder Custom MeterMinder output.
Parallel (Par)
Unused
Diagnostics Would output raw Hex-ASCII code.
Printer English output to a printer.
[Auto Bkp Prn] Would act as a backup print output port if a fault occurred with
the automation port.
<Communications>
1=Port Functions
2 Com Port1: Unused
3 Com Port2: Unused
â
<Communications>
4=Par Port: Unused
á
5 Automation Cfg
6 Annunciator Cfg
â
<Communications>
7=Aux Relay Cfg
á
< Exit Menu
Programming
5-11
Com Port 1
Baud
19200
9600
7200
4800
2400
1200
600
300
110
D (# Data Bits) 7
8
S (# Stop Bits) 1
2
P (Parity)
Even
Odd
Space
Mark
No
F (Flow) Hdwr Unidirectional communication
None
Init Str
(Initialization
String)
Two 20 character ESC command sequences.
See “Setting Com Port 1 Parameters” section for step-by -step
instructions.
Com Port 2 Same as Com Port 1
Par Port (Parallel
Port)
Init Str
(Initialization
String)
Two 20 character ESC command sequences.
See “Editing the Init String (Com 1, Com 2, and Parallel Port)”
for step-by -step instructions.
Automation Cfg
Format
SIA CIS See “Setting the Format” for programming steps.
See Section 8 for more information on automation formats.
SIA 2000
(pending)
ITI Gen
ITIComp
HeartBeat Y = Enabled See “Enabling or Disabling the HeartBeat” for programming
steps.
N = Disabled
Time (of
HeartBeat)
10-600 seconds 0 sec
(N)
60 (Y)
How often a supervisory signal (a HeartBeat) is sent to the
automation computer. HeartBeat must by Y for Time to work.
See “Time (Period of HeartBeat)” for programming steps.
AckTimeout 01-600 seconds 10 sec 15 seconds or less in UL applications. See “Ack Time
(Acknowledge Time)” for programming steps.
ITI Special ITI options. See Table 5-8. Displayed only if ITI Gen or
ITI Comp automation formats are selected.
Table 5-6: Communications Options and Descriptions (Continued)
Communica-
tions Menu Choices Options De-
fault Comments
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-12
Annunciator Cfg
Printer Yes Yes = will annunciate if an event, trouble or fault condition
occurs.
No = no annunciation if an event, trouble or fault condition
occurs.
See Configuring the On-board Annunciator Outputs” for
programming steps.
No
Bkp Printer Yes
No
Auto Comp Yes
No
Bkp Auto
Comp
Yes
No
MeterMinder Yes
No
Battery Yes
No
Line Card Yes
No
Line Fault Yes
No
AC Power Yes
No
Buffer Full Yes
No
Listen-In Yes
No Must be set to No for UL installations.
Call Pending Yes
No
Table 5-6: Communications Options and Descriptions (Continued)
Communica-
tions Menu Choices Options De-
fault Comments
Programming
5-13
Setting Up the Port Function
Port Functions set up how each of the communication ports will be used. Before you start to
set up the port functions review the rules for port functions in Table 5-6.
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 3 for Communications.
4. Press 1 to Set Port functions.
5. Press the or button until the display flashes on the desired port setting.
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
7. Repeat steps 5 through 6 until all port functions are set.
8. Press left arrow button to exit menu.
Aux Relay Cfg
Printer Yes Yes = will annunciate if an event, trouble or fault condition
occurs.
No = no annunciation if an event, trouble or fault condition
occurs.
See “Configuring the Auxiliary Relay Outputs” for programming
steps.
No
Bkp Printer Yes
No
Auto Comp Yes
No
Bkp Auto
Comp
Yes
No
MeterMinder Yes
No
Battery Yes
No
Line Card Yes
No
Line Fault Yes
No
AC Power Yes
No
Buffer Full Yes
No
Listen In Yes
No Must be set to No for UL installations.
Call Pending Yes
No
Table 5-6: Communications Options and Descriptions (Continued)
Communica-
tions Menu Choices Options De-
fault Comments
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-14
Setting Com Port 1 Parameters
Set the baud rate, the number of data bits, number of stop bits, the parity, and the flow control.
(See Table 5-6 for choice details.)
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 3 for Communications.
4. Press 2 to set Com Port 1 parameters.
5. Press the or button until the display flashes on the desired port setting.
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
Note: See “Editing the Init String (Com 1, Com 2, and Parallel Port)” section.
7. Repeat steps 5 through 6 until all parameters are set.
8. Press left arrow button to exit menu.
Setting Com Port 2 Parameters
Set the baud rate, the number of data bits, number of stop bits, the parity, and the flow control.
(See Table 5-6 for choice details.)
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 3 for Communications.
4. Press 3 to set Com Port 2 parameters.
5. Press the or button until the display flashes on the desired port setting.
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
Note: See “Editing the Init String (Com 1, Com 2, and Parallel Port)” section.
7. Repeat steps 5 through 6 until all parameters are set.
8. Press left arrow button to exit menu.
Editing the Init String (Com 1, Com 2, and Parallel Port)
An initialization string can be used to customize the output to the device connected to a port
on the receiver.
For example, you can skip over perforations, set proportional spacing, or condense the print
output to a printer.
Note: Refer to the user manual, of the device connected to the receiver, for special command sequences.
Follow these step to insert an initialization string:
1. Press ENTER/MENU at the flashing <Init Str> field.
Programming
5-15
Figure 5-6 Initialization String Display
2. Press the or button until the desired character flashes.
3. Press , the next character position will flash.
4. Repeat steps 2 and 3 until the desired sequence is complete.
5. Press ENTER/MENU.
6. Repeat steps 2 through 5 for the second string.
To Clear an Init String
1. At the Clear String=N field, press or until the desired option flashes (Figure 5-6)
2. Press ENTER/MENU.
3. Press left arrow button to exit menu.
Table 5-7: Initialization String Characters
Character Description
0 through 9Numeric characters which can be entered from the touchpad or by
pressing up/down arrows.
a-z and A-ZAlpha characters entered with the up/down arrows.
: _ - . , & * # ? EC = + and space bar Special Characters entered with the up/down arrows.
ENTER
MENU
<Edit Init String>
____________________
Clear String=N
<Edit Init String>
____________________
Clear String=N
First 20-digit string
Second 20-digit string
N = Do not clear init string
Y = Clear init string
Press to toggle Y or N
= ESC or Escape
E
C
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-16
Setting Automation Communication
Automation communication format and parameters can be set up through this option. (See
Table 5-6 for format choices.)
Setting the Format
Follow these steps to set the automation communication format.
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 3 for Communications.
4. Press 5 to setup Automation configuration.
5. Press the or button until the display flashes on the desired format setting.
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
7. Repeat steps 5 through 6 until all parameters are set.
8. Press left arrow button if you wish to exit menu or continue with heartbeat.
Enabling or Disabling the HeartBeat
A HeartBeat is a supervisory signal that continually tests the communication link between the
automation computer and the receiver.
Follow these steps to enable or disable HeartBeat:
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 3 for Communications.
4. Press 5 to setup Automation configuration.
5. Press until the HeartBeat field is flashing.
6. Press the or button until the display flashes on the desired setting.
7. Press ENTER/MENU.
8. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
Time (Period of HeartBeat)
If HeartBeat is enabled, this option determines how often the HeartBeat is sent to the
automation computer. For example, if the time is set to 60 seconds (default setting) then a
HeartBeat will be sent every 60 seconds.
Follow these steps to set the HeartBeat time period:
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 3 for Communications.
4. Press 5 to setup Automation configuration.
5. Press until the Time field is flashing.
6. Enter the desired time (10-600) and press ENTER/MENU.
7. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
Programming
5-17
Ack Time (Acknowledge Time)
The acknowledge time is the duration that the receiver will wait for a response from the
automation computer after a data packet has been sent. Data packets include all reports and
HeartBeats.
Follow these steps to set the acknowledge time duration:
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 3 for Communications.
4. Press 5 to setup Automation configuration.
5. Press until the ACK Time field is flashing.
6. Enter the desired time (01-600) and press ENTER/MENU.
7. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
ITI Options (Only Visible if ITI Gen or ITIComp Formats are Chosen)
These are options particular to the ITI automation format and can only be edited if one of
these formats is used to communicate with the automation computer. (See “ITI Generic
Computer Format” and “ITI Comp (Computer Interface) Format” in Section 8.)
Follow these steps to set the ITI options:
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 3 for Communications.
4. Press 5 to Setup Automation configuration.
5. Press until the ITI field is flashing.
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
Note: ITI automation formats are covered in greater detail in the Section 8.
Table 5-8: ITI Automation Format Options
Option Choices Default Meaning Comments
Log Recs Y (Yes) NLog records identify the time and date of a
incoming report.
N (No)
XID Y (Yes) Y Extended panel identification code. See “Setting
Automation
Communication” in
Section 5.
N (No)
SupCh[] A-Z, a-z,1-9,:,-
=,+,*,_,.,&,#,?,
ESC
s
Supervisory Character sent during link test.
NoDataCh[] A-Z, a-z,1-9,:,-
=,+,*,_,.,&,#,?,
ESC
0
Defines the no data character in the
automation output.
Generic Rev 6.1, 6.2 6.1 Identifies selected ITI Generic & ITIComp
revision level.
See Appendix E.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-18
Log Recs (For ITI Formats)
1. At the flashing Log Recs field, press the or button until the display flashes on the
desired setting.
2. Press ENTER/MENU.
3. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
XID (Extended ID for ITI Panels)
1. At the flashing XID field, press the or button until the display flashes on the desired
setting.
2. Press ENTER/MENU.
3. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
SupCh (Supervisory Character)
The supervisory character is the ASCII character sent to the receiver from the automation
computer (or in response to a heartbeat) to request a supervisory record.
1. At the flashing SupCh[_] field, press the or button until the display flashes on the
desired setting.
2. Press ENTER/MENU.
3. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
NoDataCh (No Data Character for Automation Record)
1. At the flashing NoDataCh[_] field enter a digit from 0-9 from the touchpad or press the
or button until the display flashes on the desired setting.
2. Press ENTER/MENU.
3. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
Generic (& ITIComp) Revision
See Appendix E for version control details.
1. At the flashing GenericRev field press ENTER/MENU.
2. Press the or button until the display flashes on the desired setting.
3. Press ENTER/MENU.
4. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
Programming
5-19
Configuring the On-board Annunciator Outputs
Program what will give a trouble annunciation or what will not annunciate from the on-board
annunciator.
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 3 for Communications.
4. Press 6 to Set Annunciator configuration and display a list of output options.
5. Press the or button to move through the annunciator output options.
6. When the equal sign highlights the option you wish to change, press ENTER/MENU.
Note: Additional presses of the Enter button toggle the setting between yes and no. See Table 5-9.
7. Repeat steps 5 through 6 for all annunciator options you wish to change. (See Table 5-9
for list of additional options.)
Configuring the Auxiliary Relay Outputs
Program an event that will give a trouble output to the auxiliary relay contact. (See next
section to program the normal state of the auxiliary relay.)
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 3 for Communications.
4. Press 7 to Set Relay configuration.
A list of the relay output options is displayed.
5. Press the or button to move through the relay output options.
6. When the equal sign highlights the option you wish to change, press ENTER/MENU.
Note: Additional presses of the enter button toggle the setting between yes and no (Table 5-9).
7. Repeat steps 5 through 6 for all relay options you wish to change. (See Table 5-9 for list
of additional options.)
Table 5-9: On-board Annunciator and Auxiliary Relay Options
Option Choices Comments
Printer Y (Yes) or N (No)
Y = The on-board annunciator will beep if there is an error condition.
N = No on-board annunciation if an error condition exist.
Bkp Printer Y (Yes) or N (No)
Auto Comp Y (Yes) or N (No)
Bkp Auto Comp Y (Yes) or N (No)
MeterMinder Y (Yes) or N (No)
Battery Y (Yes) or N (No)
Line Card Y (Yes) or N (No)
Line Fault Y (Yes) or N (No)
AC Power Y (Yes) or N (No)
Buffer Full Y (Yes) or N (No)
Listen-In Y (Yes) or N (No)
Call Pending Y (Yes) or N (No)
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-20
System Options
In System Options you can configure the backup battery configuration, the receiver ID
number, and the normal state of the auxiliary relay.
Figure 5-7 System Options Display
Table 5-10 list the available choices and gives a description of those choices.
Changing the Backup Battery Setting
Through System Options the backup battery can be configured for the type of backup
battery your installation site requires.
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 4 for System Options.
4. Press the or button until the display flashes on the desired setting.
5. Press ENTER/MENU.
6. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
Table 5-10: System Options
System Options
Menu Choices Default Comments
Battery Backup Cfg
No Battery Bkp No charging current applied to battery circuit. Receiver
will not test battery output or give trouble annunciations.
Battery Bkp Charging current applied to battery circuit.
DC Bkp No charging current applied to battery circuit. Typically
used for systems that use a UPS (uninterrupted power
supply) for backup battery power.
Receiver ID 01-99 01
Strip/Send Bad Data Strip Bad Strips or sends bad data with good.
Send Bad
Aux Relay Normal State De-energized See “Configuring the Auxiliary Relay Outputs” in Section
5 for auxiliary relay output options.
Energized
ENTER
MENU
<General Options>
4=System Options
á
< Exit
No Battery Bkp
Rcvr ID=01 Strip Bad
Aux Relay=DeEnergize
<Batt Bkp <=Exit>
Programming
5-21
Setting the Receiver ID Number
In large central stations where calls may be coming in on several receivers at once, the
automation software will need to identify from which receiver it received a call. This will
help in troubleshooting if a problem occurred with the automation system or receiver.
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 4 for System Options.
4. Press right arrow button.
The display will flash on the receiver ID number: Rcvr ID=01
5. Enter the desired receiver ID number (a number from 01 to 99).
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
7. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
Setting to Strip or Send Bad Data
Bad data (if any) can be stripped or sent with the good data. Default is for the bad data to be
stripped.
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 4 for System Options.
4. Press , .
The display will flash on the setting: Strip or Send Bad
5. Press the or button until the display flashes on the desired setting.
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
7. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
Setting the Auxiliary Relay Contact Normal State
The auxiliary relay contact is a “Form C” relay. This feature allows you to set the state of the
auxiliary relay normally open contact when power is applied to the receiver.
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 4 for System Options.
4. Press , , .
The display will flash on the auxiliary relay setting: Aux Relay=Energized
5. Press the or button until the display flashes on the desired setting.
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
7. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-22
Message Queue Options
Set the percentage of how full the message queue must be before a “Message Queue Warning”
and “Message Queue Warning Restore” occur. (See Section 7 “Troubleshooting” for trouble
messages.)
Figure 5-8 Message Queue Display
Note: The “Warning On” can be set from 10% to 99%, the “Warning Off” can be set from 1% to 90%. A mini-
mum separation of 5% will be set between the On % and the Off %. For example, if the “Warning On” is
set to 82% the “Warning Off” maximum setting can be 77%.
Setting the Message Queue Warning-On Level
Set the percentage of how full the message queue can get before the receiver indicates a
“Message Queue Warning” condition.
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 5 for Message Queue Options.
4. Enter the level (in %) you wish the receiver message queue to get before it will indicate a
message queue warning.
5. Press ENTER/MENU.
6. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
Setting the Message Queue Warning-Off Level
Set the percentage level where the receiver will indicate a restore condition for a “Message
Queue Warning.”
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 5 for Message Queue Options.
4. Press until the display flashes on the Off field.
5. Enter the level (in %) you wish the receiver message queue to get before it will indicate a
message queue warning restore.
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
7. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
5
<General Options>
5=Msg Queue Opt.
á
< Exit Menu
<Msg Queue Menu>
Wrn Lvl On:75 Off:50
Max Buf Limit: 1000
<%Wrng On <=Exit >
Programming
5-23
Set the Maximum Buffer Limit
Used to set the maximum number of bytes in a call. This number is used to determine if a call
is a runaway call.
1. Enter program mode. (See “Entering Program Mode” in Section 5.)
2. Press 1 for General Options.
3. Press 5 for Message Queue Options.
4. Press until the display flashes on the Max Buf Limit field.
5. Enter the number of bytes you wish the receiver message queue to reach before it will
indicate a Message Queue Buffer Full warning and hang up on the runaway call.
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
7. If you wish to exit, press left arrow button until you exit this menu.
Line Card Menu
Through the Line Card Menu you can add a new line card, edit, copy, clear, or view existing
line cards.
Note: Copy Line Card menu item not shown.
Figure 5-9 Choosing Line Card Menu and Line Card Program Menu Items
<Program Menu>
2=Line Card Menu
á
3 User List
< Exit
<LineCard Program>
1=Add Line Card
2 Edit Line Card
3 Clear Line Card
â
<LineCard Program>
2=Edit Line Card
á
3 Clear Line Card
4 View Line Cards
â
2
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-24
Table 5-11 lists the menu options available under line card menu.
Table 5-11: Line Card Menu Options
Line Card
Menu Choice Choice Choice Default Comments
Add Line card Line card # Use Defaults
Copy Existing
Edit Line Card
(select card to
edit)
Handshake
Sequence
Handshake
Sequence (HS)
Number
1 See the
corresponding
numbers below.
The order in which the line card will
output different handshakes.
See “Changing the Handshake Sequence
Number” in Section 5.
2
3
4
5
6
Handshake
Group
2225Hz 1 & 2 The handshake format group determines
the handshake format to be used.
The number in default column indicates
the defaults per handshake sequence
number.
See “Changing the Format Group” in
Section 5.
1400Hz 5
1400_2300Hz 3
4/1 1400Hz
4/1 2300Hz 6
1400 Even
2300 Even
Not Used
2300Hz 4
Handshake
Delay
0-255 In 50ms
periods
1. 010
(500ms)
This is the duration of time that the
receiver will wait before it sends its
handshake tone.
See “Changing the Handshake Delay
Time” in Section 5.
2. 000 (0ms)
3. 002 (100ms)
4. 002 (100ms)
5. 002 (100ms)
6. 002 (100ms)
Handshake
Duration
0-255 In 10ms
periods
1. 090 (900ms) The handshake duration is the length of
time that the receiver will send a
handshake tone.
See “Changing the Handshake Duration
Time” in Section 5.
2. 255 (2.55
sec)
3. 010 (100ms)
4. 100 (1 sec)
5. 100 (1 sec)
6. 100 (1 sec)
Programming
5-25
Edit Line Card
(Continued)
Handshake
Sequence
(Continued)
Maximum
Handshake Wait
0-255 In 50ms
periods
1. 064
(3.2 sec)
See “Changing the Maximum Handshake
Wait Time” in Section 5.
2. 000 (0ms)
3. .010
4. 064
(3.2 sec)
5. 064
(3.2 sec)
6. 064
(3.2 sec)
Maximum
Handshake
Acknowledge
Duration
0-255 In 10ms
periods
1. 075 (750ms) See “Changing the Acknowledgment
Tone Duration Time” in Section 5.
2. 075 (750ms)
3. 55 (550ms)
4. 100 (1 sec)
5. 100 (1 sec)
6. 100 (1 sec)
Line
Options
Direct
Y (Yes) Y = dedicated or direct connect phone
line.
N = used for standard phone lines. See
“Setting the Line Card for a Direct Panel
Connection” in Section 5.
No (No)
Number of
Rings
000-255 002 If caller ID is turned on (see “Line Card
Menu” in Section 5.) Set rings set to 2.
On time 0-255 in 50ms
periods
010 (500ms) See “Changing the Ring On Time” in
Section 5.
Off time 0-255 in 50ms
periods
010 (500ms) See “Changing the Ring Off Time” in
Section 5.
Threshold 1-15 in 2.0
VDC steps
08 (16.0VDC) See “Changing the Ring Threshold
Voltage” in Section 5.
Sample Time 0-255 seconds 020 (20 Sec) See “Changing the Phone Line Sample
Rate” in Section 5.
Table 5-11: Line Card Menu Options (Continued)
Line Card
Menu Choice Choice Choice Default Comments
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-26
Edit Line Card
(Continued)
Listen-In
Listen Mode
Not Used See “Listen-In” in Section 5.
Must not be used in UL installations.
Common
PBX
PBX String
<str> edit
None See “Listen-In” in Section 5.
Timeout 0-255 0 See “Listen-In” in Section 5.
Listen-In
account edit
Add Account None See “Adding a Listen-In Account” in
Section 5.
Edit Account See “Adding a Listen-In Account” in
Section 5.
Clear Account See “Adding a Listen-In Account” in
Section 5.
Trap List
Add Account Enter Account # None The trap list is used to trap an account that
you wish to route to a downloading
computer for initial or additional
programming. See “Trap List” in Section
5.
Edit Account Choose Account
Clear Account Choose Account
Misc. Line
Options
Echo Suppress
Y (Yes) Outputs a 2 second 2025Hz tone to
disable echo suppression equipment that
may interfere with modem formats.
N (No)
Caller ID
Yes The Caller ID information will only be
sent on incoming call messages that
contain no data. If the call message
contains any data (valid or invalid) no
Caller Id information will be output.
No
Billing Delay
Y (Yes) Initiates a 2 second delay at the start of
each call before the handshake delay.
N (No) See “Changing the Billing Delay Setting”
in Section 5.
Hunt Group
00-99 00 Allows multiple line cards to report under
the same group number to the automation
software.
LineCard ID 000-999 000
Table 5-11: Line Card Menu Options (Continued)
Line Card
Menu Choice Choice Choice Default Comments
Programming
5-27
Adding a Line Card
To program in a new line card, follow these steps:
1. Install the new line card. (See “Installing Line Cards” in Section 3.)
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press ENTER/MENU button.
3. Press 7 for <Program Menu>.
The display will briefly display Initializing
Please wait . . .
Edit Line Card
(Continued) ITI Options
ITI SCode
Menus
Add Acct./
SCode
Used in communication locking on ITI
panels.
Edit Acct./
SCode
Clear Acct./
SCode
Add SCode
Table
Clear SCode
Table
Date/Time Flag Alway Used to update the panel clock.
Requested
ITI 300 Baud
Y (yes) If enabled, the receiver will attempt to
negotiate 300 baud communication with
ITI panels that support 300 baud
communication. See “ITI 300 Baud” for
programming steps.
N (no)
Audio Mode
Instant See “Audio Mode” in Section 5.
One ring
Dial-back
Copy Line Cards
Use
Defaults
Choose line
card #
Y (yes) Copies existing user default.
N (no)
Copy
Existing
Choose line
card #
Y (yes) Copies existing line card settings.
N (no)
Clear Line Cards Choose line
card #
Y (yes) Deletes a line card from the receiver.
N (no)
View Line Cards Choose line
card #
Y (yes) Views what line cards are installed.
N (no)
Table 5-11: Line Card Menu Options (Continued)
Line Card
Menu Choice Choice Choice Default Comments
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-28
4. Press 2 to choose Line Card menu.
5. Press 1 to Add a New Line Card.
The Display will show <Add Line Card> _ _
Enter Line card #:
6. Enter the slot number (1-12) of the line card being added.
7. Press ENTER/MENU button.
8. Choose 1 to use line card defaults, or
9. Press 2 to copy the programming of another line card.
Edit Line Card
To edit an existing line card follow these steps:
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press ENTER/MENU button.
3. Press 7 for <Program Menu>.
The display will briefly display Initializing
Please wait . . .
4. Press 2 to choose Line Card Menu.
5. Press 2 to Edit Line Card.
The display will show a list of the existing line cards.
6. Press the or arrow buttons to move through the available list.
7. When the equal sign highlights the line card you wish to edit, press ENTER/MENU.
The display will show a list of choices. Table 5-12 lists these choices and a brief descrip-
tion.
Table 5-12: Edit Line Card List Items and Descri
p
tion
Edit Line Card List Descri
p
tion
1 Handshake Seq This function is used to program the handshake order and parameters for this line card.
2 Line Options Used to set number of rings, ring on/off duration, threshold voltage, and sample time.
3 Listen-In Used to program the parameters for the listen-in (two-way voice communication) feature if
used. Must not be used in UL installations.
4 Trap List Used to set up accounts that need to be trapped such as a panel which must be sent to a
downloading computer for programming or updating.
5 Misc. Line Opt. Used to program hunt group number, enable or disable echo suppression and billing delay.
6 ITI Options Used to program ITI account/SCodes, SCode Tables, date/time flag, and 300 baud enable.
Programming
5-29
Handshake Sequence
Each line card is intelligent enough to determine what format is being sent from a reporting
panel. You only need to program the handshake order and parameters for each line card. A
line card will initiate up to six different types of handshake tone groups. The order in which
the receiver sends out these handshake signals can be changed in this program location for
each line card. Table 6-1 lists the proper handshake to use for the type of communication
format you are using with a panel.
Figure 5-10 Handshake Sequence Menu
Follow these steps to change the handshake order and or the parameters associated with the
handshake.
Changing the Handshake Sequence Number
Handshake sequence sets the order in which the receiver will send out handshakes.
1. Follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 1 for Handshake Sequence menu.
When display flashes on the Seq# (Figure 5-10).
3. Press the or button to change the ordered handshake number.
Note: Hs=1 is the first handshake tone sent. Hs=2 is the second handshake tone to be sent and so on.
Figure 5-11 Handshake Order Number
4. When the desired order number is flashing, press ENTER/MENU or .
The display will automatically start flashing the Format Group field.
<Edit Line Card>
L01=0000 Linecard
L02=0000 Linecard
L03=0000 Linecard
â
<Edit Line Card: XX>
1=Handshake Seq.
2 Line Options
3 Listen In
â
Hs=1 Gr=2225Hz
Delay=010 Dur=090
Wait-020 AckDur=075
<Seq # <=Exit>
2
Line card number (1-12)
Hs=1 Gr=2225Hz
Delay=010 Dur=090
Wait=020 AckDur=075
<Seq # <=Exit>
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-30
Changing the Format Group
The handshake format group determines the handshake format to be used.
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 1 for Handshake Sequence menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the Format Group field. (See Table 5-11 for valid
entries.)
4. Press the or button to change the format group. (See Table 6-1 for communication
formats.)
5. When the desired format group is flashing, press ENTER/MENU or .
Changing the Handshake Delay Time
This is the duration of time that the receiver will wait before it sends its handshake tone (0-
255 in 50ms periods). (See Table 5-11.)
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 1 for Handshake Sequence menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the Hs delay field.
4. Enter the desired value from the keypad or press the or button to change the delay
time.
5. When the desired handshake delay time is flashing, press ENTER/MENU or .
Changing the Handshake Duration Time
The handshake duration is the length of time that the receiver will send a handshake tone (0-
255 in 10ms periods). (See Table 5-11.)
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 1 for Handshake Sequence menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the Hs Duration field.
4. Enter the desired value from the keypad or press the or button to change the hand-
shake duration time.
5. When the desired handshake duration time is flashing, press ENTER/MENU or .
Changing the Maximum Handshake Wait Time
The wait time is the amount of time (0-255 in 50ms periods) the receiver will wait for data
from the reporting panel before outputting the next handshake sequence. (See Table 5-11.)
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 1 for Handshake Sequence menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the Max Wait field.
4. Enter the desired value from the keypad or press the or button to change the wait
time.
5. When the desired wait time is flashing, press ENTER/MENU or .
Programming
5-31
Changing the Acknowledgment Tone Duration Time
The acknowledgment tone duration time is the amount of time (0-255 in 10ms periods) the
receiver will send an acknowledgment tone to the reporting panel. (See Table 5-11.)
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 1 for Handshake Sequence menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the Ack Duration field.
4. Enter the desired value from the keypad or press the or button to change the
acknowledgment tone duration time.
5. When the time is flashing, press ENTER/MENU or .
Line Options
Line Options is used to set the type of phone line, number of rings, ring on/off duration,
threshold voltage, and sample time.
Figure 5-12 Line Options Menu
Setting the Line Card for a Direct Panel Connection
SelectY” (yes) for the Direct setting if instead of going though a phone system, the receiver
and a panel are directly connected as shown in “Direct Panel Connection” in Section 3.
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 2 for Line Options menu.
3. The display will flash on the Direct field.
4. Press the or button to toggle between Y for yes, or N for no.
5. When the desired setting is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
<Edit Line Card>
L01=0000 Linecard
L02=0000 Linecard
L03=0000 Linecard
â
<Edit Line Card: XX>
2=Line Options
3 Listen In
4 Trap List
â
Direct=N Rings=002
On=010 Off=010
Thresh=08 Sample=075
<Direct Cnct <=Exit>
2
XX=Line Card
Number being Edited
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-32
Changing the Number of Rings
This controls the number of rings the receiver needs to see before it will answer the call.
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 2 for Line Options menu.
3. The display will flash on the Num Rings field.
4. Enter the desired value from the keypad (0-255) or press the or button to change the
number of rings before the receiver will answer.
5. When the desired number of rings is flashing, press ENTER/MENU or .
Note: If Caller ID is turned on (see “Miscellaneous Line Options” the number of rings must be set to two.
Changing the Ring On Time
The On field controls the ring on time. The ring on time is the length of time the receiver will
listen to a ring prior to recognizing it as a ring.
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 2 for Line Options menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the On Time field.
4. Enter the desired value from the keypad or press the or button to change the ring on
time. Values range from 0 to 255 in increments of 50ms (1=50ms, 2=100ms, 3=150ms
and so on).
5. When the desired ring on time is flashing, press ENTER/MENU or .
Changing the Ring Off Time
The Off field controls the ring off time. The ring off time is the length of time the receiver
will recognize an “Off” ring voltage.
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 2 for Line Options menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the Off Time field.
4. Enter the desired value from the keypad or press the or button to change the ring off
time. Values range from 0 to 255 in increments of 50ms (1=50ms, 2=100ms, 3=150ms
and so on).
5. When the desired ring off time is flashing, press ENTER/MENU or .
Changing the Ring Threshold Voltage
The Threshold field controls the phone line low voltage/line fault threshold level. If the
voltage on the phone line connected to the line card drops below this set threshold level for
that line card, the receiver will indicate a Line Fault on that phone line.
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 2 for Line Options menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the Threshold field.
4. Enter the desired value from the keypad or press the or button to change the line
fault threshold level. Values range from 1 to 15 in 2.0 VDC increments (1=2.0VDC,
2=4.0VDC, 3=6.0VDC and so on).
5. When the desired line fault threshold is flashing, press ENTER/MENU or .
Programming
5-33
Changing the Phone Line Sample Rate
The sample time field controls how often the receiver will sample the phone line to verify
that it is above the set threshold level of that line card. This time setting is how often the
receiver verifies the phone line integrity.
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 2 for Line Options menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the Sample Time field.
4. Enter the desired value from the keypad or press the or button to change the line
sample rate. Values range from 0 to 255 in 1 second increments (0=line monitor disabled.
1=1 second, 2=2 seconds, 3=3 seconds and so on). The receiver will make two to three
samples before generating a trouble condition on a faulty line.
5. When the desired sample time is flashing, press ENTER/MENU or .
6. Press left arrow button to exit this menu.
Listen-In
The listen-in feature is used to perform two-way voice alarm verification between the central
station and the alarm installation site.
Note: See “UL Requirements” in Section 2 for UL listen-in requirements.
Figure 5-13 Listen Mode Menu Display
Changing the Listen Mode
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 3 for Listen-In Options menu.
3. When the display shows the listen-in options menu (Figure 5-13):
Press the or button to change the Listen Mode setting.
4. When the desired setting is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
Changing the PBX String
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 3 for Listen-In Options menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the <Str> field.
4. Press ENTER/MENU.
<Edit Line Card>
L01=0000 Linecard
L02=0000 Linecard
L03=0000 Linecard
â
<Edit Line Card: XX>
3 Listen In
4 Trap List
5 Misc. Line Opt.
â
Mode=Not Used <Str>
Timeout=000
<Account List>
<Listen Mode <=Exit>
2
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-34
5. Enter the desired numeric value from the keypad or press the or button to enter any
special characters.
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
Chan
g
in
g
the Listen-In Timeout
Timeout is the amount of time listen-in will remain active before timing out.
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 3 for Listen-In Options menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the <Timeout> field.
4. Enter the desired value from the keypad or press the or button to change the timeout
setting. Values range from 0 to 255 in 1 second increments.
5. When the desired value is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
Editin
g
the Listen-In Accounts Lists
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 3 for Listen-In Options menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the <Account List> field.
4. Press ENTER/MENU.
The Figure 5-14 shows the next display.
Fi
g
ure 5-14 Listen-In Accounts Menu
Table 5-13: Valid Pro
g
rammable Strin
g
Characters
Character Descri
p
tion
F Flash hook.
P Delay 500ms
, Delay 2 seconds
H Force a hang up of the line.
@ Detect dial tone.
T Check to see if the line is busy by looking for a busy tone.
0-9, *, #, A, B, C, D DTMF digits.
ENTER
MENU
Mode=Not Used <Str>
Timeout=000
<Account List>
<Listen Mode <=Exit>
<Listen In Accounts>
1=Add Account
2 Edit Account
3 Clear Account
â
1
Programming
5-35
Adding a Listen-In Account
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 3 for Listen-In Options menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the <Account List> field.
4. Press ENTER/MENU.
5. Press 1. The display briefly shows the number (indicated by XX) of the lowest available
listen-in account number slot (20 total listen-in account numbers). Adding # XX
6. Enter the account number you wish to add to the listen-in account list.
7. When the desired account number is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
Editing a Listen-In Account
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 3 for Listen-In Options menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the <Account List> field.
4. Press ENTER/MENU.
5. Press 2.
6. Press the or button until the desired listen-in account is highlighted by the equal
sign.
7. Press ENTER/MENU.
8. Enter the revised account number to the account list. (See Table 5-14.)
9. Press ENTER/MENU.
Note: When editing an existing account, the account number must be completely re-entered.
Clearing a Listen-In Account
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 3 for Listen-In Options menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the <Account List> field.
4. Press ENTER/MENU.
5. Press 3.
6. Press the or button until the desired listen-in account is highlighted by the equal
sign.
7. Press ENTER/MENU.
The Display will read: < WARNING! >
Delete Record No
8. Press the or button to toggle to Yes.
Note: Additional presses of the up or down arrow will toggle the choice between Yes and No.
9. Press ENTER/MENU.
Table 5-14: Account Characters
Characters Description
0-9 Numeric entries
A-Z Alpha entries
* Alpha-numeric wild card entry. Example: 123* = any account starting with 123.
# Numeric wild card entry. Example: # = 0 to 9. Example: 12345# = 123450 to 123459.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-36
Trap List
The trap list is used to trap an account that you wish to route to a downloading computer for
initial or additional programming.
Adding an Account to the Trap List
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 4 for Trap List menu.
3. Press 1.
The display briefly shows the number (indicated by XX) of the lowest available trap
account number slot (20 total trap account numbers). Adding # XX
4. Enter the account number you wish to add to the trap account list. (See Table 5-14.)
5. When the desired account number is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
Editing an Account in the Trap List
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 4 for Trap List menu.
3. Press 2.
4. Press the or button until the desired trap account is highlighted by the equal sign.
5. Press ENTER/MENU.
6. Enter the account number you wish to add to the trap account list. (See Table 5-14.)
7. Press ENTER/MENU.
Clearing an Account from the Trap List
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 4 for Trap List menu.
3. Press 3.
4. Press the or button until the desired trap account is highlighted by the equal sign.
5. Press ENTER/MENU.
The Display will read: < WARNING! >
Delete Record No
6. Press the or button to toggle to Yes.
Note: Additional presses of the up or down arrow will toggle the choice between Yes and No.
7. Press ENTER/MENU.
Miscellaneous Line Options
Some phone lines may use echo suppression, billing delay feature, or hunt group options.
These miscellaneous phone options can be set through this programming menu.
Programming
5-37
Figure 5-15 Miscellaneous Phone Line Options
Changing the Echo Suppress Setting
If echo suppression is enabled (Y), a 2025Hz signal will be output for two seconds to disable
echo suppression equipment.
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 5 for Miscellaneous Line Options menu (Figure 5-15).
The display Flashes on the Echo Supress= field.
3. Press the or button to change the echo suppress option from Y (Yes) to N (No) or
vice versa.
4. When the setting is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
Setting Caller ID
Caller ID information is displayed and sent to the printer only if the incoming call contains no
data.
Note: If the incoming message contains any data (valid or invalid) no Caller ID information will be sent.
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 5 for Miscellaneous Line Options menu (Figure 5-15).
The display Flashes on the Echo Supress= field.
3. Press until the display flashes on the Caller ID field.
4. Press the or button to change the caller ID option from Y (Yes) to N (No) or vice
versa.
5. When the setting is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
<Edit Line Card>
L01=0000 Linecard
L02=0000 Linecard
L03=0000 Linecard
â
<Edit Line Card: XX>
5 Misc. Line Opt.
6 ITI Opt.
< Exit Menu
Echo Supr=N Call ID=Y
BillDly=N HntGrp=00
<Echo Suppress<=Exit>
5
Caution
Only use this option for panels that require a
2225Hz handshake.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-38
Changing the Billing Delay Setting
If billing delay is enabled (Y), a delay of two seconds will be inserted at the beginning of each
incoming call.
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 5 for Miscellaneous Line Options menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the Billing Delay field.
4. Press the or button to toggle the billing delay between Yes or No.
5. When the desired setting is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
6. To exit, press the left arrow button.
Changing the Hunt Group
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 5 for Miscellaneous Line Options menu.
3. Press until the display flashes on the HntGrp field.
4. Enter the desired value from the keypad or press the or button to change the hunt
group number.
5. When the desired hunt group is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
6. To exit, press the left arrow button.
ITI Options Menu
Some ITI panels may use communication locking features such as account/security codes,
tables, date/time flags, or 300 baud options. These ITI options can be set through this edit line
card programming menu.
Figure 5-16 ITI Options
ITI SCode (Security Code) Menu
Some ITI control panels use one of two types of communication locks (phone lock or a central
station lock). On the panels using a central station lock, a security code is required during
communication.
<Edit Line Card>
L01=0000 Linecard
L02=0000 Linecard
L03 0000 Linecard
â
<Edit Line Card: XX>
6=ITI Opt.
< Exit Menu
6
Programming
5-39
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 6 for ITI Options menu.
3. Press the or button to view the various options.
4. To exit, press the left arrow button.
Addin
g
an Account/SCode
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 6 for ITI Options menu.
3. Press 1 for ITI SCode Menu.
4. Press 2 for Add Acct/SCode.
5. Enter the desired account number and press ENTER/MENU.
6. Select SET or CLEAR and press ENTER/MENU
7. Enter the desired five-digit account security code.
8. Press ENTER/MENU.
9. To exit, press the left arrow button.
Note: If an incorrect entry is made, you can move back to that digit by pressing the left arrow button.
Editin
g
an Account/SCode
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 6 for ITI Options menu.
3. Press 1 for ITI SCode Menu.
4. Press 3 for Edit Acct./SCode.
5. Press the or button to highlight the account to edit and press ENTER/MENU.
6. Enter the desired account number and press ENTER/MENU.
7. Select SET or CLEAR and press ENTER/MENU
8. Enter the desired five-digit account security code.
9. Press ENTER/MENU.
10. To exit, press the left arrow button.
Note: If an incorrect entry is made, you can move back to that digit by pressing the left arrow button.
Clearin
g
(
Deletin
g)
an Account/SCode
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 6 for ITI Options menu.
3. Press 1 for ITI SCode Menu.
4. Press 4 for Clear Acct./SCode.
5. Press the or button to select the account to be cleared and press ENTER/MENU
6. Press the or button to toggle between Y or N.
7. When the desired setting is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
8. To exit, press the left arrow button.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-40
Adding an SCode to the Table
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 6 for ITI Options menu.
3. Press 1 for ITI SCode Menu.
4. Press 5 for Add SCode to Table.
5. Enter the desired 5-digit security code
6. Press ENTER/MENU.
7. To exit, press the left arrow button.
Note: If a incorrect entry is made you can move back to that digit by pressing the left arrow button.
Clearing an SCode from the Table
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 6 for ITI Options menu and press ENTER/MENU.
3. Press 1 for ITI SCode Menu and press ENTER/MENU.
4. Press 6 for Clear SCode and press ENTER/MENU.
5. Press the or button to select the SCode to be cleared and press ENTER/MENU
6. Press the or button to toggle between Y or N.
7. When the desired setting is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
8. To exit, press the left arrow button.
Date/Time Flag
The date/time flag configures how the receiver will update ITI panels that have a clock. The
receiver can update the panel clock every time it calls or only when the panel requests to have
its clock updated.
Changing the Date/Time Flag
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 6 for ITI Options menu.
3. Press 1 for ITI SCode Menu.
4. Press 2 for Date/Time Flag.
5. Press the or button to toggle between Requested and Always.
6. When the desired setting is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
7. To exit, press the left arrow button.
ITI 300 Baud
ITI 300 baud is a connection sequence that is used to negotiate a 300 baud connection with ITI
panels that support 300 baud communications.
Programming
5-41
Changing the ITI 300 Baud Enable
To Enable or Disable ITI 300 Baud Negotiation:
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 6 for ITI Options menu.
3. Press 1 for ITI SCode Menu.
4. Press 3 for ITI 300 Baud.
5. Press the or button to toggle between Y (enabled) or N (disabled). If enabled, the
receiver will attempt to negotiate 300 baud communications. (See Table 5-11.)
6. When the desired choice is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
7. Press the left arrow button to exit.
Audio Mode
The audio mode listen-in options set the listen-in answering method for ITI panels.
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 4 for Audio Mode menu.
3. Press the or button until the desired listen in answering method is highlighted by the
equal sign.
4. Press ENTER/MENU.
Copying Line Cards
To copy existing line card settings follow these steps:
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 3 to copy a line card.
3. Press the or button to select Use Default or Copy Existing type of copy and press
ENTER/MENU.
4. When display shows the list of line cards (Figure 5-17), press the or button to select
the line card to be copied and press ENTER/MENU.
5. To exit, press the left arrow button.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-42
Clearing (Deleting) Line Cards
Figure 5-17 Visual Steps to Clear a Line Card From the Receiver
To Clear or Delete a Line Card From the Receiver
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 4 to clear a line card.
3. When display shows the list of line cards (Figure 5-17), press the or button until the
desired line card to be cleared is highlighted with the equal sign. Press ENTER/MENU
The display will read: <Warning!>
LC01 13-417 Linecard
Delete Record No
4. Press the button until Yes is flashing.
5. Press ENTER/MENU.
6. To exit, press the left arrow button.
Viewing Line Cards
To view all of the line cards in the receiver follow these steps:
1. If required, follow the procedures in the “Line Card Menu” section.
2. Press 5 to view line cards.
3. When display shows the list of line cards (Figure 5-17), press the button to scroll
through the list of line cards.
4. To exit, press the left arrow button.
3
<LineCard Program>
3=Copy LineCard
4=Clear LineCard
5=View LineCard
<LineCard Program>
L01=0000 LineCard
L02 0000 LineCard
L03 0000 LineCard
â
< WARNING! >
LC01 0000 LineCard
Delete Record No
ENTER
MENU
Programming
5-43
User List
User List is used to program and store the information on the various installers and operators
who will operate and maintain the receiver. Through this program menu item you can add,
edit or clear (delete) an operator/installer (up to 40 users). The user is identified by name,
then assigned a PIN (personal identification number) and a profile.
Figure 5-18 User List Menu Items
Table 5-15 lists the available choices under User List and provides a matrix of choices.
Table 5-15: User List Menu Items and Steps
Choice Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Comments
Add User Enter user name:
1. Use the up or down arrow to move
through characters.
2. Press the right arrow to move to next char-
acter slot.
3. Press enter key to move to next step.
Enter PIN code:
4 digits minimum
9 digits maximum
Choose profile
level:
Operator or
Installer
Add user is used to add a
new user to the system and
enter the users PIN and
profile information.
Edit User When “Choose User” list appears:
1. Press the down arrow key until the desired
user is highlighted with the equal sign.
2. Press enter to move to next step.
Repeat Steps 1-3
under Add User.
Edit user is used to change
an existing users profile.
Clear User When “Choose User” list appears:
1. Press the down arrow key until the desired
user is highlighted with the equal sign.
2. Press enter to move to clear user from pro-
file list.
Clear user is used to delete
a user from the receivers
memory.
<Program Menu>
3=User List
á
<Exit Menu
<User List>
1=Add User
2 Edit User
3 Clear User
â
3
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-44
Adding a User
Use the following steps to add a user to the system:
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press ENTER/MENU button.
3. Press 7 for <Program Menu>.
The display will briefly display Initializing
Please wait . . .
4. Press
3 to choose User List.
5. Press 1 to add a user.
The user number to be programmed will appear in the display for one second. This user
number will always be the lowest available user number.
6. Press the or arrow buttons to move through the available characters. (See Table 5-
16.)
There are 16 characters available for each user name.
Note: If no characters are entered in the name field, the user name will default to User #XX. XX = the number
location of the user being programmed. For example, if user 12 location is being programmed and no
name characters are entered in the name field, then that user will be named User #12.
When the desired character is flashing in the display:
7. Press the arrow key.
8. Repeat steps 6 and 7 until the users name is complete.
9. Press ENTER/MENU.
10. Enter the desired PIN code for the user using a minimum of 4 and a maximum of 9 digits.
11. Press ENTER/MENU.
The display will flash Operator.
12. Press the or arrow buttons to toggle between Installer and Operator.
13. When the desired profile level is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
Table 5-16: Available Characters
Characters Comments
Space, 0-9, :, -, _, ., ,, &, *, #The word “Space” indicates that a physical space would be
inserted if this character were chosen.
A-ZUpper case alphabetical characters
a-zLower case alphabetical characters
Programming
5-45
Editing a User
Use the following steps to edit an existing user:
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press ENTER/MENU button.
3. Press 7 for <Program Menu>.
the display will briefly display: Initializing
Please wait . . .
4. Press 3
to choose User List.
5. Press 2 to Edit a User.
A list of all the users will appear starting with the lowest user number.
6. Press the or arrow buttons to move through the user list.
7. When the equal sign highlights the user you wish to edit, press ENTER/MENU.
8. If you do not want the user name changed, press ENTER/MENU.
Or, to change the user name, press the or arrow buttons to move through the avail-
able characters. (See Table 5-16 for list of available characters.) When the name change
is complete press ENTER/MENU.
9. If you do not want the PIN code changed, press ENTER/MENU.
Or, to change the PIN code enter the desired code (4 to 9 digits long), then press ENTER/
MENU.
The display will flash the current profile level.
10. Press the or arrow buttons to toggle between Installer and Operator.
11. When the desired profile level is flashing, press ENTER/MENU.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
5-46
Clearing (Deleting) a User
Use the following steps to clear or delete a user from the system:
1. Log on to the receiver. (See “Logging On and Off” in Section 4 for the logon procedure.)
2. Press ENTER/MENU button.
3. Press 7 for <Program Menu>.
The display will briefly display: Initializing
Please wait . . .
4. Press
3 to choose User List.
5. Press 3 to clear (delete) a user.
A list of all the users will be displayed starting with the lowest user number.
6. Press the or arrow buttons to move through the user list.
7. When the equal sign highlights the user you wish to clear, press ENTER/MENU.
The display shows < WARNING ! >
Delete Record No
8. Press the or arrow button to toggle the flashing display to Yes.
9. Press ENTER/MENU.
6-1
Section 6
Compatible Reportin
g
Formats
This section lists the available CS-5000 receiver reporting formats. Table 6-1 shows the
formats that the CS-5000 receiver can decode and the handshake frequency format group
which accommodates that format. (See “Line Card Menu” in Section 5 for line card
programming). Each line card can decode every format listed below, however; a line card can
be programmed to prioritize the handshake order in which that line card will communicate.
Formats By Communication Group
Table 6-1 shows which formats fit under the general communication groups and the
corresponding handshake frequency.
Table 6-1: CS-5000 Compatible Formats
Communica-
tion Group Format Name Description Handshake
Format Group
SIA P1 Sends a 3-digit account code and a 1-digit alarm code up
to two rounds (10pps).
1400 Hz
Tone Burst
SIA P3, 4+2, ITI Euro
Commander
Sends a 4-digit account and a 2-digit alarm code up to
four rounds.
1400 Hz
SIA P4, Radionics 3+1
Checksum
Sends a 3-digit account and a 1-digit alarm code and a
checksum.
1400 or 2300 Hz
3+1 Standard, 3+1 Extended Sends a 3-digit account and a 1-digit alarm code up to four
rounds (10-40pps). If a second block of data is sent, it will
contain the extended information. The account number
cannot have repetitive digits (333, 888, etc.).
1400 or 2300 Hz
Radionics Hex Pulses Sends a 3-digit account and a 1-digit alarm code up to two
rounds in a hex pulse format (10-40pps).
1400 or 2300 Hz
4+1, 4+1 Extended Sends a 4-digit account code and a 1-digit alarm code up
to four rounds in a pulse format (10-40pps).
4/1 1400 or
4/1 2300 Hz
SIA P2 Sends a 3-digit account code and a 1-digit alarm code up
to two rounds (20pps).
2300 Hz
Sescoa 3+1, Franklin 3+1 Sends a 3-digit account and a 1-digit alarm code up to four
rounds in a tone burst format. Each digit can be
programmed from (0-9). Because there is no standard, this
format reports in codes only.
2300 Hz
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
6-2
Modem
ITI SX-III, SX-IVA Sends a 5-digit account and 2-digit alarm code in a Bell
103, pseudo-octal format with parity and checksum. The
data is decoded into English account information.
2225 Hz
ITI SX-IVB
ITI SX-V
ITI Commander, Euro
Commander, RF Commander,
Harbor Guard
ITI Commander 2000, LifeGard Sends a 5-digit account and 2-digit alarm code in a Bell
103, hex (Learn Mode) format with parity and checksum.
The data is decoded into English account information.
ITI CareTaker+, SecurityPro
4000
ITI MeterMinder
ITI FONSAFE, PhoneWatch
ITI SX-V Special, Rollins
System 6
ITI SIMON
ITI UltraGard, CareTaker EX
SIA 1993 DCS Level 2+ (SIA
F1) Digital Communication
Standard), ITI Concord
(WESTAR), SIMON II
Sends a 6-digit (10-digit for WESTAR) account and a
variable-digit alarm code in a Bell 103 format with parity
and checksum. The data is decoded into English account
information.
SIA 2000 (pending approval)
ITI Advent
Sends an 8-digit account and a 2-digit alarm code in a Bell
103, 212 format with Fletcher’s checksum. The data is
decoded into English account information.
FSK BFSK Sends a 3-digit account and a 1-digit alarm code similar to
3+1 Extended format except the data is decoded into
English account information.
1400 or 2300 Hz
DTMF
Contact ID, ITI Advent,
Concord, SIMON II, Ademco
Sends a 4-digit account and a 3-digit alarm code in a Dual
Tone Multiple Frequency (DTMF) (9 digits per second)
format with checksum. The data is decoded into English
account information.
1400 & 2300 Hz
Table 6-1: CS-5000 Compatible Formats (Continued)
Communica-
tion Group Format Name Description Handshake
Format Group
Compatible Reporting Formats
6-3
Format Numbers Used In Printer Output
In a printed report, the calling panel format is listed as a format number. Table 6-2 lists these
format numbers and corresponding types.
Table 6-2: Formats By Report Number
Format Number Fomat Type
0 No Response
3 SIA 2000
4 SIA DCS, Level-2
10 ITI SX-III, SX-IVA
12 ITI RF Commander
13 ITI UltraGard, CareTaker EX
14 ITI CareTaker Plus, Security Pro 4000
15 ITI SX-V
16 ITI Commander 2000, EuroCommander
17 ITI HarborGard
18 ITI Simon
20 ITI Commander
21 ITI SX-V Special, Rollins System 6
25 ITI SX-IVB
31 Franklin/Sescoa 3/1
32 3/1
33 3/1 Extended
37 4/1
38 4/1 Extended
41 SIA P3, SK 4/2
47 SIA P4, Radionics 3/1 with checksum
50 Ademco Contact ID
60 BFSK
ITI MeterMinder (pending)
ITI (Sprint) FONSAFE, PhoneWatch (pending)
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
6-4
7-1
Section 7
Troubleshootin
g
This section contains a list of possible error messages and a troubleshooting process for each.
Error Messages
Table 7-1 lists the error messages that are displayed by the receiver as well as the message
sent to the printer.
There are two types of error messages that are displayed and printed; line card communication
errors, and system event errors. Line card communication errors relate specifically to how the
receiver communicated to an incoming call. System event errors relate specifically to the
system and the performance of its peripheral devices such as the automation software,
printers, etc.
In Table 7-1, heading “LC Error” indicates that the error message was a line card
communication error and “SYS Error” indicates any system event related error messages.
Table 7-1: Error Messages
LC
Error Sys
Error Display
Message Printer Message Description What to Do
No Data
Received
No Data Received On an incoming call, no data was sent to the
receiver after the receiver gave its handshake
tones.
Usually a wrong
number.
0 Length Block 0 Length Blk One of the message blocks received contained no
data.
Possibly a call with
caller ID information
but no data from a
control panel.
No Ack No Ack Receiver was unable to acknowledge the call. Check the line card
setup and retest the
panel.
Time Out Time Out The incoming call timed out and the phone line
was released.
1. Retest panel.
2. Replace panel.
3. Replace line card.
Corrupted Data Corrupted Data Bad or corrupted data was sent to the receiver.
Illegal Specifier Illegal Specifier An error occurred in the look-up table for this call
message.
Call Technical
Support.
Undefined
Event
Undefined Event The panel communicating to the receiver sent an
event code that the receiver does not recognize.
Call Technical
Support.
Unsupported
Event
Unsupported Event The panel communicating to the receiver sent an
event code that the receiver recognized but does
not support.
Call Technical
Support.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
7-2
Unsupported
Format
Unsupported Fmt The calling panel communicated in a format not
supported by the receiver.
Program the panel to a
different reporting
format.
Communication
Error
Communication
Error, Panel
Requested Re-send
There was a communication error between the
panel and the receiver, and the receiver asked the
panel to re-send the message.
If it continues, test the
panel.
Possible
Incomplete
Possible Incomplete
Call
The receiver missed information in the call
sequence.
Retest the panel.
System Power
Up
System Power Up Indicated that the receiver powered up.
Expander
Trouble
Expander Trouble Trouble with a device connected to the SBUS. Check the connection
of that device on the
SBUS. If connection
is OK replace SBUS
device (line cards and
touchpads).
Expander Trbl
Rst
Expander Trouble
Restore
The trouble condition of a SBUS device was
corrected.
AC Trouble AC Trouble AC power failure. Check AC outlet and
AC power cord.
AC Trouble Rst AC Trouble Restore AC power was restored.
Battery Low
Restore
Battery Low Restore The backup battery power supply trouble has
been corrected.
Restores at 12VDC
after a low battery
condition.
Battery Low Battery Low The back-up battery is checked continually every
second. This message would be displayed if the
backup battery were set to “Battery Bkp.” (See
“System Options” in Section 5. Indicates a low
battery when the voltage drops to 10.2 VDC or
lower.
Check battery cables.
If they are OK,
replace back-up
battery.
Local Program
Begin
Local Program Begin
User #
This message indicates the time a system
“installer” entered program mode.
Local Program
End
Local Program End
User #
This message indicates the time a system
“installer” exited program mode.
Local Program
Fail
Local Program Fail
User #
The receiver will stay in program mode for 15
minutes without any activity, then it will time out
and go back to normal mode. This message
indicates that an installer entered programming
and did not exit programming before it timed out.
Listen-in End Listen-in End A listen-in session completed
Listen-in Begin Listen-in Begin A listen-in session started.
System Date
Changed
System Date
Changed User #
An installer changed the system date.
System Time
Changed
System Time
Changed User #
An installer changed the system time.
Table 7-1: Error Messages (Continued)
LC
Error Sys
Error Display
Message Printer Message Description What to Do
Troubleshooting
7-3
Msg Queue Full Message Queue Full Messages can be sent to automation computer, a
printer or can be manually acknowledged. If one
or more of these devices does not respond to
messages being sent or manually acknowledged,
the message queue will fill up. When the message
queue is full, the receiver will no longer accept
incoming calls.
Verify that messages
are acknowledged to
any printers and
automation software
while in manual
mode.
Msg Queue Full
restore
Message Queue Full
restore
Indicates that the message queue full error has
been corrected.
Main Computer
Trbl
Main Computer
Trouble
A communication problem exists between the
automation software and the receiver.
Check cable
connections. Verify
that the port is
configured properly.
Main Computer
Rst
Main Computer
Restore
The communication error between the receiver
and the automation software has been corrected.
Bkup Computer
Trbl
Bkup Computer
Trouble
A communication problem exists between the
backup automation software and the receiver.
Check cable
connections. Verify
that the port is
configured properly.
Bkup Computer
Rst
Bkup Computer
Restore
The communication error between the receiver
and the backup automation software has been
corrected.
Main Prn Off
Trbl
Main Printer Off Line The port programmed as the primary printer port
is off line.
Check cable
connections. Verify
that the port is
configured properly.
Check power to
printer.
Main Prn Paper
Out
Main Printer Paper
Out
The port programmed as the primary printer port
is out of paper.
Replace paper in
printer.
Main Prn
Restore
Main Printer Restore The error on the primary printer has been
corrected.
Bkup Prn Off
Trbl
Bkup Printer Off Line The port programmed as the backup printer port
is off line.
Check cable
connections. Verify
that the port is
configured properly.
Check power to
printer.
Bkup Prn Paper
Out
Bkup Printer Paper
Out
The port programmed as the backup printer port
is out of paper.
Replace paper in
printer.
Bkup Prn
Restore
Bkup Printer Restore The error on the backup printer has been
corrected.
DC Input Low
Rst
DC Input Low
Restore
The backup DC power supply trouble has been
corrected.
Restores at 12VDC
after a low battery
condition.
Table 7-1: Error Messages (Continued)
LC
Error Sys
Error Display
Message Printer Message Description What to Do
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
7-4
DC Input Low DC Input Low The backup battery is checked continually every
second. This message would be displayed if the
backup battery setting were set to “DC Bkp”.
(See “System Options” in Section 5.) Indicates a
low when the voltage drops to 10.2 VDC or
lower.
Check the connection
to the DC power
supply. Verify the
output from DC
power supply.
Msg Queue >
Warning
Message Queue
Warning
When the message queue reaches the
programmed level mark, this message is given as
a pre-warning to “Message Queue Full”. See
“Message Queue Options” in Section 5 to
program the % level at which the receiver will
indicate the warning.
Verify that messages
are acknowledged to
any printers and
automation software
while in manual
mode.
Msg Queue <
Warning
Restore
Message Queue
Warning Restore
This message is given when the message queue
drops below the programmed level after a
message queue warning indication has displayed.
See “Message Queue Options” in Section 5 to
program the % level.
LC Run in
ROM
Linecard Running
ROM Code
The line card is not running the application code. Replace the line card.
Line Fault Line Fault The phone line voltage has dropped below the
threshold voltage as programmed. (See “Edit
Line Card” in Section 5.)
Check phone line
outlet and phone cord.
Line Fault
Restore
Line Fault Restore Phone line voltage has been restored to normal
parameters.
Line Card
Deleted
Line Card Record
Deleted
A line card has been deleted.
Line Card
Added
Line Card Record
Added
A line card has been added.
User Log In User Log In: User # A user has logged on to the receiver.
User Log Out User Log Out: User # A user has logged off of the receiver.
Table 7-1: Error Messages (Continued)
LC
Error Sys
Error Display
Message Printer Message Description What to Do
Troubleshooting
7-5
Troubleshooting Process
Before contacting Technical Support, you may be able to solve the problem yourself using the
following procedures:
1. Verify that a problem exists.
2. Check the manual for suggestions or solutions.
3. Check connections.
4. Isolate the problem. Remove other devices that may be interfering.
5. Try swapping devices to isolate the problem.
6. Try to replace the problematic device.
7. Document the failures and the steps used to resolve them.
Removing the Power Supply/Mother Board Assembly
Once ITI Technical Support has determined that a problem exists with either the main power
supply or the mother board, use the following procedure to remove the assembly and return it
to ITI for repair.
1. Remove the front plate by unscrewing the front plate retaining screws. (See Figure 3-1 for
locations of front plate retaining screws.)
2. Turn the main power switch to the “off” position. (See Figure 3-2.)
3. Disconnect AC power Cable.
4. Disconnect the backup battery. (See Figure 3-14.)
5. On the back of the receiver remove the four screws that hold the mother board/power sup-
ply assembly to the chassis. (See Figure 7-1 for screw locations.)
6. Pull the mother board/power supply assembly out from the front of the receiver.
Figure 7-1 Mother Board/Power Supply Assembly retaining Screw Locations
COM 1
COM 2 PARALLEL PORT
AC
100 VA
120 VAC ± 10%
240 VAC ± 10%
50-60 Hz
WARNING!
HIGH VAOLTAGE PRESENT
DISCONNECT AC LINE AND
ALL OTHER CONNECTORS
PROIR TO SERVICING
Screw Locations
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
7-6
Replacing the Mother Board/Power Supply Assembly
1. Remove the front plate by unscrewing the front plate retaining screws. (See Figure 3-1 for
locations of front plate retaining screws.)
2. From the front side of the receiver slide the replacement mother board/power supply
assembly back into the receiver chassis.
3. On the back of the receiver replace the four screws that hold the mother board/power sup-
ply assembly in place (Figure 7-1).
4. Make sure that the power switch is in the “off” position (Figure 3-12).
5. Reconnect the AC power cable.
Note: Make sure to plug the AC power cable into a grounded outlet. (See “How to Verify Earth Ground” in Sec-
tion 3 for instructions on verifying earth ground.)
6. Reconnect the back-up battery (Figure 3-14).
7. Turn the main power switch to the “on” position (Figure 3-12).
8. Replace the front plate by screwing in the front plate retaining screws (Figure 3-1).
Safe Mode
Safe mode can be used to reset User #01 access code back to the default of 5000 regardless of
its present setting.
For example, if the code for the installer (User #01) is lost and additional programming is
required the receiver can be restarted in safe mode to return User #01 to an access code of
5000.
Follow these steps to initiate Safe Mode and default User code #01:
1. Follow the steps in “System Restart” in Section 4 to restart the receiver.
Note: All messages must be acknowledged before a system restart procedure can be performed. If all messages
are not acknowledged, cycle the receiver’s power to restart the system. If the power is cycled, all
unacknowledged messages will be lost.
2. When the display Shows Model CS-5000 Receiver
ITI
3. Press the STAR/HOME button, then the LOG/STATUS button.
The display will read Safe Mode Activated
4. Press
ENTER/MENU.
5. Enter the default installer code or 5000.
Updating the Receiver Software
ITI will continue testing new reporting formats with the CS-5000 receiver. As additional
reporting formats become available it may be necessary to update your receiver. This can be
done from your own PC using a null modem cable (Figure 3-15 and Figure 3-16). Any
software upgrades will be sent to you on a 3.5 inch floppy disk and will come with down-
loading instructions.
8-1
Section 8
Automation Communication Formats
Introduction
The receiver supports several automation communication formats which are used to
communicate with an automation computer. The supported formats are:
• SIA-CIS
SIA-2000 (pending)
ITI Generic
•ITI Comp
ITI MeterMinder (Custom COM 2 Output)
The remainder of this section details these formats.
Section Terms and Conventions
This manual uses the term “automation computer” to refer to a computer that receives data
from the CS-5000 and interprets it through software that automates the central station.
A “message” is any data the CS-5000 is passing to an automation computer. The term
“message” is reserved for discussions of the string as a whole.
A “Call from panel” refers to the complete data stream from a panel to the CS-5000.
“Event data” refers to the actual data (alarms, troubles, and so on) that are part of a call
from a panel. (In the SIA protocol, the event data is the part of the message that is con-
tained within brackets [ ].)
A “system message” refers to messages the CS-5000 sends to an automation computer
about its internal status.
Hexadecimal values are used to refer to data (rather than the ASCII characters that repre-
sent the values). Hexadecimal numbers will be represented with a preceding $ symbol as
in “$0A”.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
8-2
SIA-CIS (Computer Interface Standard) Format
The receivers SIA-CIS automation configuration follows the standards set forth in the SIA
Computer Interface Standard. This section of the manual provides an overview of ITIs
implementation of the CIS standard.
For more information about SIA standards, consult the publications: Computer Interface
Standard, June 1990 and Digital Communication Standard, February 1993 Revision. (Both
documents are published by and available from the Security Industry Association.)
Automation Communication Formats
8-3
Data String Description And Special Characters
Table 8-1 Data String Description
Data
Element
Byte
Positions
Occupied Data Description
Identifier 1 $0A indicates the beginning of a new message.
CRC
(includes total
length of
message)
2-7 Bytes 2-7 are the cyclic redundancy check and the length of the entire message. (If you need to know
how the CRC is calculated, refer to the publication, Computer Interface Standard, June 1990
Revision, published by and available from the Security Industry Association.)
Separator 8 $09 separates the CRC from the next field which is the sequence number.
Sequence
number
9-12 Four bytes. The sequence number of the message. Valid numbers are 0001-9999. Sequence numbers
repeat after 9999.
Note:
A sequence # of "0000" is used for link test messages.
Receiver ID
number
13-14 Two bytes indicating the ID number of the receiver that is sending the message. Valid numbers are
01-99.
Line card
number
15-16 Two bytes indicating a line card number (01-12).
Note:
If the message is a system message (rather than a call from a panel), the data in this field will
be “$00”.
Open bracket 17 $5B indicates the beginning of event data.
Event Data Variable,
beginning at
position 18.
Account numbers, alarms, modifier codes, system status messages, and so on. The CS-5000 can send
up to 128 bytes of data per message to the automation computer. The data is a call from a panel if it
has an account number and a system status message if it does not. The data field contains event data
if the message is a call from a panel and system data if the message is a CS-5000 system message.
The data is a link test if there is no data between the delimiting brackets ($5B and $5D) and the
sequence number is "0000".
If a message is a call from a panel, the first bytes after the open bracket will be $23 (ASCII “#”)
followed by a 4-8 digit account. A field separator $7C (ASCII “”), will separate the account number
from the first events.
If there is more than one event, each event is separated by $2F (ASCII “/”) or by $7C (ASCII "|").
Refer to SIA publication Digital Communication Standard, February 1995 Revision, for message
syntax.
Listen-in and Hang Up Requests
Requests originating from the panel:
In data sent to the CS-5000 by the panel, the event code “LF” indicates the beginning of a listen-in
session. “LE” indicates the end of listen-in. See Section 2, “Agency Requirementsfor UL
requirement on listen-in.
Close bracket Variable,
1 byte long
$5D indicates end of event data.
End of
message
indicator
Variable,
1 byte in long
calls
$0D is always the last character in a message. Even if the data is too large to be sent in one message,
the end of message indicator appears at the end of the partial message.
If the message is to long to be contained in one line, a $7C (ASCII "|") will precede the end of
message indicator. In this case the header of the current message will be repeated in the second line
with the remaining data.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
8-4
Basic Message Format
The basic format for any message coming from the CS-5000 to an automation computer is
shown in Figure 8-1.
Table 8-2 Special Characters
Hex Value Meaning
$7C Field separator. Separates account number from what follows. Also indicates more data to
come for messages that exceed 70 bytes.
$23 Precedes an account number.
$5B Beginning of event data.
$4E New event.
$4F Old or previously reported event.
$5D End of event data.
$0A Beginning of message identifier.
$0D End of message indicator.
$2F Event separator.
$09 Tab character, separates CRC from sequence number.
Automation Communication Formats
8-5
Figure 8-1 Example Message
Note: Figure 8-1 is a sample only. Sizes of data fields may vary in actual use.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
8-6
Modifier Codes
The CS-5000 supports the SIA modifier codes shown in Table 8-3 below.
Note: SIA codes are case-sensitive; modifiers are always lowercase
Figure 8-2 Event Data With Modifier Codes
Long Calls
The CS-5000 can send a maximum of 128 bytes in one message. When call data is more than
128 bytes, the CS-5000 breaks up the data into 128-byte chunks followed by a field separator,
$7C, (ASCII vertical bar character, |) and an end of message indicator, $0D.
Table 8-3 Modifier Codes Used With The CS-5000
CODE MEANING AND USE
da Date modifier. Followed by MM-DD-YY as in da04-01-94.
ti Time modifier. Followed by HH:MM:SS (:SS is optional) as in ti05:45:52.
ri Area modifier. Followed by an area number (0000-9999, leading 0’s not required).
id Subscriber modifier. Used to identify the user causing the actions or events. (0000 - 9999)
pi Peripheral ID modifier. Used to identify the device causing the action or event. (0000-9999)
ai Automated ID modifier. Used to identify the logical function or timer causing the action or event
and is included in the current block. (0000-9999)
ph Telephone ID modifier. Identifies the index of the telephone service number used when the events
occurred.
[#1234/Nda04-01-94/ti05:43/ri1/OP1/da04-01-94/ti05:44/ri2/OP2]
Event (Opened by User Code 1)
Area Modifier + Area #
Time Modifier + Time
Date Modifier + Date
Automation Communication Formats
8-7
Figure 8-3 Long Call
$0A $X X $X X $X X SX X $X X SX X $09 $32 S35 S36 $30 S30 S31 S31 S32 $5B $23 $32 S35 $38 S38 $7C < E V E N T D A T A >$7C $5D $0D
Beg. of msg
indicator
CRC ("$XX represents
CRC numerical data.
Actual event data is
needed to calculate CRC.) Separator
Sequence #
Receiver ID #
Line Card#
Separator
Indicates start of
event time
Account #
Field Separator
Up to 45 bytes
Field separator indicates more
data to come in next message
Separator indicates end of
event data for this message
End of message indicator
Message 1
$0A $X X $X X $X X SX X $X X SX X $09 $32 S35 S36 $30 S30 S31 S31 S32 $5B $23 $32 S35 $38 S38 $7C < E V E N T D A T A >$5D $0D
Same as Message 1 Up to 46 bytes
Separator indicates end of event data for
this message. $7C not appearing at end
of event data means no more data for this call.
End of messa
g
e indicator
Message 2
Additional
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
8-8
System Status Messages
The CS-5000 can send 24 status messages. Status messages are a type of event data. They are
differentiated from calls from panels because the first bytes after the open bracket are not an
account number.
Figure 8-4 System Status Message
Table 8-4 System Status Messages
CODE PRINT-OUT
AT SYSTEM AC LOST
AR SYSTEM AC RESTORE
CL LOG ON OPERATOR (close report)
LB LOCAL PROGRAM BEGIN
LE LISTEN-IN END
LF LISTEN-IN BEGIN
LR LINE RESTORE L.C.#
LS LOCAL PROGRAM END
LT LINE FAULT L.C.#
LU LOCAL PROGRAM FAIL
JD SYSTEM DATE CHANGE
JT SYSTEM TIME CHANGE
OP LOG OFF OPERATOR (open report)
RR SYSTEM POWER UP
RT DATA LOST
VO PAPER OUT (on-board printer)
VR PRINTER RESTORE (for external printer)
VZ PRINTER OFF-LINE
Automation Communication Formats
8-9
HeartBeat
The SIA CIS protocol supports a periodic HeartBeat message to be sent to the automation
computer. The HeartBeat message is used to verify the communication between the receiver
and the automation computer. The sequence number of the HeartBeat message is always
0000.
Communication from a Computer to the CS-5000
ACKing and NACKing Data
The computer must respond to messages sent by the CS-5000 with a response packet.
The computer must ACK a received block by responding with the acknowledge packet (see
Figure 8-5).
Figure 8-5 Sample ACK Message
The computer must NACK a received block by sending an ambiguous null response packet
(Figure 8-6).
YC COMPUTER TROUBLE
YD TROUBLE L.C.#
YE LINE CARD TROUBLE RESTORE
YK COMPUTER TROUBLE RESTORE
YR BATTERY RESTORE (system battery restore)
YT BATTERY TROUBLE (system battery trouble)
Table 8-4 System Status Messages
CODE PRINT-OUT
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
8-10
Figure 8-6 Sample NACK Message
Note: If the computer fails to respond to the receiver’s transmission within the timeout period, the packet will be
considered to be NACKED, and the NACK logic will be output on next page.
A specific null response is sent when the computers CRC agrees with the CRC sent in the
message and the general format of the message appears to be correct (for example, the last
byte is $0D).
An ambiguous null response is sent whenever the computer suspects an error in the
transmission of the message.
Note: Refer to SIA CIS documentation for their format information.
The CS-5000 ignores any other communication from the computer when it is awaiting
ACKing or NACKing.
Generally, after two ambiguous null responses or two timeout periods of no response from the
computer, the CS-5000 generates a “computer trouble” message.
If the computer sends a specific null response, the CS-5000 will send any additional data
in its buffer.
If the computer sends an ambiguous null response, the CS-5000 will immediately re-send
the data.
If the computer sends an ambiguous null response or 2 timeout periods a second time, the
CS-5000 will generate a computer trouble message and begin periodically sending the
"Link Test" message to test the channel for recovery.
Link Test
An ambiguous null response may be used to cause the receiver to send a link test to the
automation computer. The receiver normally treats the ambiguous null response as an
immediate time-out on any delay and transmits the next unacknowledged message. If the
receiver has no unacknowledged message to transmit, the receiver will respond to the
ambiguous null response with a link test message.
Automation Communication Formats
8-11
SIA-2000 Format
(Pending)
The receivers SIA-2000 automation configuration follows the standards set forth in the SIA-
2000 Digital Communications Standard. When information is available, this section of the
manual will provide an overview of ITI’s implementation of the SIA-2000 standard.
For more information about SIA standards, consult the publications: Computer Interface
Standard, _______ 199___ and Digital Communication Standard “SIA2000”, _______ 199__
Revision. (Both documents are published by and available from the Security Industry
Association.)
ITI Generic Computer Format
The ITI Generic Computer Format is designed to pass reported information through an
RS-232 port to communicate with an automation computer. This format consists of four
types of generic records: report, log, test, and okay.
Convention Used In This Subsection
An ITI digit in this section is an ASCII representation of a number from 0 to 61 as follows:
Report Record
A report record is an alarm report from a control panel to the receiver.
The following is a general description of the information contained in a report record:
<$0A><"1"><"B"><"1"><$6A><"2345"><"8"><"b"><"45"><"A"><$0D>
Table 8-5 Number and ITI Digit Equivalent
Number Represented by ITI Digit
0 - 9 0 - 9
10 - 35 A - Z
36 - 61 a - z
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
8-12
Control Panel Type and Zone Attribution Byte
Byte 4 (see Table 8-6) of the report record is divided into upper and lower nibbles. The upper
nibbles (4 most significant bits) contain the code indicating the panel type.
The lower nibble (4 least significant bits) contains the code describing the zone attributes
(unique with ITI panels). The definition of this field varies depending on from which ITI
panel the call was generated. For detailed communication specifications, refer to the
installation instructions of the ITI panel with which you wish to communicate.
If the upper nibble is 2 (non-ITI formats), the lower nibble is used to identify the format as
shown in Table 8-8.
Table 8-6 Report Record Components
Character Byte Description
<$0A> 0 ASCII (0A hex) line feed character that marks the beginning of a record.
<"1"> 1 Receiver ID digit. See Table 8-5 for value range.
<"B"> 2 Phone line number digit. See Table 8-5 for value range.
<"1"> 3 Most significant digit of account number. For example, A in account AB-CDE.
Note: Account numbers greater than 5 digits will be truncated to the least significant 5 digits.
<$6A> 4 Control panel type/zone attribute code.
<"2345"> 5-8 Lower 4 digits of the account number. For example, B-CDE in account AB-CDE.
<"8"> 9 Group number. See Table 8-5 for value range.
<"b"> 10 User ID number. Will report the Generic Nodata character when a user number is not
applicable. See Table 8-5 for value range.
<"45"> 11-12 Zone number. Two ASCII digits 00 - 99, A = 100, C = 110.
<"A"> 13 Alarm condition. See Table 8-11 for alarm codes and descriptions.
<$0D> 14 ASCII (0D hex) carriage return marking the end of the record.
Table 8-7 Upper Nibble Description
Upper Nibble Value Description
2 Non-ITI formats
3 Pulse formats
4 SX-III or SX-IVa
5 SX-IVb
6SX-V
7 All other ITI panels.
Automation Communication Formats
8-13
If the upper nibble is 3 (pulse formats), the lower nibble is used to identify the panel as shown
in Table 8-9.
Extended Panel ID Codes
When XID is set to Y in programming mode the extended panel ID replaces the control panel
type. (See “General Options” in Section 5 for to set XID.)
Table 8-10 lists the XID codes (both the Hex and the ASCII character) for the ITI Generic
computer output.
Table 8-8 Non-ITI Formats Lower Nibble Description
Lower Nibble Value Description
0x23 (#) SIA-DCS
0x25 (%) Contact ID
0x26 (&) SIA-2000
Table 8-9 Pulse Formats Lower Nibble Description
Lower Nibble Value Description
0 Anything not listed below
1 Slow 3/1 format
2 Fast 3/1 format
3 Slow 3/1 extended format
4 Fast 3/1 extended format
5 Slow 4/1 format
6 Fast 4/1 format
7 Slow 4/2 format
8 Fast 4/2 format
9 Radionics 3/1 hex format
$A Radionics BFSK
Table 8-10 Extended Panel ID Codes (XID)
XID Code Panel Type
Hex Character ASCII Character
$40 @ SX-III
$50 P SX-IVb
$60 ‘ SX-V
$70 p Other ITI panel
$71 q PhoneWatch, FONSAFE
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
8-14
Alarm Codes
Table 8-11 lists the alarm codes used in byte 13 of the report record, and descriptions of the
alarm codes.
$72 r SX-V Special
$73 s Commander
$74 t RF Commander
$75 u CareTaker +
$76 v MeterMinder
$77 w Commander 2000
$78 x Security Pro 4000
$79 y UltraGard
$7A z European Commander
$7B { Simon
$7E ~ New Panels
Table 8-11 Alarm Codes and Descriptions
Alarm Codes Description
AAlarm
BBypass
C Closing Report
D Dial out audio alarm
E Exit fault
G One-ring audio report
H AC restore (non-ITI panels only)
I Improper security code
JTrouble
K Key-chain access
L Low battery
M Low CPU battery (non-ITI panels only)
O Opening report
P Phone test
Q AC failure (non-ITI panels only)
R Cancel
S Supervisory
Table 8-10 Extended Panel ID Codes (XID) (Continued)
XID Code Panel Type
Hex Character ASCII Character
Automation Communication Formats
8-15
Log Record
If Log Record (Log Rec) is enabled a pair of phone log records surrounds all report records
generated by the reporting panel. The unused data field of the log record is filled with six
"NoData" characters (see “Communications” in Section 5).
The following is an example of how a log record surrounds a report record:
<$0A><"1"><"1"><"0100"><"000000"><"N"><$0D> New Log Record
<Report Record> Report Record
<Report Record> Report Record
<$0A><"1"><"1"><"0100"><"000000"><"F"><$0D> Final Log Record
T Tamper alarm
U Burglary (non-ITI panels only)
V Instant audio alarm
W Restoral
X Medical/auxiliary emergency (FONSAFE)
x Medical/auxiliary emergency with audio verification
(FONSAFE)
Y Police emergency (FONSAFE)
y Police emergency with audio verification (FONSAFE)
Z Fire emergency (FONSAFE)
z Fire emergency with audio verification (FONSAFE)
! Undefined alarms (non-ITI panels only)
Table 8-11 Alarm Codes and Descriptions (Continued)
Alarm Codes Description
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
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Table 8-12 lists the components of a log record and their description.
Test Record
A special test record is sent to the automation computer whenever a panel clock is updated
and the date/time line is displayed.
The following is an example of a test record:
<$0A><"IT IRCV 234A"><$0D>
Okay Record
When the automation computer sends a supervisory character to the CS-5000 receiver (or in
response to a heartbeat), the receiver will return with an Okay record.
Note: The supervisory character defaults to lower case “s” and is programmable. (See “Communications” in
Section 5.)
The following is an example of an Okay record:
Table 8-12 Log Record Components and Description
Character Description
<$0A> Start or record indicator (line feed).
<"1"> Receiver ID number.
<"1"> Phone line number.
<"0100"> Reference number, equals four ASCII bytes ranging from
0001-9999. (Reference number 100 shown.)
<"000000"> Six No Data characters. Valid characters are: 0-9, A-Z, a-
z, Space, :, -, _, ., ,, &, *, #, ?, Ec.
See “Communications” in Section 5.
<"N"> New or start of log record.
<"F"> Final or end of log record.
<$0D> End of record indicator (carriage return).
Table 8-13 Test Record Components and Description
Character Description
<$0A> Start of record (line feed).
<"IT IRCV 234A"> Predefined test record string. The predefined test string is automatically set
when ITI Generic format is chosen to communicate with automation computer.
<$0D> End of record indicator (carriage return).
Automation Communication Formats
8-17
<$0A><"00 OKAY @"><$0D>
ACKing and NACKing Data
After the end of message byte (<0Dh>) is sent by the receiver, the automation computer will
respond with an ACK (<$06>) or NACK (<$15>). This response can be delayed between 1
byte time (depending on the baud rate) and the ACK timeout period. (See “Communications”
in Section 5.)
If the receiver doesn’t get an ACK within the ACK timeout period or receive a NACK from
the automation computer, it will re-transmit the data.
After two NACKs or two ACK time-outs, the receiver will generate a Computer Trouble
message. When a computer trouble message is generated, the receiver will continually send a
heartbeat until it receives an ACK from the automation computer. When communication is
restored, a Computer Trouble Restore message will be generated.
ITI Comp (Computer Interface) Format
ITI Computer Interface format consists of four types of records: report, test, supervisory, and
log (see Table 8-16).
Convention Used In This Subsection
An ITI digit in this section is an ASCII representation of a number from 0 to 61 as follows:
Table 8-14 Okay Record Components and Description
Character Description
<$0A> Start of record (line feed).
<"00 OKAY @"> Predefined okay record string. The predefined okay record string is
automatically set when ITI Generic format is chosen to communicate with
automation computer.
<$0D> End of record indicator (carriage return).
Table 8-15 Number and ITI Digit Equivalent
Number Represented
by ITI Digit
0 - 9 0 - 9
10 - 35 A - Z
36 - 61 a - z
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
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General Record Structure
Each record begins with <"|["><Record Type> field (see Table 8-16 for record identifiers) and
end with a <"]|"><Cksum/Ctrl> field. Any fields within a record may be included in an
individual record as needed.
A record is made up of field of data (in varying lengths), and each field within a record begins
with a <"|"> character. The <"|"> is followed by a field identifying character. Individual field
identifiers are unique to the specific record where they are contained. For example, an |L field
in a report record has a different meaning than an |L field of a test record and so on. There is
no specific order to the fields of a record, with the exception that it will begin with the record
type and end with a checksum/control field.
After the checksum/control field, each record is terminated with a carriage return (<$0D>).
The following is a generic example of a transmitted message record:
<"|["><Record Type><Info fields...><"|]"><Cksum/Ctrl><$0D>
Table 8-16 Type of Record Identifiers
Field Identifier Definition
[R Report record
[T Test record
[S Supervisory record
[L Log record
Table 8-17 Record Components
Character Description
<"|["> Start of record indicator.
<Record Type> Record type. See table Table 8-16.
<|Info fields...> Information fields. See Table 8-19.
<"|]"> End of information fields indicator.
<Cksum/Ctrl> Checksum/control field.
<$0D> End of record indicator.
Automation Communication Formats
8-19
Report Record
A report record is generated when a control panel calls into the receiver for any reason.
The following is an example report record (see also Table 8-17):
<"|["><"R"><"|IA1"><"|LB"><"|A123456"><"|V55600"><"|D0514"><"|
T1019"><"N0005"><"|Z1"><"|CA"><"|]"><Cksum/Ctrl><$0D>
Table 8-18 lists the components of a report record and their description.
Table 8-18 Report Record Components and Description
Character Description
<"|["> Start of record indicator.
<R> Report record identifier.
<"|IA1"> Unit ID = A, followed by receiver ID = 1.
<"|LB"> Line Card #, B = 11. Acceptable values are 0-9, A (= 10), B (=11), C
(=12).
<"|A123456"> Account Number.
<"|V55600"> Panel (see Table 8-20) and revision number. In this example the panel =
SX-V and the revision is 5600.
<"|D0514"> Date of the report in mmdd format. mm = Month, dd = Day
<"|T1019"> Time of report in hhmm format. hh = Hour, mm = Minutes
<"N0005"> Reference number. See Operation - Main Menu, Call History section.
0001-9999
<"|Z1"> Zone number. One to four alphanumeric characters are acceptable values.
<"|CA"> Condition code indicating the nature of the reported message.
See Table 8-21.
<"|]"> End of information fields indicator.
<Cksum/Ctrl> Checksum/control field.
<$0D> End of record indicator.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
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Information Field Identifiers
The following characters (Table 8-19) signify which data is contained in an information field:
Table 8-19 Information Field Identifiers
Field Identifier Description Acceptable Values
I System identifier. A unit ID (always an A) and
the receiver ID digit. See “System Options” in
Section 5 to set receiver ID.
"A" followed by 0-9.
O Communication Lock (Comm-Lock) usage. 0 = Not Supported ()
1 = Phone lock
2 = Central Station Lock
3 = No lock used
M Audio (Listen-in) usage. 0 = Not Used ()
1 = Instant mode
2 = Dial out mode
3 = One ring mode
L Line Card number. Line Card #. Acceptable values are 0-9, A (= 10), B (=11),
C (=12).
A Account number. Three to six alphanumeric characters. If the account is
more than 6 characters the account will be truncated to the
last six characters.
P Protection level of panel. Two bytes, the first indicates the previous protection level
and the second indicates the current protection level.
V Panel type and revision. One panel type code byte followed by a 4-digit revision
number. See Table 8-20.
G Group and attribute information. Contact ITI for group and attribute information.
D Date of report. In mmdd format, where mm = month, and dd = day.
T Time of report In hhmm format, where hh = hour, and mm = minutes.
N Reference number. 0001-9999. See “Call History” in Section 4.
Z Zone number. One to four alphanumeric characters.
U User number. See Table 8-15 for acceptable values.
K Dealer key numbers. For Commander 2000 only. Values from 00-99.
S CPU sub-unit number Values from 0-9
C Condition code indicating the nature of the
reported message. See Table 8-21.
See Table 8-21 for condition code values.
Automation Communication Formats
8-21
Panel Type Characters
Table 8-20 lists the characters used to identify panel types:
Table 8-20 Panel Type Characters
Character Panel Type
0 Unknown type
3 SX-III or SX-IVA
4 SX-IVB
5SX-V
9 FONSAFE
A Commander
B SX-V Special
C Magnetic card reader
D Euro Commander
E Security Pro 4000
ISIMON
KHarborGard
M UltraGard
N Network Security
P Pin Point
R RF Commander
S Commander 2000 or LifeGard
T CareTaker +
U MeterMinder
VProtector
X New panels
ZNutone
a-d 3/1
e-h 3/1 extended
i-l 4/1
m-p 4/2
rRadionics BFSK
s SIA DCS
tContact ID
u SIA 2000
v Ademco Touch Tone
w Acron Touch Tone
x Westec Touch Tone
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
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Condition Codes
Condition codes are a one-digit character which indicates the nature of the call from a control
panel to the receiver.
Table 8-21 lists the different condition codes and their descriptions:
y Ademco DTMF 4/2
z Ademco DTMF 4/1
#SIA D1
( FBI 4/3/1
Table 8-21 Condition Codes and Descriptions
Condition Code Description
AAlarm
BBypass
C Closing Report
D Undefined Alarm (non-ITI panels only)
E Exit Fault
F Force Arm
G Burglary (non-ITI panels only)
H AC Restore (non-ITI panels only)
I Improper Security Code
JTrouble
L Low battery
M Medical/Auxiliary Emergency
N Fire Emergency
O Opening Report
P Power Failure (non-ITI panels only)
Q Police Emergency
RRestoral
S Supervisory
TTamper
U Status Report (non-ITI panels only)
W CPU Low Battery (non-ITI panels only)
X Cancel
Table 8-20 Panel Type Characters (Continued)
Character Panel Type
Automation Communication Formats
8-23
Test Record
A special test record is sent to the automation computer whenever a panel clock is updated
and the date/time line is displayed.
The following is an example of a test record:
<"|["><"T"><"|IA1"><"|D970514"><"|T145056"><"|V042097">
<"|L6.1"><"|]"><Cksum/Ctrl><$0D>
Table 8-22 lists the information fields contained in a test record and their descriptions.
Y CPU Low Battery Restoral (non-ITI panels only)
Z Phone Test
c Key Access Closing Report
o Key Access Opening Report
Table 8-21 Condition Codes and Descriptions (Continued)
Condition Code Description
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
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Supervisory Record
When the automation computer sends a supervisory character to the receiver (or in response to
a heartbeat), the receiver will answer with a supervisory record.
The following is an example of a supervisory record:
<"|["><"S"><"|IA1"><"|D970514"><"|T145056"><"|V042097">
<"|L6.1"><"|]"><Cksum/Ctrl><$0D>
Table 8-23 lists the information fields contained in a supervisory record and their descriptions.
Table 8-22 Test Record Information Fields and Descriptions
Character Description Acceptable Values
I System identifier. A unit ID (always an A) and the receiver ID
digit. See “System Options” in Section 5 to set receiver ID.
"A" followed by 0-9.
D Date Current date in yymmdd format yy = year,
mm = month, dd = day.
T Time Current time in hhmmss format hh = hours,
mm = minutes, ss = seconds.
V Software version In date format.
L ITIcomp revision level. Two digits separated by a decimal point.
Table 8-23 Supervisory Record Information Fields And Descriptions
Character Description Acceptable Values
I System identifier. A unit ID (always an A) and the receiver ID
digit. See “System Options” section to set receiver ID.
"A" followed by 0-9.
D Date Current date in yymmdd format yy = year,
mm = month, dd = day.
T Time Current time in hhmmss format hh = hours,
mm = minutes, ss = seconds.
V Software version In date format.
L ITIcomp revision level. Two digits separated by a decimal point.
Automation Communication Formats
8-25
Log Records
If Log Record (Log Rec) is enabled (see “Communications” in Section 5), a pair of phone log
records surrounds all report records generated by the reporting panel. The unused data field of
the log record is filled with six "NoData" characters (see “Communications” in Section 5).
The following is an example of how a log record surrounds a report record:
<"|["><"L"><"|IA1"><"|L1"><"|Nooo1"><"|S970425080020"><"|]"><Cksum/Ctrl><$0D>Start Log Rec
<Report Record> Report Rec
<Report Record> Report Rec
<"|["><"L"><"|IA1"><"|L1"><"|Nooo1"><"|E970425080110"><"|]"><Cksum/Ctrl><$0D>End Log Rec
Table 8-24 lists the information fields contained in a log record and their descriptions.
Checksum/Control Field
The last field of every record is the checksum/control field. This field contains an upper case
letter followed by four ASCII hexadecimal digits. Contained in these five characters are three
controls to help guarantee data integrity between the receiver and the automation computer.
The first control is the Sequence Control Character (SCC). This is a letter code which cycles
from "A" to "Z" continually, changing successively with each new record transmitted.
Note: If the receiver has to repeat a record in response to a NACK from the automation computer, the same SCC
is sent both times.
The first digits sent (following the SCC) are the two least significant digits of an additive
checksum for the record from the first "|" character up to and including the SCC.
(See Table 8-25.)
The last two digits in the record are an XOR checksum. The XOR checksum starts with a
value FFh. This value is XORed against the first byte in the record. The result is XORed
against the next byte and so on, up through the SCC. (See Table 8-25.)
Table 8-24 Log Record Information Fields And Descriptions
Character Description Acceptable Values
I System identifier. A unit ID (always an A) and the receiver ID
digit. See “System Options” in Section 5 to set receiver ID.
"A" followed by 0-9.
L Line Card number. See Table 8-15 for accepted values.
N Reference number. 0001-9999
S Date and time. YYMMDDhhmmss format where YY =
Year, MM = Month, DD = Day, hh = hour,
mm = minutes, ss = seconds.
E Date and time. YYMMDDhhmmss format where YY =
Year, MM = Month, DD = Day, hh = hour,
mm = minutes, ss = seconds.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
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The following is an example of a checksum/control field:
|[X|]A49E0
ITI METERMINDER Format
The ITI METERMINDER® is a dual-purpose control panel that provides off-site meter
reading for the utility company and provides home security functions for subscribers. The
METERMINDER is based on the ITI CareTaker® Plus panel and the Panel ID sent in the
account record is the same as a CareTaker® Plus (4x).
The CS-5000 passes the security related reports to the automation computer via serial (COM
1) and the meter related reports via serial (COM 2).
For more information on panel functions and programming commands, refer to the
METERMINDER Installation Manual (46-729), CareTaker® Plus Installation and Reference
Manual (46-504), and the METERMINDER® Release Notes (46-480).
Meter Format
The following describes all possible meter reports that the CS-5000 may receive from in-
service meters. The reports include the text/data messages shown in Table 8-26. Please refer
to the “Output Record Format” in Section 8 for details of the entire record.
Table 8-25 Checksum Verification Process
Character ASCII Code Additive Checksum XOR Checksum
| 7C 00 + 7C = 7C FF ^ 7C = 83
[ 5B 7C + 5B = D7 83 ^ 5B = D8
X 58 D7 + 58 = 12F D8 ^ 58 = 80
| 7C 12F + 7C = 1AB 80 ^ 7C = FC
] 5D 1AB + 5D = 208 FC ^ 5D = A1
A 41 208 + 41 = 249 A1 ^ 41 = E0
Automation Communication Formats
8-27
Table 8-26 METERMINDER (COM 2) Reports
Report Output
Message Description
Immediate Meter Reports
90 RF Disk A/C Failure #n aRFD AC Fail #n AC power failure at the meter.
90 RF Disk A/C Restore #n bRFD AC Rest #n AC power has been restored at the meter.
7D RF Disk Failure #n cRFD Failure #n RF MeterLink has not reported.
7F Meter Loop Tamper! #n Meter Tamper #n Meter loop tamper.
Mtr n Kh yy.xx Cnt ccccccccc
Reading: rrrrr
dddddeeeeefffff Meter reading:
ddddd - meter 1 reading
eeeee - meter 2 reading
fffff - meter 3 reading
M n Kh yy zz/aa Cnt ccccccccc
Reading: rrrrr
dddddeeeeefffff Meter reading:
ddddd - meter 1 reading
eeeee - meter 2 reading
fffff - meter 3 reading
Immediate Voltage Reports
7E Voltage Error nnn V #n dVError nnnV #n RF MeterLink voltage has gone out-of-range (above or below
the threshold for 3 minutes
Monthly Voltage Events Reports
Voltage Events nnnnn #n eVEvent nnnnn #n RF MeterLink voltage error number of out-of-range events
(above or below the threshold for any amount of time) that have
occurred since the last monthly report or since events count was
cleared. The panel generates a message for each of the three
meters. No report will be generated for hardwire or unintialized
meters.
Where:
n is the meter number(1-3)
nnn is the error voltage
nnnnn is the voltage events count sent by the panel
ccccccccc is the meter pulse count
mm is the meter reading
yy is the whole part of Kh
xx is the decimal part of Kh
zz/aa is the fractional part of Kh
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
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Output Record Format
The output record general message format includes the following:
A 5-character meter account (panel account)
A 12-digit meter utility number
A report message (a, b, c, d, or e) described in Table 8-26
The date, time, and a record terminator carriage return (hex OD)
The following example includes a space between each item; these spaces do not appear in the
actual record output.
55555 121212121212 abcde DATE TIME<CR>
For example, the report “90 RF Disk A/C Failure #1,” would be:
55555121212121212aRFD AC Fail #1 DATETIME<CR>
Where:
55555 is the reported account number (if enabled).
121212121212 is the reported utility number (if enabled).
DATETIME is the date and time of the report. This field is 8 characters long;
2 digits each for month, day, hours, and minutes. For example, November 11 at
3:30 p.m. is:
11 11 15 30.
abcde field identifies the report type. The first byte of the message field (a, b, c, d, or e)
will be unique for each output record. The field also contains a short text message
describing the report and any relative data sent by the panel.
<CR> is the record terminator (hex 0D).
For example, the report “90 RF Disk A/C Failure #1,” would be:
55555121212121212aRFD AC Fail #1 DATETIME<CR>
An example tamper loop report (meter 1 shown) is:
TEST5121212121212Meter Tamper#111220033
Where:
TEST5 is the 5-digit account number (if enabled)
121212121212 is the 12-digit utility number (if enabled)
1122 is the date
0033 is the time
Automation Communication Formats
8-29
Meter Test Record
A meter test record is reported when the SUPCHAR character is received. SUPCHAR
defaults to a question mark (?). The following shows how the meter test record reports:
TEST512121212121211111222223333301211230
Where:
TEST5 is the 5-digit account number (if enabled)
121212121212 is the 12-digit utility number (if enabled)
11111 is meter 1 reading
22222 is meter 2 reading
33333 is meter 3 reading
0121 is the date
1230 is the time
Commands Initiated by the Automation Computer
Typically all communications are initiated by the receiver, however, there are several
commands available to the automation computer to control or request information from the
receiver. The automation computer may send these requests only when the receiver is not
transmitting data to the automaton computer.
The following sub-sections show the message format that must be sent from the automation
computer to the receiver in order that these command requests function properly.
The receiver will respond to these requests from the automation computer with one of the
following messages:
Table 8-27: Response Messages by the CS-5000 Receiver
ASCII Hex Character Character Name Description
$06 ACK The request is granted.
$15 NACK The request is unrecognized because of one of the following reasons:
Checksum error
Invalid request code/format
$1B ESC (Escape) The request is refused because of one of the following:
Unauthorized access
Invalid receiver/line card number
Receiver/line card is busy
Invalid PBX string
Account list full
Account number not found in the account list
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
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Table 8-28 lists which request can be made from the automation computer by request
identifiers.
Remote Log-on/Log-off
You must log-on to the receiver before you can change any system program options. Remote
log-in and log-off commands can be sent from the automation computer to the receiver.
To Log-in:
<$4A><Receiver ID><$22><User PIN><V-byte><$0D>
Table 8-28: Command Requests by Identifiers
Command Request Identifier Description
$4A Log-on request
$4B Log-off request
$05 Hang up request
$04 Add a listen-in account. (This adds an account number to the listen-in account list.)
$03 Delete a listen-in account. (This deletes an account number from the listen-in account list.)
$4C Listen-in extend request.
$48 Listen-in end request.
$49 PBX string request.
$02 Add a trap account. (This adds an account number to the trap account list.)
$01 Delete a trap account. (This deletes an account number from the trap account list.)
$0D Link test request.
Table 8-29: Log-in Request Components
Component Description
<$4A> Command request identifier. See Table 8-28.
<Receiver ID> Receiver ID number. 1 or 2 ASCII digits.
<$22> Separator
<User PIN> The users PIN code.
<V-byte> A validation byte always precedes the end of message indicator and is the only error checking used when
sending commands to the receiver through the automation port. The following equations are used to
calculate the V-byte:
1. Set the V-Byte comparison byte to zero.
2. Add the first (or next) byte of the message to the V-Byte comparison byte.
3. Clear bit seven of the result V-Byte comparison byte.
4. Set bit six of the V-Byte comparison byte.
5. Repeat steps 2, 3, and 4 until the last byte of the event data (up to and including the byte
preceding the V-Byte). The range of V-Byte is $40 to $7F.
<$0D> End of message indicator.
Automation Communication Formats
8-31
To Log-off:
<$4B><Receiver ID><$22><User PIN><V-byte><$0D>
Force Hang-up Request
This command is used to immediately hang up the phone line regardless of line card state.
To Force Hang-up:
<$05><Receiver ID><$22><LC#><V-byte><$0D>
Add or Delete a Listen-in Account
If the account number of a control panel is in the listen-in account list, when that control panel
calls in to the receiver, the receiver will preform a listen-in operation with that control panel.
The maximum length of a listen-in account number is 8 characters and may include wild card
characters (# and or *). Each line card can have up to 20 listen-in accounts. (See “Adding a
Listen-In Account” and “Clearing a Listen-In Account” in Section 5.
Table 8-30: Log-off Request Components
Component Description
<$4B> Command request identifier. See Table 8-28.
<Receiver ID> Receiver ID number. 1 or 2 ASCII digits.
<$22> Separator
<User PIN> The users PIN code.
<V-byte> Validation Byte (V-byte). See Table 8-29.
<$0D> End of message indicator.
Table 8-31: Force Hang-Up Request Components
Component Description
<$05> Command request identifier. See Table 8-28.
<Receiver ID> Receiver ID number. 1 or 2 ASCII digits.
<$22> Separator
<LC#> The line card number.
<V-byte> Validation Byte (V-byte). See Table 8-29.
<$0D> End of message indicator.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
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To Add a Listen-in Account:
<$04><Receiver ID><$22><LC#><$22><Act#><V-byte><$0D>
To Delete a Listen-in Account:
<$03><Receiver ID><$22><LC#><$22><Act#><V-byte><$0D>
Table 8-32: Add Listen-in Account Request Components
Component Description
<$04> Command request identifier. See Table 8-28.
<Receiver ID> Receiver ID number. 1 or 2 ASCII digits.
<$22> Separator
<LC#> The line card number.
<$22> Separator
<Act#> Account number to be added to the listen-in account list.
<V-byte> Validation Byte (V-byte). See Table 8-29.
<$0D> End of message indicator.
Table 8-33: Delete a Listen-in Account Request Components
Component Description
<$03> Command request identifier. See Table 8-28.
<Receiver ID> Receiver ID number. 1 or 2 ASCII digits.
<$22> Separator
<LC#> The line card number.
<$22> Separator
<Act#> Account number to be deleted from the listen-in account list.
<V-byte> Validation Byte (V-byte). See Table 8-29.
<$0D> End of message indicator.
Automation Communication Formats
8-33
Common Listen-in Extend/End Request
During a listen-in operation if the call requires additional time you can extend the listen-in
period by sending an extend request. At the end of a listen-in call you can end the session by
sending an end request.
Some control panels send a listen-in period included in the reported message to the receiver.
If the listen-in period is not sent from the control panel, the programmed listen-in period will
be used. (See “Listen-In” in Section 5.
To Extend Listen-in:
<$4C><Receiver ID><$22><LC#><V-byte><$0D>
To End a Listen-in Session:
<$48><Receiver ID><$22><LC#><V-byte><$0D>
Table 8-34: Extend Listen-in Period Request Components
Component Description
<$4C> Command request identifier. See Table 8-28.
<Receiver ID> Receiver ID number. 1 or 2 ASCII digits.
<$22> Separator
<LC#> The line card number.
<V-byte> Validation Byte (V-byte). See Table 8-29.
<$0D> End of message indicator.
Table 8-35: End Listen-in Period Request Components
Component Description
<$48> Command request identifier. See Table 8-28.
<Receiver ID> Receiver ID number. 1 or 2 ASCII digits.
<$22> Separator
<LC#> The line card number.
<V-byte> Validation Byte (V-byte). See Table 8-29.
<$0D> End of message indicator.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
8-34
PBX Listen-in String
When PBX listen-in mode is selected (see “Changing the PBX String” in Section 5), the
receiver will transfer the call to the extension X string. The PBX string can also be
programmed in to the receiver from the automation computer.
To Create or Edit PBX String:
<$49><Receiver ID><$22><LC#><$22><PBX String><V-byte><$0D>
Add or Delete a Trap Account
The receiver provides a trapping feature that allows the automation computer to trap certain
account numbers when these account numbers are identified in the trap account list. Trapping
is typically done to panels that are to be sent to an up-load/down-load computer for
programming.
To Add a Trap Account:
<$02><Receiver ID><$22><LC#><$22><Act#><V-byte><$0D>
Table 8-36: Create PBX Listen-in String Request Components
Component Description
<$49> Command request identifier. See Table 8-28.
<Receiver ID> Receiver ID number. 1 or 2 ASCII digits.
<$22> Separator
<LC#> The line card number.
<$22> Separator
<PBX String> PBX string to transfer a call to a specified extension. See
Table 5-13 for valid string characters.
<V-byte> Validation Byte (V-byte). See Table 8-29.
<$0D> End of message indicator.
Table 8-37: Add Trap Account Request Components
Component Description
<$02> Command request identifier. See Table 8-28.
<Receiver ID> Receiver ID number. 1 or 2 ASCII digits.
<$22> Separator
<LC#> The line card number.
<$22> Separator
<Act#> Trap account number to be added to the trap account list.
<V-byte> Validation Byte (V-byte). See Table 8-29.
<$0D> End of message indicator.
Automation Communication Formats
8-35
To Delete a Trap Account:
<$01><Receiver ID><$22><LC#><$22><Act#><V-byte><$0D>
Table 8-38: Delete Trap Account Request Components
Component Description
<$01> Command request identifier. See Table 8-28.
<Receiver ID> Receiver ID number. 1 or 2 ASCII digits.
<$22> Separator
<LC#> The line card number.
<$22> Separator
<Act#> Trap account number to be deleted from the trap account list.
<V-byte> Validation Byte (V-byte). See Table 8-29.
<$0D> End of message indicator.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
8-36
Glossary-1
Glossar
y
AC
Alternating current.
access code
A group of numbers and/or letters that when properly
entered allow authorized entry into a specific area with-
out causing an alarm.
account
A subscriber to an alarm company’s services.
account number
A character string that identifies the control panel to the
central station
AC failure
A condition that results after a specific time without AC
power, determined by the software. The power indicator
flashes, showing the back-up battery is working.
ACK
Acknowledgment. A control signal used to complete a
handshaking sequence in telecommunications. See also
NACK
AH
Amp hour (back-up battery capacity).
alarm
A warning by signal or sound, used to get the attention
of users and/or the central station.
alarm report, alarm reporting
An alarm message sent by a control panel to the central
station. A tripped sensor sends a signal to the control
panel, which in turn sends an alarm report to the central
station.
alarm system
A device which detects fire, access, and emergency
alarm conditions and alerts the user and central station.
alarm type
The alarm state that is initiated when a particular sensor
or emergency button is activated. Alarm types include
police, auxiliary (medical), fire, and silent.
alphanumeric
Consisting of letters and numbers. As opposed to
numeric.
ampere, amp, amps, A
The rate of electrical flow in a circuit.
annunciator
The element of an alarm system that alerts humans to
the status of the system such as a bell, siren, or strobe
light.
annunciation
A sound or light emitted to announce activity or report
system status.
approval
The certification that a device meets specific standards
such as the FCC and UL.
ASCII (American Standard Code for Information
Interchange)
An acronym for American Standard Code for Informa-
tion Interchange; a widely-used 7-bit binary code for
storing data, often used to transfer data from one system
to an incompatible system.
audible alarm
A signaling device which is within the users hearing
range.
automatic mode
All event information is sent directly to the automation
computer and must be acknowledged by the automation
software.
auxiliary
Supplementing, subsidiary, or additional.
auxiliary relay
Relay output used to control external alarm signaling
devices.
back-up battery
An optional kit that provides a back-up DC power
source if the primary AC power to the receiver fails.
back-up battery mode, supply
An operation status which is initiated when the receiver
is programmed to shutdown after four hours without AC
power or when a low-battery is detected while on bat-
tery power. The back-up battery supplies standby power
while in back-up battery mode.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Glossary-2
back-up time
The period of time the receiver will operate from battery
power, without restoral of AC power, using a specific
battery capacity with sufficient charge.
battery
A storage device for and source of direct current.
battery test
A diagnostic feature that checks the condition of the
receiver panel back-up battery.
battery monitor, battery monitoring
The process by which the receiver bypasses AC power
and tests the battery’s direct current voltage periodically.
baud, baud rate
The number of changes in an electrical line per second.
Often used as measurement of printer or modem speed.
BFSK
A form of binary frequency modulation commonly used
in low speed modems in which the two states of the sig-
nal are transmitted as two separate frequencies. See also
FSK.
billing delay
A delay of two seconds will be inserted at the beginning
of each incoming call.
buffer
See history buffer.
bus
A common channel, or pathway, between hardware
devices.
bypass
Ignore. Such as bypassing unused devices.
byte
An 8-bit sequence of binary digits. Each byte corre-
sponds to 1 character of data, representing a single let-
ter, number, or symbol.
card
See line card.
call from panel
The complete data stream from a panel to the CS-5000.
central station
A central station is defined by UL as a monitoring sta-
tion that observes certain physical characteristics and
operating guidelines.
central station lock
A security code is required during communication.
central station receiver
The equipment licensed to receive transmissions, moni-
tor control panel alarm and status reports, and notify
operators of emergency situations.
central station operator
The individual responsible for operating the central sta-
tion monitoring device and responding to alarm reports.
central station report
The message sent from a control panel over a phone
line when an alarm, trouble, or phone test occurs.
checksum
A method of qualifying that data was transmitted with-
out errors by summing the bytes of data together in
some way.
CIS
Computer Interface Standard
closing report
The control panel message sent to the central station
when the system is armed, or rearmed to another level.
communication group
ITI has separated the different types of communication
by handshake type. These handshake types are assigned
in a numbered order.
comlock
Communications lock. A method of ensuring that cus-
tomer accounts are not lost to other dealers. Comlock is
used to change a panels security code (SCode) so that
the panel will only communicate with a receiver with a
matching security code. See also, SCode.
com port, serial port
Computer communications connection. PC serial port.
Contact ID
Ademco event reporting format standard.
Glossary-3
control panel
The central point of an alarm system monitoring the
detection devices and activating any number of signal-
ing devices. Also known as the Central Processing Unit,
CPU, Master Processing Unit,
and Panel.
dry contact
Contacts that are used as a switching device, as in a
relay. The externally switched circuit must have its own
source of power and is merely routed through the dry
contacts.
DACT
Digital Alarm Communicator Transmitters.
DB-9, 15, 25, 50
A D type connector with 9, 15, 25, or 50 pins or conduc-
tors.
DC
Direct current. An electric current that flows in one
direction. As opposed to AC.
DCS
Digital Communications Standard. See also SIA.
default, default settings
Factory settings or values.
DTE
Data Terminal Equipment.
DTMF (Dual tone multi-frequency)
In a telephone system, using two simultaneous voice
band tones for dialing. Also called tone dialing.
DOC (Department of Communications) approval
Canada’s equivalent to FCC approval. The certification
that a device meets specific DOC standards.
download, downloader
PC-based software which allows uploading and down-
loading of receiver setup (programming) to and from
any modem equipped personal computer.
echo suppression
A 2025 Hz signal with a two second duration that is sent
at the start of the connection sequence to disable the
phone system echo suppression equipment.
EEPROM (Electrically Erasable Programmable
Read-Only Memory)
Electrically erasable programmable read-only memory.
This memory chip contains the installer programmed
information.
EPROM (Erasable Programmable Read-Only
Memory)
Programmable read-only memory that is read-only in
normal use but that can be erased by a special technique
and then reprogrammed.
event data
The actual data (alarms, troubles, and so on) that are
part of a call from a panel.
face plate
Removable front of CS-5000.
false alarm
A signal from a monitoring service subscriber indicating
an emergency condition when no
emergency exists.
false dispatch
A request for emergency service to a location where no
emergency exists.
FCC (Federal Communications Commission)
Board of commissioners having the power to regulate
all electrical communications systems originating in the
United States, including radio, television, facsimile,
telegraph, telephone, and cable systems.
FCC approval
The certification that a device meets specific FCC stan-
dards.
fields, data fields
Sections of display or data record.
flash memory
Read/write memory capable of retaining stored informa-
tion with power off.
Fletcher’s checksum
A method of qualifying that data was transmitted with-
out errors by summing the data bytes together into two
checksum bytes that are then divided by 255. See also
checksum.
format
The arrangement by which data are stored, transmitted,
or displayed.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Glossary-4
Form C contact
Single pole double throw contact or relay, providing
both normally open and normally closed outputs.
FSK (Frequency Shift Keying)
A form of frequency modulation commonly used in low
speed modems in which the two states of the signal are
transmitted as two separate frequencies. See also BFSK.
full duplex
A multiplex system that can simultaneously transmit in
both directions on a transmission line.
Grade A, AA, B, BB or C
A UL rating of a system.
ground, earth ground
The part of a circuit that is connected to a metallic
object buried in the earth. The ground connection is usu-
ally designated as negative.
handshake
A process in which predetermined arrangements of
characters are exchanged by the receiving and transmit-
ting equipment to establish synchronization.
Heart Beat
A supervisory signal for continually testing the commu-
nication link between the automation computer and the
receiver.
hex
Hexadecimal. The base-16 number system, which is
used to condense binary-based codes, such as bytes, for
more efficient computer processing. Denoted by preced-
ing $ symbol.
history buffer
A history storage containing the date, time, and user ID
for each event. The history is limited by the buffer size
and is refreshed by erasing events on a first in/first out
basis.
hook flash
Places an incoming call on hold by completing a quick
on-/off-hook on the phone line. Also see PBX.
hunt group
A group of associated telephone lines within which an
incoming call is automatically routed to an idle (not
busy) telephone line for completion.
initialization string
A list of ASCII characters used to customize the output
of a receiver port connected device.
installer access code
The access code that lets the installer operate and pro-
gram all features of the system. See operator access
code.
installer profile
Part of access code allowing both operation and pro-
gramming. See also operator profile.
initialize, reinitialize
To set memory addresses or contents of storage to zero
or other starting values at prescribed points in the opera-
tion of a computer routine.
kissoff
A signal sent from the central station to the control
panel, confirming that a message was received. Both
sides release the phone line. Siren shutoff confirms a
successful central station report.
LCD
Liquid crystal display.
LED (Light-Emitting Diode)
A semiconductor chip that gives off visible or infrared
light when activated. See also indicator light.
line card
Line card for phone lines.
line ring
One of two connections to the telephone company. Line
ring is typically the red wire paired with line tip, the
green wire. A qualified technician should connect these
two wires to provide phone service. Note: Line ring nor-
mally has a nominal -48 volts DC relative to line tip.
line tip
See line ring.
listen-in
Listen-in is the ability to listen in to what is happening
real-time from the central station to a remote location.
This can help the central station operator determine if s/
he should dispatch for a particular alarm situation.
LC Error
Line card communication error message.
Glossary-5
log
To record in memory and/or print to external printer.
log-in, log out
Process of entering access code to start or end a session.
log only mode
All event information is internally acknowledged and
put into event history buffer.
low battery
A condition that results when the back-up battery charge
level weakens, and the receivers power requirements
cannot be sufficiently supplied by the back-up battery.
manual mode
Requires manual acknowledgments of each call or event
from an operator.
MCPU
Master Central Processing Unit.
main menu
The main menu will be displayed as either <Installer
Menu> or <Operator Menu>.
message
Any data the CS-5000 is passing to an automation com-
puter. The term “message” is reserved for discussions of
the string as a whole.
mode
A method of operation.
motherboard
The primary electronic printed circuit board in a piece
of equipment.
ms
Milliseconds.
NACK
No acknowledgment. See also ACK.
NEC
National Electrical Code.
NFPA
National Fire Protection Association.
normal mode
The receiver’s operating mode when it is not in the pro-
gramming mode. When in normal mode, the receiver
displays alarm report information on the display “logo”
screen.
normally closed, N.C.
An unactivated switch or contact connection that allows
current to flow through it.
normally open, N.O.
An unactivated switch or contact connection that does
not allow current to flow through it.
null modem cable
Special serial cable used to simulate modem connec-
tions.
off-hook
Activated. Busy or in use. A phone handset is off-hook,
but a communication line is busy or in use. See also on-
hook.
on-hook
Not active. Not busy or not connected. A phone handset
is on-hook, but a communication line is not busy or not
connected. See also off-hook.
opening report
The message sent to the central station when the system
is disarmed. For example, when a store is opened.
operator profile
Part of access code allowing operation only. See also
installer profile.
operator access code
The access code that lets the operator operate the sys-
tem. See installer access code.
panel
Security system control panel.
parallel port
Industry standard printer communications cable and
connections. Also known as “Centronics
parallel” type.
parity bit
Additional bits added to a character code or string of
codes to provide a means for determining if transmitted
information has been received correctly.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Glossary-6
PBX (Exchange, Private Branch)
A small manual telephone switchboard providing local
and trunked telephone service on a subscriber’s pre-
mises. Also see hook flash.
PC
An abbreviation for personal computer; a microcom-
puter that serves one user.
phantom signals
Various communication format signals that can be used
to test the receiver or automation software configura-
tions.
phone
Telephone.
phone lock
A panel configuration that will not allow the installer to
change the panel’s phone numbers unless the installer
enters program mode with the correct dealer access
code.
PIN
Abbreviation for Personal Identification Number. PINs
are used to log in and out of the receiver.
programming mode
The type of control panel operation that allows system
defaults and values to be programmed with user defined
values.
profile
See operator and installer profile.
protocol
The rules for communications between devices, giving a
means to control the orderly communication of informa-
tion between devices.
port
An interface on a computer system to allow the connec-
tion of a modem or data terminal.
PZT
Abbreviation for a piezo alert transmitting sounder.
que, queue
A lineup of operations or input signals in a system.
RAM
An abbreviation for Random Access Memory; same as
memory. Contents of RAM may be retrieved and altered
by the user.
RAM test, memory test
The self-test of RAM when a receiver is powered up for
the first time.
receiver
The central station receiver assembly.
relay
An electrically operated switch. On a receiver, the relay
is used to operate external bells or strobes.
report
To communicate information, usually in detail.
RJ-11 jack, phone jack
A phone port connecting the receiver to phone equip-
ment.
RMA
Returned Material Authorization.
ROM
An abbreviation for Read Only Memory; a permanent
memory.
RS-232
An Electronics Industry Association (EIA) specification
for asynchronous communications that use a 9 or 25 pin
DB connector.
Telco
Telephone company.
safe mode
Mode used to reset User #01 access code back to the
default of 5000 regardless of its present setting.
SIA (Security Industry Association)
The association that develops equipment standards, has
adopted warranty return and repair policies, sponsors
market research, and participates in false alarm preven-
tion activities.
SBUS
Serial Bus interface for future expansion.
SCode, Security Code
The number assigned that is used to authorize communi-
cations between the panel and the receiver. See also,
Comlock.
Glossary-7
shutdown, shutdown mode
An operation status initiated when the receiver detects a
low back-up battery after AC power is interrupted. At
this point the receiver enters shutdown mode, storing
programmed information in RAM, and maintaining a
low-power consumption state.
siren
A sounding device capable of loud alarm sounds, used
to alert alarm conditions.
standby, standby mode, standby power
The receiver’s energy conservation mode of operation.
supervisory
A signal indicating the need for action in connection
with the supervision of guard tours, fire suppression sys-
tems or equipment, or with the maintenance features of
related systems.
SYS Error
System event related error message.
system message
Messages the CS-5000 sends to an automation computer
about its internal status.
trap
Mode used by the receiver to capture the calling panel
for programming.
trap list
A list of panel account numbers that the receiver will
route to a downloader for programming.
threshold
The point or value to be measured against.
tie wrap
Plastic device for securing wire bundles.
time-out
A time interval allotted for certain operations to occur.
toggle
To switch between two states.
UL-listed
The certification that a device meets specific UL stan-
dards.
UPS
Uninterrupted Power Supply.
V
Volts.
wait
A pause while testing; the pause will end when the
desired state occurs or when the specified time elapses.
watt
A unit of electrical power. One watt is equal to one volt
of electrical pressure multiplied by one amp of current.
XID
Extended panel Identification code.
zones
Small subdivision into which large areas are divided,
This permits selective access to some zones while main-
taining other zones secure; and permits pinpointing the
specific location from which an alarm signal is transmit-
ted.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Glossary-8
A-1
Appendix A
Programming Quick Chart
Table A-1: Programming Quick Chart
Program Mode
Options Choices Choices Choices Choices Comments
General Options
Operation Mode
Manual See “Modes of Operation” in Section 4.
Automatic
Log Only
Display Options
Language English See “Displays” in Section 4.
español Not available at this time.
Time Display AMPM 12 hour clock. See “Displays” in Section 4.
24Hr 24 hour clock. See “Displays” in Section 4.
Date Display
M\D\Y See “Displays” in Section 4.
M = month, D = day, Y = year.
D·M·Y
Y-M-D
Day light Savings Yes See “Displays” in Section 4.
No
ITI
(Flags)
Attempts Yes or No (Default)) Show number of dialing attempts made by the reporting
panel before communication was successful.
CPU Time Yes or No (Default)) Show the CPU time reporting.
CPU Type Yes or No (Default)) Show the CPU type reporting.
Panel Rev. Yes or No (Default)) Show the software revision of the reporting panel.
Arming Level Yes or No (Default)) Show the arming level of the reporting panel.
Meter Acct 5 Yes or No (Default)) Use special 5-digit MeterMinder account number.
Meter Acct 12 Yes or No (Default)) Use special 12-digit MeterMinder account number.
Hold Last Event Yes See “Displays” in Section 4.
No
Model CS-5000 Centrl Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
A-2
General Options
(Continued) Communication
Port Functions
Com1 Unused, Automation, Printer Rules for Port Configuration:
1. Functions in Brackets [ ] will not appear unless
“Automation” is selected for Com1 function.
2. Functions in { } will not appear unless “Printer” is
selected in Com1 or Par.
3. A function may be selected only once in the 3 ports
(only one printer, only one Diag, and so on).
4. All ports may be configured “Unused”.
Com2 Unused, [Auto Bkp], [Auto Bkp
Prn], {Print Bkp}, Diag,
MeterMinder, Printer
Par (Parallel) Unused, Printer, [Auto Bkp Prn],
Printer, Diag
Com Port1
Baud 19200, 9600, 7200,4800, 2400,
1200, 600, 300, 110
See “Communications” in Section 5.
D (# Data Bits) 8, 7
S (# Stop bits) 1 or 2
P (Parity) Even, Odd, No, Space, Mark,
F (Flow Control) Hdwr, None
Init Str
(Initialization
String)
Enter ASCII characters for the Escape command
sequence desired. For example: Set the page size or
number of lines per page for a serial printer.
Com Port2 Same as Com1
Par Port Edit Init String Enter or edit an escape command sequence. For example:
Set the page size or number of lines per page for a serial
printer.
Automation Cfg.
Format SIA-CIS, SIA-2000 (pending),
ITI Gen, ITIComp
See “Communications” in Section 5.
HeartBeat Y (Yes, enabled)
N (No, disabled)
Time
(of HeartBeat)
10-600 seconds
AckTimeout 01-600 seconds
Table A-1: Programming Quick Chart (Continued)
Program Mode
Options Choices Choices Choices Choices Comments
Programming Quick Chart
A-3
General Options
(Continued)
Communications
(Continued)
Automation Cfg.
(Continued)
ITI Log Records Displayed only if ITI Gen or ITI Comp automation
formats are selected. See Table 5-7 for details.
XID
SupCh[]
NoDataCh[]
GenericRev
Annunciator
Configuration
Printer Yes or No See “Communications” in Section 5.
Yes = alert on trouble indication
See “UL Requirements” in Section 2 for UL requirements
on listen-in.
Bkp Printer Yes or No
Auto Comp Yes or No
Bkp Auto Comp Yes or No
MeterMinder Yes or No
Battery Yes or No
Line Card Yes or No
Line Fault Yes or No
AC Power Yes or No
Buffer Full Yes or No
Listen In Yes or No
Call Pending Yes or No
Aux Relay Cfg
Printer Yes or No See “Communications” in Section 5.
Yes = alert on trouble indication
See “UL Requirements” in Section 2 for UL requirements
on listen-in.
Bkp Printer Yes or No
Auto Comp Yes or No
Bkp Auto Comp Yes or No
MeterMinder Yes or No
Battery Yes or No
Line Card Yes or No
Line Fault Yes or No
AC Power Yes or No
Buffer Full Yes or No
Listen-In Yes or No
Call Pending Yes or No
Table A-1: Programming Quick Chart (Continued)
Program Mode
Options Choices Choices Choices Choices Comments
Model CS-5000 Centrl Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
A-4
General Options
(Continued)
System Options
Battery Backup Cfg
No Battery Bkp See “System Options” in Section 5.
Battery Bkp See “System Options” in Section 5.
DC Bkp No charging current. See “System Options” in Section 5.
Receiver ID 01-99 See “System Options” in Section 5.
Strip/Send Bad
Strip Bad
(Default)
Stip bad data before sending good.
Send Bad Send bad data with good.
Auxiliary Relay DeEnergize See “Configuring the Auxiliary Relay Outputs” in
Section 5.
Energize
Message Queue Opt.
Wrn Lvl
On: 10 to 99% 75% Set the percentage of how full the message queue must be
before a “Message Queue Warning' will occur.
Off: 01 to 90 % 50% What percentage the queue must go back down to before
a“Message Queue Warning Restore” message will be
sent.
Max Buf Limit 500 to 5000 1000 Used to set the maximum number of bytes in a call. This
number is used to determine if a call is a runaway call.
Line Card Menu
Add Line Card Line Card # Use Defaults See “Line Card Menu” in Section 5.
Copy Existing
Edit Line card Handshake
Sequence
Handshake
Sequence No.
1 through 6 See “Line Card Menu” in Section 5.
Handshake
Group
See table 5-10 for details
Handshake
Delay
0-255 in 50ms periods
Handshake
Duration
0-255 in 10ms periods
Handshake Wait 0-255 in 50ms periods
Handshake Ack
Duration
0-255 in 10ms periods
Table A-1: Programming Quick Chart (Continued)
Program Mode
Options Choices Choices Choices Choices Comments
Model CS-5000 Centrl Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
A-5
Line Card Menu
(Continued)
Edit Line Card
(Continued)
Line Options
Direct Y (yes) Y = dedicated or direct connect phone line.
N = used for standard phone lines.
N (no)
Number of Rings 0-255 See “Line Card Menu” in Section 5.
On Time 0-255 in 50ms periods
Off Time 0-255 in 50ms periods
Threshold 1-15 in 1.64 VDC steps
Sample Time 0-255 seconds.
Listen-In
Listen-In Mode Common, PBX, Not Used See “Line Card Menu” in Section 5.
See “UL Requirements” in Section 5 for UL requirements
on listen-in.
PBX string edit
screen
Up to 20 characters.
Timeout 0-255 seconds?
Listen-In
account edit
screen
Add, Edit, or Clear Account (up
to 20 accounts).
Trap List
Add Account Up to 20 accounts. See “Line Card Menu” in Section 5.
Edit Account
Clear Account Highlight with equal sign and
press enter.
Misc. Line Options
Echo Supress Y (yes) See “Line Card Menu” in Section 5.
N (no)
Caller ID Y (yes)
N (no)
Billing Delay On
Off
Hunt Group 00-99
Line Card ID 000 (default) -999
Table A-1: Programming Quick Chart (Continued)
Program Mode
Options Choices Choices Choices Choices Comments
A-5
Model CS-5000 Centrl Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
A-6
Line Card Menu
(Continued)
Edit Line Card
(Continued) ITI Options
ITI SCode
Menus
Add Acct./SCode Used for ITI panels with Central Station Lock initialized.
See “Line Card Menu” in Section 5.
Edit Acct./SCode
Clear Acct./SCode
Add SCode Table
Clear SCode Table
Date/Time Flag Always
Requested
ITI 300 Baud Y (yes)
N (no)
Audio Mode Instant, One-ring, dial-back
Copy Line Card Use Default Choose Line
Card #
Copies selected line card and uses default settings.
Copy Existing Copies selected line card and existing settings.
Clear Line Card Choose Line Card # Clears (deletes) selected line card.
View Line Card Views selected line card settings.
User List
Add User
User Name Up to 16
characters.
See “User List” in Section 5.
User Code 4-9 digits
User Profile Installer/
Operator
Edit User List of users User name, code
and profile
Clear User List of users
Table A-1: Programming Quick Chart (Continued)
Program Mode
Options Choices Choices Choices Choices Comments
Programming Quick Chart
A-7
Diagnostics
Phantom Menu Troubleshooting/Diagnostics tools.
Message Queue
Event Log
Format Raw Hex
Line Card Debug
Mode
Choose Line Card #
Line Card Statistics
Port Status
Com Port 1
Com Port 2
Para Port
Table A-1: Programming Quick Chart (Continued)
Program Mode
Options Choices Choices Choices Choices Comments
Model CS-5000 Centrl Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
A-8
Appendix B-1
Appendix B
US ASCII Character Codes
The following table displays the US ASCII character and its hexadecimal code equivalent.
Table B-1 US ASCII Character Codes
Character Hex Character Hex Character Hex Character Hex Character Hex
NUL 00 DC4 14 (28 <3C Q/q 51/71
SOH 01 NACK 15 )29 =3D R/r 52/72
STX 02 SYN 16 *2A >3E S/s 53/73
ETX 03 ETB 17 +2B ?3F T/t 54/74
EOT 04 CAN 18 ’2C @40 U/u 55/75
ENQ 05 EM 19 -2D A/a 41/61 V/v 56/76
ACK 06 SUB 1A .2E B/b 42/62 W/w 57/77
BEL 07 ESC 1B /2F C/c 43/63 X/x 58/78
BS 08 FS 1C 030 D/d 44/64 Y/y 59/79
HT 09 GS 1D 131 E/e 45/65 Z/z 5A/7A
LF 0A RS 1E 232 F/f 46/66 [5B
VT 0B US 1F 333 G/g 47/67 \5C
FF 0C SPACE 20 434 H/h 48/68 ]5D
CR 0D !21 535 I/i 49/69 /5E
S0 0E “22 636 J/j 4A/6A —5F
S1 0F #23 737 K/k 4B/6B ‘60
DLE 10 $24 838 L/l 4C/6C {7B
DC1 11 %25 939 M/m 4D/6D |7C
DC2 12 &26 :3A N/n 4E/6E }7D
DC3 13 ‘27 ;3B O/o 4F/6F ~7E
P/p 50/70 DEL 7F
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix B-2
Appendix C-1
Appendix C
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix C-2
CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Menu Map
Press:
ENTER - to select item
v - to skip to next item
^ - to skip to previousitem
< - to exit menu
8460G01A.DSF
AND INSTALLER
1 Phantom Menu
2 Message Que
3 Event Log
4Format - Raw Hex
-
5 Line Card Debug Mode
1 Call History
2 System History
6 Printer Menu*
5 System Restart
3 System Info
8 Diagnostics Menu*
4 Set Time/Date
7 Program Menu*
Detail:
7 Program Menu*
Line Card Statistics
7 Port Status
6
1 General Options
1 Operation Mode
2 Display Options
3 Communications
4 System Options
5 Message Que Opt
2 Line Card Options
1 Add Line Card
2 Edit Line Cards
3 Clear Line Card
4 View Line Cards
3 User List
1 Print Report
1 Call History
2 System History
3 System Config.
4 Test Page
2 Edit Event Format
3 Configure Printer
1 General Options
Operation Mode
Manual
Automatic
Log Only
2 Display Options
Language
Time Display
Date Format
Daylight Savings
ITI (FLAGS)
Hold Last Event
3 Communications
1 Port Functions
2 Com Port 1
3 Com Port 2
4 Parallel Port
5 Automation Cnfg.
6 Annunciator Cnfg.
7 Aux. Relay Cnfg.
4 System Options
Backup Batt. Cnfg.
Receiver ID No.
Strip/Send Bad
Aux. Relay State
5 Message Que Opt
% Warning Level
Max. Buffer Limit
2 Line Card Options
1 Add Line Cards
2 Edit Line Cards
1 Handshake Seq.
2 Line Options
3 Listen-In
4 Trap List
5 Misc Line Opt.
6 ITI Options
3 Copy Line Card
4 Clear Line Card
5 View Line Cards
3 User List
1 Add User
2 Edit User
3 Clear User
Denotes installer profile only
*
Appendix D-1
Appendix D
CS-5000 Specifications
Approvals/Listings/Registration
UL-listed (UL 864) for residential and commercial fire and burglary central station service.
ULC-listed (UL-Canada)
Meets UL and IEC 801 Level 3 transient requirements.
Meets FCC part 15 and part 68 for commercial applications.
FCC #AC6USA-31519-AL-E
DOC Canadian Department of Communications approval.
DOC #7013-SIL-1
Supported Panel Communications Formats
Modem Formats (Bell 103, 212)
SIA-2000
(pending),
ITI® Advent
SIA-1993, SIA- DCS Level 2+ (SIA F1), ITI® Concord, SIMON II
•ITI
® Commander® 2000, LifeGuard®, UltraGuard, CareTaker® EX
•ITI
® Commander®, Euro Commander®, RF Commander®, HarborGuard
•ITI
® Caretaker® Plus, Security Pro 4000
•ITI
® METERMINDER®
•ITI
® FONSAFE, PhoneWatch
•ITI
® SIMON
•ITI
® SX-V® Special, Rollins System 6®
•ITI
® SX-IVB, -V
•ITI
® SX-III, -IVA
DTMF Formats
Contact ID
•ITI
® Advent
•ITI
® Concord
•ITI
® SIMON II
• Ademco®
FSK Formats (1850Hz and 2150 Hz)
SIA F2 (BFSK)
Tone Burst Formats (1800, 1900 Hz)
SIA P1, Franklin® 3+1
SIA P2
SIA P3, 4+2
SIA P4, Radionics® 3+1 with Checksum
•Radionics
® Hex pulses
3+1 Standard
3+1 Extended
•Sescoa
® 3+1, Franklin® 3+1
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix D-2
Supported Computer Automation Communication Protocols
SIA
• SIA-CIS
ITI
•ITI
® Generic
•ITI
® Comp
•ITI
® METERMINDER®
Operation/Programming
Receiver throughput: Continuous calls from 12 line cards simultaneously receiving SIA DCS events at
300 baud.
500 call minimum call history. (Actual number of calls depends on call size and number of message
queue system events.)
Built-in test and diagnostics
Up to 40 unique programming user passwords with up to two user profiles.
Up to 20 audio accounts and up to 20 trap accounts per line card.
Up to 8 character alphanumeric account numbers.
Up to 5 character alphanumeric account security codes.
“#” and “*” account number wild card characters.
Mitsubishi M7700 16 bit microprocessor with up to 8M of Flash or EPROM program memory and 128K
of RAM.
On-board FLASH memory operating parameter storage.
Local (front panel) or remote (automation port) operating parameter programming.
Standard “TELCO” and special PBX line card listen-in modes of operation.
Automatic line card interpretation of Modem, FSK/BFSK, Tone Burst, and DTMF formats.
Inputs/Outputs
Annunciator Output
“Form C” relay annunciator normally open and normally closed dry contacts rated 24VDC at 1A maxi-
mum.
Line Cards/Phones
Supervised line cards with 0-255 seconds (programmable) fault detection.
Front mounted, dual-line RJ-11 line card phone jacks.
12 line card capacity.
Line cards (and phone lines) are front panel accessible.
Line card operating code resides in EPROM and in RAM, controlled by a Mitsubishi 3800 processor.
RAM operating code can be downloaded from the master via the SBUS port.
Four bit DAC line monitoring with a measurement resolution to 1.64 volts over a range of approximately
1.64 to 24.5 volts.
Optional line monitor disable for CDPD “Cellular” interface.
Optional “Echo-Cancel” enable via the modem formats triggers echo cancellation in local phone sub-
scriber loops.
Serial Communications Ports
Two (primary and backup) supervised RS-232C (DB-9M) serial ports (IBM AT compatible). If the primary
(computer automation) port fails, information will automatically be sent to the backup port if it has been
selected.
1K call event buffer (memory) prevents loss of events due to a temporarily disconnected cable or non-
responsive device.
CS-5000 Specifications
Appendix D-3
Parallel Printer Port
One supervised “Centronics” type (DB-25F) parallel printer port (IBM AT compatible).
Printer output can be prefaced with an optional receiver identification string.
1K parallel port buffering prevents loss of events due to a temporarily disconnected cable or non-
responsive device.
Backup printer capability available via either serial or parallel port connection.
System Future Expansion Ports
Dual (primary and secondary) RS-485 type SBUS (DIN9F) future expansion ports.
User Interface
Phone Line Status
Three red LED line card indicators show Active/Ring, Fault, and Listen-in status.
System Status
Four green LEDs indicate AC Power, System Fault, Operator Logged-In, and Call Pending status.
Display
Front panel 4-line by 20-character LCD alphanumeric display provides system status indication.
Display back-lighting.
Touchpad
Simple, 19-button operating and programming touchpad with visual and audio feedback.
Power Supply
AC Power
Switch selectable 120 or 220V ((10%), 60 Hz, 100VA AC power supply, fused at 3A.
Built-in AC power monitoring with annunciation of fault within 60 sec.
Backup Battery System
DC Power Required; 12VDC at 1.75A maximum.
12VDC, 7 AH, lead acid battery provides a minimum of four hours of backup operation.
(Backup battery does not provide standby time required for UL and NFPA standards. A UPS
[uninterruptable power supply], listed for Fire Protection Signaling Use, must be utilized when
standby power is required.)
Built-in backup battery condition monitoring with fault annunciation within 60 sec.
Backup battery connection short and reversal protection.
Physical Description
Color
Black and silver.
Dimensions
5.25” H x 19” W x 11.5” D. (13.34 cm H x 48.26 cm W x 29.21 cm D.)
Shipping Weight
30 lbs (13.6 kg).
Other
Rack mountable, anodized aluminum desktop chassis.
“Tool-less” front panel access to all changeable cards.
Holds up to 12 line cards.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix D-4
Environmental
Operating Temperature
32° to 120° F.(0° to 49° C.)
Storage Temperature
-4.0° to 158° F. (-20° to 70° C.)
Maximum Humidity
85% non-condensing, non-corrosive
Indoor use only
Warranty
Two-year limited warranty
Optional Accessories (partial list)
Line Card (ITI 13-417)
Expands phone line capacity (one included with receiver).
Backup Battery (Powersonic Model 1270)
Provides power failure backup power. (Backup battery does not provide standby time required for UL and
NFPA standards. A UPS [uninterruptable power supply], listed for Fire Protection Signaling Use, must be
utilized when standby power is required.)
Printer (Okidata Microline 320 Turbo, 9-pin)
Provides hardcopy report output.
Appendix E-1
Appendix E
Automation Output Version Control
The CS-4000 receiver used a channel command option called VERSION to control the output
of new Event codes to the automation computer. The CS-5000 uses the version control
feature on the automation configuration menu to help coordinate the reporting abilities of the
CS-5000 with that of the automation computer software.
The CS-5000 version control feature defaults to 6.1. Version 6.1 outputs the same codes as
the CS-4000 software version 6.1 and does not include any new event codes.
When the automation computer software is updated to support the new codes, change the
version control feature to 6.2. (To change the version, see “Setting Automation
Communication” in Section 5.) Version 6.2 allows the new event codes to be sent to the
automation software, which in turn will display the event. Once the version control feature is
set to 6.2, the CS-5000 is able to send 8 new event codes.
Interpreting 3-Digit User Codes and Zone Numbers
To meet Contact ID and SIA reporting standards, the CS-5000 version control feature 6.2
combines the user and zone bytes. The combination of bytes allows 3-digit zone and user
numbers to be displayed.
This applies only to Contact ID and SIA formats—all other reporting formats send user and
zone information as before.
Whether the number represents user information or zone information is determined by the
type of event.
Table E-1 New Event Codes
Generic Event Code Event Description
Q AC Power Failure
H AC Power Restore
M System Low Battery
U Burglary Alarm
X Medical/Auxiliary Panic Alarms
Y Police Panic Alarms
Z Fire Panic Alarms
! Undefined Event—Sent for assorted test signals and other non-alarm reports.
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-2
Panel ID Characters
The CS-5000 identifies Contact ID, SIA-DCS, and SIA-2000 reporting formats with three
panel ID characters (Table E-1).
Figure E-1 Panel ID Signals Use of Three Digits
The appearance of any of these panel ID characters in the report record serves as a signal that
the 3-digit number is utilizing bytes 10, 11, and 12 for either user or zone information.
When Zone Information is Represented
The 3 digits represent zone information in all cases except Opening or Closing reports.
If:
the panel ID character is #, %, or &, and
the event code of the Generic output is anything but an opening or closing report, then
the three digits represent zone information.
Figure E-2 Three Digits Representing Zone
The example above shows an alarm received from a panel using the Contact ID format. The
three digits represent zone 172.
Table E-2 Panel ID Characters
Reporting Format Panel ID
Contact ID %
SIA-DCS #
SIA-2000 (pending) &
PANEL ID
CHARACTER IDENTIFIES
REPORTING FORMAT
3 DIGITS REPRESENT
USER OR ZONE INFORMATION
1B1#23450125A
1B1%23450172A
3 DIGITS
REPRESENT ZONE
CONDITION CODE IS NO
T
OPENING OR CLOSING
PANEL ID
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-3
When User Information is Represented
The only instance in which the three digits will represent user information is in the case of
Opening or Closing reports.
If:
the version control feature of the CS-5000 is set to 6.2, and
the panel ID character is #, %, or &, and
the event code of the Generic output is C (Closing) or O (Opening), then
the three digits represent user information.
Figure E-3 Three Digits Representing User Information
The example above shows a closing report received from a panel using the SIA format. The
three digits represent user 112.
Signs of Incompatibility
Problems can arise if the CS-5000 version control feature does not match the automation
computer software:
Only the last two digits of a 3-digit zone number will be interpreted.
User information will not be interpreted correctly.
1B1#23450112C
3 DIGITS REPRESENT
USER INFORMATION
CONDITION CODE IS A
CLOSING REPORT
PANEL ID
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-4
Reporting Format Codes
Table E-3 and Table E-4 give comprehensive information regarding SIA-DCS and Contact ID
data codes.
Each table:
lists all the SIA-DCS (Table E-3) or Contact ID (Table E-4) data codes and a short descrip-
tion of each.
indicates which data codes ITI panels send.
indicates which data codes the Caddax panel sends.
lists the condition code in the Generic output stream for each data code.
lists the condition codes in the ITICOMP output stream for each data code.
Table E-3 SIA-DCS Format
Data Code and Short Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
AN Analog Restoral W CR
AR AC Restoral Yes Yes Yes W CH
AS Analog Service J CJ
AT AC Trouble Yes Yes Yes J / Q CP
BA Burglary Alarm Yes Yes Yes A / U CG
BB Burglary Bypass Yes Yes Yes B CB
BC Burglary Cancel Yes R CX
BH Burglary Alarm Restore Yes R CX
BJ Burglary Trouble Restore Yes W CR
BM Burglary Alarm - Cross Point A / U CG
BR Burglary Restoral Yes Yes Yes W CR
BS Burglary Supervisory Yes Yes S CS
BT Burglary Trouble Yes Yes Yes J CJ
BU Burglary Unbypass Yes Yes B CB
BV Burglary Verified A / U CG
BX Burglary Test ! CD
BZ Missing Supervision J CJ
CA Automatic Closing C CC
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-5
CD Closing Delinquent C CC
CE Closing Extend C CC
CF Forced Closing Yes Yes C CC
CG Close Area C CC
CI Fail to Close C CC
CJ Late Close C CC
CK Early Close C CC
CL Closing Report Yes Yes Yes C CC
CM Missing Alarm - Recent Closing J CJ
CP Automatic Closing C CC
CR Recent Closing Yes J CJ
CS Closing Keyswitch C CC
CT Late to Open C CC
CW Was Force Armed Yes Yes C CC
CZ Point Closing C CC
DA Card Assigned ! CD
DB Card Deleted ! CD
DC Access Closed C CC
DD Access Denied A CA
DE Request to Enter ! CD
DF Door Forced ! CD
DG Access Granted ! CD
DH Door Left Open - Restoral W CR
DJ Door Forced - Trouble J CJ
DK Access Lockout A CA
DL Door Left Open - Alarm A CA
DM Door Left Open - Trouble W CR
DN Door Left Open
(non-alarm, non-trouble) ACA
DO Access Open O CO
DP Access Denied - Unauthorized Time A CA
Table E-3 SIA-DCS Format (Continued)
Data Code and Short Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-6
DQ Access Denied Unauthorized Arming
State !CD
DR Door Restoral W CR
DS Door Station ! CD
DT Access Trouble J CJ
DU Dealer ID ! CA
DV Access Denied Unauthorized Entry
Level ACA
DW Access Denied - Interlock A CA
DX Request to Exit ! CD
DY Door Locked A CA
DZ Access Denied -
Door Secured ACA
EA Exit Alarm A CA
EE Exit Error Yes E CA
ER Expansion Restoral Yes W CR
ET Expansion Trouble Yes Yes J CJ
EX External Device Condition ! CJ
EZ Missing Alarm - Exit Error A CA
FA Fire Alarm Yes Yes Yes A / Z CN
FB Fire Bypass Yes Yes Yes B CB
FC Fire Cancel Yes R CX
FH Fire Alarm Restore Yes R CX
FI Fire Test Begin ! CD
FJ Fire Trouble Restore Yes W CR
FK Fire Test End ! CD
FM Fire Alarm - Cross Point A / Z CN
FR Fire Restoral Yes Yes Yes W CR
FS Fire Supervisory Yes Yes S CS
FT Fire Trouble Yes Yes Yes J CJ
FU Fire Unbypass Yes Yes B CB
FX Fire Test !CD
Table E-3 SIA-DCS Format (Continued)
Data Code and Short Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-7
FY Missing Fire Trouble J CJ
FZ Missing Fire Supervision J CJ
GA Gas Alarm Yes Yes A CA
GB Gas Bypass Yes Yes B CB
GH Gas Alarm Restore Yes R CX
GJ Gas Trouble Restore Yes W CR
GR Gas Restoral Yes Yes W CR
GS Gas Supervisory Yes S CS
GT Gas Trouble Yes Yes J CJ
GU Gas Unbypass Yes B CB
GX Gas Test !CD
HA Holdup Alarm Yes Yes Yes A CQ
HB Holdup Bypass Yes B CB
HH Holdup Alarm Restore R CX
HJ Holdup Trouble Restore W CR
HR Holdup Restoral Yes W CR
HS Holdup Supervisory S CS
HT Holdup Trouble Yes J CJ
HU Holdup Unbypass Yes B CB
HX Holdup Test ! CD
IA Equipment Failure Condition J CJ
IR Equipment Fail - Restoral W CR
JA User Code Tamper Yes A CA
JD Date Changed ! CD
JH Holiday Changed ! CD
JK Latchkey Alert Yes C CC
JL Log Threshold Yes Yes J CJ
JO Log Overflow J CJ
JP User On Premises Yes Yes O CO
JR Schedule Executed ! CD
Table E-3 SIA-DCS Format (Continued)
Data Code and Short Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-8
JS Schedule Changed ! CD
JT Time Changed ! CD
JV User Code Changed ! CD
JX User Code Deleted ! CD
JY User Code Added ! CD
JZ User Level Set ! CD
KA Heat Alarm Yes A CA
KB Heat Bypass Yes B CB
KH Heat Alarm Restore R CX
KJ Heat Trouble Restore W CR
KR Heat Restoral Yes W CR
KS Heat Supervisory S CS
KT Heat Trouble Yes J CJ
KU Heat Unbypass Yes B CB
KX Heat Test ! CD
LB Local Program ! CD
LD Local Program Denied ! CD
LE Listen-in Ended V CD
LF Listen-in Begin Yes Yes V CD
LR Phone Line Restoral Yes W CR
LS Local Program Success ! CD
LT Phone Line Trouble Yes J CJ
LU Local Program Fail J CJ
LX Local Programming Ended Yes ! CD
MA Medical Alarm Yes A / X CM
MB Medical Bypass Yes B CB
MH Medical Alarm Restore R CX
MJ Medical Trouble Restore W CR
MR Medical Restoral Yes W CR
MS Medical Supervisory S CS
Table E-3 SIA-DCS Format (Continued)
Data Code and Short Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-9
MT Medical Trouble Yes J CJ
MU Medical Unbypass Yes B CB
MX Medical Test ! CD
NA No Activity Yes Yes A CA
NC Network Condition ! CD
NF Forced Perimeter Arm A CA
NL Perimeter Armed C CC
NR Network Restoral W CR
NS Activity Resumed Yes W CR
NT Network Failure J CJ
OA Automatic Opening O CO
OC Cancel Report Yes R CX
OG Open Area O CO
OH Early to Open from Alarm O CO
OI Fail to Open J CO
OJ Late Open O CO
OK Early Open O CO
OL Late to Open from Alarm O CO
OP Opening Report Yes Yes Yes O CO
OR Disarm From Alarm O CO
OS Opening Keyswitch O CO
OT Late To Close C CC
OZ Point Opening O CO
PA Panic Alarm Yes Yes Yes A / Y CA
PB Panic Bypass Yes Yes Yes B CB
PH Panic Alarm Restore Yes R CX
PJ Panic Trouble Restore Yes W CR
PR Panic Restoral Yes Yes Yes W CR
PS Panic Supervisory Yes Yes S CS
PT Panic Trouble Yes Yes Yes J CJ
Table E-3 SIA-DCS Format (Continued)
Data Code and Short Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-10
PU Panic Unbypass Yes Yes B CB
PX Panic Test ! CD
QA Emergency Alarm Yes Yes Yes A CM
QB Emergency Bypass Yes Yes Yes B CB
QH Emergency Alarm Restore Yes R CX
QJ Emergency Trouble Yes W CR
QR Emergency Restoral Yes Yes Yes W CR
QS Emergency Supervisory Yes Yes S CS
QT Emergency Trouble Yes Yes Yes J CJ
QU Emergency Unbypass Yes Yes B CB
QX Emergency Test ! CD
RA Remote Programmer Call Failed J CJ
RB Remote Program Begin ! CD
RC Relay Close C CC
RD Remote Program Denied A CA
RN Remote Reset A CA
RO Relay Open O CO
RP Automatic Test Yes Yes Yes P CZ
RR Power Up Yes W / H CH
RS Remote Program Success Yes ! CD
RT Data Lost Yes J CJ
RU Remote Program Fail J CJ
RX Manual Test Yes Yes Yes P CZ
RY Test Off Normal J CJ
SA Sprinkler Alarm Yes A CA
SB Sprinkler Bypass Yes B CB
SH Sprinkler Alarm Restore R CX
SJ Sprinkler Trouble Restore W CR
SR Sprinkler Restoral Yes W CR
SS Sprinkler Supervisory S CS
Table E-3 SIA-DCS Format (Continued)
Data Code and Short Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-11
ST Sprinkler Trouble Yes J CJ
SU Sprinkler Unbypass Yes B CB
SX Sprinkler Test ! CD
TA Tamper Alarm Yes Yes T CT
TB Tamper Bypass Yes B CB
TC All Points Tested ! CD
TE Test End !CA
TH Tamper Alarm Restore W CR
TJ Tamper Trouble Restore W CR
TP Walk Test Point ! CD
TR Tamper Restoral Yes W CR
TS Test Start ! CD
TT Tamper Trouble Yes J CJ
TU Tamper Unbypass Yes B CB
TX Test Report ! CD
UA Untyped Zone Alarm Yes A CA
UB Untyped Zone Bypass Yes B CB
UH Untyped Alarm Restore R CX
UJ Untyped Trouble Restore W CR
UR Untyped Zone Restoral Yes Yes W CR
US Untyped Zone Supervisory Yes S CS
UT Untyped Zone Trouble Yes Yes J CJ
UU Untyped Zone Unbypass Yes B CB
UX Undefined A CA
UY Untyped Missing Trouble J CJ
UZ Untyped Missing Alarm A CA
VI Printer Paper In W CJ
VO Printer Paper Out J CJ
VR Printer Restore W CR
VT Printer Trouble J CJ
Table E-3 SIA-DCS Format (Continued)
Data Code and Short Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-12
VX Printer Test ! CD
VY Printer Online W CJ
VZ Printer Offline J CJ
WA Water Alarm Yes A CA
WB Water Bypass Yes B CB
WH Water Alarm Restore R CX
WJ Water Trouble Restore W CR
WR Water Restoral Yes W CR
WS Water Supervisory S CS
WT Water Trouble Yes J CJ
WU Water Unbypass Yes B CB
WX Water Test ! CD
XA Extra Account Report ! CD
XE Extra Point J CJ
XF Extra RF Point J CJ
XH RF Interference Restoral W CR
XI Sensor Reset W CR
XJ RF Receiver Tamper Restoral W CR
XL Low Received Signal Strength J CJ
XM Missing Alarm - Cross Point A CA
XQ RF Interference Yes J CJ
XR Transmitter Battery Restoral Yes W CR
XS RF Receiver Tamper Yes J CJ
XT Transmitter Battery Trouble Yes Yes Yes L CL
XW Forced Point J CJ
XX Fail to Test ! CA
YA Bell Fault Yes J CJ
YB Busy Seconds J CJ
YC Communications Fail Yes J CJ
YD Receiver Line Card Trouble J CJ
Table E-3 SIA-DCS Format (Continued)
Data Code and Short Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-13
YE Receiver Line Card Restored W CR
YF Parameter Checksum Fail J CJ
YG Parameter Changed ! CD
YH Bell Restored Yes W CR
YK Communications Restoral Yes W CR
YM System Battery Missing L / M CW
YN Invalid Report ! CD
YO Unknown Message J CJ
YP Power Supply Trouble Yes J CJ
YQ Power Supply Restored Yes W CR
YR System Battery Restoral Yes Yes Yes W CY
YS Communications Trouble J CJ
YT System Battery Trouble Yes Yes Yes L / M CW
YW Watchdog Reset J CJ
YX Service Required J CJ
YY Status Report ! CD
YZ Service Completed ! CD
ZA Freeze Alarm Yes Yes Yes A CA
ZB Freeze Bypass Yes Yes Yes B CB
ZH Freeze Alarm Restore Yes R CX
ZJ Freeze Trouble Restore Yes W CR
ZR Freeze Restoral Yes Yes Yes W CR
ZS Freeze Supervisory Yes Yes S CS
ZT Freeze Trouble Yes Yes Yes J CJ
ZU Freeze Unbypass Yes Yes B CB
ZX Freeze Test ! CD
Table E-3 SIA-DCS Format (Continued)
Data Code and Short Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-14
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
4.1 ALARMS
100 Medical Alarms
100 Medical Yes Yes Yes A / X CM
100 Medical (Store) Yes Yes Yes W CR
101 Personal Emergency A / X CM
101 Personal Emergency (Restore) W CR
102 Fail to report in Yes Yes A CM
102 Fail to report in (Restore) Yes Yes W CR
110 Fire Alarms
110 Fire Yes Yes Yes A / Z CN
110 Fire (Restore) Yes Yes Yes W CR
111 Smoke A CN
111 Smoke (Restore) W CR
112 Combustion A CN
112 Combustion (Restore) W CR
113 Water flow A CN
113 Water flow (Restore) W CR
114 Heat A CN
114 Heat (Restore) W CR
115 Pull Station A CN
115 Pull Station (Restore) W CR
116 Duct A CN
116 Duct (Restore) W CR
117 Flame A CN
117 Flame (Restore) W CR
118 Near Alarm A CN
118 Near Alarm (Restore) W CR
120 Panic Alarms
120 Panic Yes Yes Yes A / Y CA
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-15
120 Panic (Restore) Yes Yes Yes W CR
121 Duress Yes Yes Yes A CQ
121 Duress (Restore) Yes Yes Yes W CR
122 Silent Yes Yes Yes A CA
122 Silent (Restore) Yes Yes Yes W CR
123 Audible Yes A / Y CA
123 Audible (Restore) Yes W CR
124 Duress – Access granted A CQ
124 Duress – Access granted (Restore) W CR
125 Duress – Egress granted A CQ
125 Duress – Egress granted (Restore) W CR
130 Burglar Alarms
130 Burglary Yes Yes Yes A / U CG
130 Burglary (Restore) Yes Yes Yes W CR
131 Perimeter Yes A / U CG
131 Perimeter (Restore) Yes W CR
132 Interior Yes A / U CG
132 Interior (Restore) Yes W CR
133 24 Hour (Safe) Yes A / U CG
133 24 Hour (Safe) (Restore) Yes W CR
134 Entry/Exit Yes A / U CG
134 Entry/Exit (Restore) Yes W CR
135 Day/night Yes A / U CG
135 Day/night (Restore) Yes W CR
136 Outdoor A / U CG
136 Outdoor (Restore) W CR
137 Tamper Yes Yes T CT
137 Tamper (Restore) Yes Yes W CR
138 Near alarm A / U CG
138 Near alarm (Restore) W CR
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-16
139 Intrusion Verifier A / U CG
139 Intrusion Verifier (Restore) W CR
140 General Alarm
140 General Alarm Yes A CA
140 General Alarm (Restore) Yes W CR
141 Polling loop open J CJ
141 Polling loop open (Restore) W CR
142 Polling loop short J CJ
142 Polling loop short (Restore) W CR
143 Expansion module failure A CA
143 Expansion module restore W CR
144 Sensor tamper T CT
144 Sensor tamper (Restore) W CR
145 Expansion module tamper T CT
145 Expansion module tamper (Restore) W CR
146 Silent Burglary A / U CG
146 Silent Burglary (Restore) W CR
150 & 160 24 Hour Non-Burglary
150 24 Hour Non-Burglary Yes A CA
150 24 Hour Non-Burglary (Restore) Yes W CR
151 Gas detected Yes A CA
151 Gas detected (Restore) Yes W CR
152 Refrigeration A CA
152 Refrigeration (Restore) W CR
153 Loss of heat Yes Yes A CA
153 Loss of heat (Restore) Yes Yes W CR
154 Water Leakage Yes A CA
154 Water Leakage (Restore) Yes W CR
155 Foil Break A / U CG
155 Foil Break (Restore) W CR
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-17
156 Day Trouble A / U CG
156 Day Trouble (Restore) W CR
157 Low bottled gas level A CA
157 Low bottled gas level (Restore) W CR
158 High temp Yes A CA
158 High temp (Restore) Yes W CR
159 Low temp Yes Yes A CA
159 Low temp (Restore) Yes Yes W CR
161 Loss of air flow A CA
161 Loss of air flow (Restore) W CR
162 Carbon Monoxide detected Yes A CA
162 Carbon Monoxide detected (Restore) Yes W CR
163 Tank level A CA
163 Tank level (Restore) W CR
4.2 SUPERVISORY
200 & 210 Fire Supervisory
200 Fire Supervisory S CS
200 Fire Supervisory (Restore) W CR
201 Low water pressure S CS
201 Low water pressure (Restore) W CR
202 Low CO2 S CS
202 Low CO2 (Restore) W CR
203 Gate valve sensor S CS
203 Gate valve sensor (Restore) W CR
204 Low water level S CS
204 Low water level (Restore) W CR
205 Pump activated S CS
205 Pump deactivated W CR
206 Pump failure S CS
206 Pump failure (Restore) W CR
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-18
4.3 TROUBLES
300 & 310 System Troubles
300 System Trouble J CJ
300 System Trouble (Restore) W CR
301 AC Loss Yes Yes Yes J / Q CP
301 AC Restore Yes Yes Yes W / H CH
302 Low system battery Yes Yes L / M CW
302 Low system battery (Restore) Yes Yes W / H CY
303 RAM Checksum bad J CJ
304 ROM checksum bad J CJ
305 System reset J CJ
306 Panel programming changed ! CD
307 Self-test failure J CJ
307 Self-test failure (Restore) W CR
308 System shutdown Yes J CJ
308 System shutdown (Restore) Yes W CR
309 Battery test failure Yes L / M CL
309 Battery test failure (Restore) Yes W CR
310 Ground fault Yes J CJ
310 Ground fault (Restore) Yes W CR
311 Battery Missing/Dead L / M CL
311 Battery Missing/Dead (Restore) W CR
312 Power Supply Overcurrent Yes J CJ
312 Power Supply Overcurrent (Restore) Yes W CR
313 Engineer Reset J CJ
320 Sounder / Relay Troubles
320 Sounder/Relay J CJ
320 Sounder/Relay (Restore) W CR
321 Bell 1 Yes J CJ
321 Bell 1 (Restore) Yes W CR
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-19
322 Bell 2 J CJ
322 Bell 2 (Restore) W CR
323 Alarm relay J CJ
323 Alarm relay (Restore) W CR
324 Trouble relay J CJ
324 Trouble relay (Restore) W CR
325 Reversing relay J CJ
325 Reversing relay (Restore) W CR
326 Notification Appliance Circuit. # 3 J CJ
326 Notification Appliance Circuit. # 3
Restore WCR
326 Notification Appliance Circuit. # 4 J CJ
327 Notification Appliance Circuit. # 4
Restore WCR
330 & 340 System Peripheral Trouble
330 System Peripheral trouble Yes J CJ
330 System Peripheral trouble (Restore) Yes W CR
331 Polling loop open J CJ
331 Polling loop open (Restore) W CR
332 Polling loop short J CJ
332 Polling loop short (Restore) W CR
333 Expansion module failure Yes Yes J CJ
333 Expansion module restore Yes Yes W CR
334 Repeater failure J CJ
334 Repeater restore W CR
335 Local printer out of paper J CJ
335 Local printer out of paper (Restore) W CR
336 Local printer failure J CJ
336 Local printer restore W CR
337 Exp. Module DC Loss L CL
337 Exp. Module DC Loss (Restore) W CR
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-20
338 Exp. Module Low Battery. L CL
338 Exp. Module Low Battery. (Restore) W CR
339 Exp. Module Reset J CJ
339 Exp. Module Reset (Restore) W CR
341 Exp. Module Tamper J CJ
341 Exp. Module Tamper (Restore) W CR
342 Exp. Module AC Loss J CJ
342 Exp. Module AC Restore W CR
343 Exp. Module self-test fail J CJ
343 Exp. Module self-test fail (Restore) W CR
350 & 360 Communication Troubles
350 Communication trouble Yes J CJ
350 Communication trouble (Restore) Yes W CR
351 Telco 1 fault Yes J CJ
351 Telco 1 restore Yes W CR
352 Telco 2 fault J CJ
352 Telco 2 restore W CR
353 Long Range Radio Transmitter fault J CJ
353 Long Range Radio Transmitter
restore WCR
354 Failure to communicate event Yes J CJ
354 Failure to communicate event
(Restore) Yes W CR
355 Loss of Radio supervision Yes J CJ
355 Loss of Radio supervision (Restore) Yes W CR
356 Loss of central polling J CJ
356 Loss of central polling (Restore) W CR
357 Long Range Radio VSWR problem J CJ
357 Long Range Radio VSWR restore W CR
370 Protection Loop
370 Protection loop J CJ
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-21
370 Protection loop (Restore) W CR
371 Protection loop open J CJ
371 Protection loop open (Restore) W CR
372 Protection loop short J CJ
372 Protection loop short (Restore) W CR
373 Fire trouble J CJ
373 Fire trouble (Restore) W CR
374 Exit error (zone) E CE
374 Exit error (zone) (Restore) W CR
375 Panic zone trouble J CJ
375 Panic zone trouble (Restore) W CR
376 Hold-up zone trouble J CJ
376 Hold-up zone trouble (Restore) W CR
380 Sensor Trouble
380 Sensor trouble Yes Yes Yes J CJ
380 Sensor trouble (Restore) Yes Yes Yes W CR
381 Loss of supervision - RF Yes Yes Yes S CS
381 Loss of supervision - RF (Restore) Yes Yes Yes W CR
382 Loss of supervision - RPM S CJ
382 Loss of supervision - RPM (Restore) W CR
383 Sensor tamper Yes Yes J CJ
383 Sensor tamper (Restore) Yes Yes W CR
384 RF low battery Yes Yes Yes L CL
384 RF low battery (Restore) Yes Yes Yes W CR
385 Smoke detector Hi sensitivity J CJ
385 Smoke detector Hi sensitivity
(Restore) WCR
386 Smoke detector Low sensitivity J CJ
386 Smoke detector Low sensitivity
(Restore) WCR
387 Intrusion detector Hi sensitivity J CJ
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-22
387 Intrusion detector Hi sensitivity
(Restore) WCR
388 Intrusion detector Low sensitivity J CJ
388 Intrusion detector Low sensitivity
(Restore) WCR
389 Sensor self-test failure J CJ
389 Sensor self-test failure (Restore) W CR
391 Sensor Watch trouble J CJ
391 Sensor Watch trouble (Restore) W CR
392 Drift Compensation Error J CJ
392 Drift Compensation Error (Restore) W CR
393 Maintenance Alert J CJ
393 Maintenance Alert (Restore) W CR
4.4 OPEN/CLOSE/REMOTE ACCESS
400, 440,
450 Open/Close
400 Open O CO
400 Close C CC
401 Open by user Yes Yes Yes O CO
401 Close by user Yes Yes Yes C CC
402 Group Open O CO
402 Group Close C CC
403 Automatic Open O CO
403 Automatic Close C CC
404 Late to Open (use 453, 454 instead) O CO
404 Late to Close (use 453, 454 instead) C CC
405 Deferred Open (Not defined) O CO
406 Cancel Yes Yes Yes R CX
407 Remote arm O CO
407 Remote disarm C CC
408 Quick arm C CC
409 Keyswitch Open O CO
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-23
409 Keyswitch Close C CC
441 Armed STAY O CO
441 Armed STAY (Restore) C CC
442 Keyswitch Armed STAY O CO
442 Keyswitch Armed STAY (Restore) C CC
450 Exception Open O CO
450 Exception Close C CC
451 Early Open O CO
451 Early Close C CC
452 Late Open O CO
452 Late Close C CC
453 Failed to Open O CO
454 Failed to Close C CC
455 Auto-arm Failed J CJ
456 Partial Arm C CC
456 Partial Arm (Restore) O CO
457 Exit Error (user) Yes Yes E CE
458 User on Premises O CO
459 Recent Close J CJ
461 Wrong Code Entry O CO
462 Legal Code Entry O CO
463 Re-arm after Alarm C CC
464 Auto-arm Time Extended C CC
465 Panic Alarm Reset W CR
410 Remote Access
411 Callback request made ! CD
412 Successful download/access Yes ! CD
413 Unsuccessful access J CJ
414 System shutdown command received ! CD
414 (Remote) System shutdown
command received WCR
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-24
415 Dialer shutdown command received ! CD
415 (Remote) Dialer shutdown command
received WCR
416 Successful Upload ! CD
420 Access control
421 Access denied A CA
422 Access report by user ! CD
423 Forced Access ! CD
423 Forced Access (Restore) W CR
424 Egress Denied ! CD
425 Egress Granted ! CD
426 Access Door propped open ! CD
426 Access Door propped open (Restore) ! CD
427 Access point DSM trouble ! CD
427 Access point DSM trouble (Restore) ! CD
428 Access point RTE trouble ! CD
428 Access point RTE trouble (Restore) ! CD
429 Access program mode entry ! CD
430 Access program mode exit ! CD
431 Access threat level change ! CD
431 Access threat level change (Restore) W CR
432 Access relay/trigger fail ! CD
432 Access relay/trigger restore ! CD
433 Access RTE shunt ! CD
433 Access RTE shunt (Restore) ! CD
434 Access DSM shunt ! CD
434 Access DSM shunt (Restore) ! CD
4.5 BYPASSES / DISABLES
500 & 510 System Disables
501 Access reader disable J CJ
501 Access reader restore W CR
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-25
520 Sounder / Relay Disables
520 Sounder/Relay Disable J CJ
520 Sounder/Relay Restore W CR
521 Bell 1 disable J CJ
521 Bell 1 restore W CR
522 Bell 2 disable J CJ
522 Bell 2 restore W CR
523 Alarm relay disable J CJ
523 Alarm relay restore W CR
524 Trouble relay disable J CJ
524 Trouble relay restore W CR
525 Reversing relay disable J CJ
525 Reversing relay restore W CR
526 Notification Appliance Circuit. # 3
disable JCJ
526 Notification Appliance Circuit. # 3
restore WCR
527 Notification Appliance Circuit. # 4
disable JCJ
527 Notification Appliance Circuit. # 4
restore WCR
530 & 540 System Peripheral Disables
531 Module Added W CR
532 Module Removed ! CD
550 & 560 Communication Disables
551 Dialer disabled J CJ
551 Dialer restore W CR
552 Radio transmitter disabled J CJ
552 Radio transmitter restore W CR
553 Remote Upload/Download disabled J CJ
553 Remote Upload/Download restore W CR
570 Bypasses
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-26
570 Zone/Sensor bypass Yes Yes Yes B CB
570 Zone/Sensor unbypass Yes Yes W CR
571 Fire bypass B CB
571 Fire unbypass W CR
572 24 Hour zone bypass B CB
572 24 Hour zone unbypass W CR
573 Burg. bypass B CB
573 Burg. unbypass W CR
574 Group bypass B CB
574 Group unbypass W CR
575 Swinger bypass B CB
575 Swinger unbypass W CR
576 Access zone shunt B CB
576 Access zone shunt (Restore) W CR
577 Access point bypass B CB
577 Access point unbypass W CR
4.6 TEST / MISC.
600 & 610 Test/Misc.
601 Manual trigger test report Yes Yes Yes P CZ
602 Periodic test report Yes Yes Yes P CZ
603 Periodic RF transmission ! CD
604 Fire test ! CD
604 Fire test (Restore) W CR
605 Status report to follow ! CD
606 Listen-in to follow Yes Yes V CR
607 Walk test mode ! CD
607 Walk test mode (Restore) W CR
608 Periodic test - System Trouble
Present !CD
609 Video Transmitter active V CR
611 Point tested OK ! CD
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Automation Output Version Control
Appendix E-27
612 Point not tested ! CD
613 Intrusion Zone Walk Tested ! CD
614 Fire Zone Walk Tested ! CD
615 Panic Zone Walk Tested ! CD
616 Service Request J CJ
616 Service Request (Restore) W CR
620 Event Log
621 Event Log reset J CJ
622 Event Log 50% full J CJ
623 Event Log 90% full Yes J CJ
624 Event Log overflow J CJ
625 Time/Date reset ! CD
626 Time/Date inaccurate J CJ
626 Time/Date inaccurate (Restore) W CR
627 Program mode entry Yes ! CD
628 Program mode exit Yes ! CD
629 32 Hour Event log marker J CJ
630 Scheduling
630 Schedule change ! CD
631 Exception schedule change ! CD
632 Access schedule change ! CD
640 Personnel monitoring
641 Senior Watch Trouble J CJ
641 Senior Watch Trouble (Restore) W CR
642 Latch-key Supervision Yes O CO
Misc.
651 Reserved for Ademco Use A CA
Table E-4 ITI Contact ID Table (Continued)
Event Code and Description ITI Panels Caddax CS-5000 Automation Output
Simon Concord NX-8 Generic V6.1 / 6.2 ITICOMP
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Appendix E-28
Warranty-1
Warrant
y
LIMITED WARRANTY
Interactive Technologies, Inc. (ITI) warrants that the central station receiver shall be free from
defects in materials or workmanship for two years from the date on the date code label,
located on the printed circuit board, if such goods have been properly installed, are subject to
normal proper use, and have not been modified in any manner whatsoever. Upon return of the
defective product to ITI, ITI will, at its sole discretion, either repair or replace, at no cost, such
goods as may be of defective material or workmanship. Customers outside the United States
are to return products to their distributor for repair.
ITI SHALL NOT UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES BE LIABLE FOR ANY
INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING FROM LOSS OF
PROPERTY OR OTHER DAMAGE OR LOSSES OWING TO THE FAILURE OF ITI
SECURITY SYSTEMS PRODUCTS BEYOND THE COST OF REPAIR OR
REPLACEMENT OF ANY DEFECTIVE PRODUCTS.
ITI MAKES NO WARRANTY OF FITNESS OR MERCHANTABILITY AND NO OTHER
WARRANTY, ORAL OR WRITTEN, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, BEYOND THE TWO
YEAR WARRANTY EXPRESSLY SPECIFIED HEREIN.
IMPORTANT
ITI products should be tested weekly to insure
complete and proper operation and proper input and
output connections.
CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Warranty-2
Index
Index-1
Index
Symbols
% Warning Lvl 5-6
Numerics
0 Length Blk 7-1
120 VAC power 1-1, 3-13
220 VAC power 3-13
240 VAC power 1-1, 3-11
25-Pin Null Modem Cable 3-16
25-pin null modem cable 3-15
3+1 Extended format 1-3, 6-1, 6-3
3+1 format 6-3
3+1 Standard format 1-3, 6-1
4+1 Extended format 1-3, 6-1, 6-3
4+1 format 6-3
4+2 1-3
4+2 format 6-1
9-pin null modem cable 3-15
A
A31 Checksum 4-21
A31 Task 1 4-21
A41 4-21
A42 4-21
AC power 5-5, 5-6, 5-12
AC power cord 3-11
AC Restore condition code 8-22
AC Trouble 7-2
AC Trouble Restore 7-2
account list full 8-29
Account number not found 8-29
ACK character name 8-29
Ack Time (Acknowledge Time) 5-17
ACKing 8-9, 8-17
Acknowledge Time (Ack Time) 5-17
acknowledgment tone duration time,
changing 5-31
AckTimeout 5-5
Acron Touch Tone 1-3, 4-21, 8-21
Add
Acct./SCode 5-27
Line Card 5-24
SCode Table 5-27
User option 5-43
adding
a user 5-44
account to trap list 5-36
line cards 5-27
listen-in account 5-35
SCode 5-39, 5-40
Ademco
Contact ID 1-3, 6-3
DTMF 8-22
Express 1-3
Super Fast 1-3
Touch Tone 8-21
ADM41 Checksum 4-21
ADM42 Checksum 4-21
alarm codes 8-14
Alarm condition code 8-22
alert output 3-10
Annunciator
configuration 5-5, 5-12
outputs 5-19
answering the call (rings needed) 5-32
Arming Level 5-4, 5-9
ASCII Appendix B-1
audio mode listen-in options 5-41
Auto Comp 5-5, 5-6, 5-12
Automatic 5-7
automation
communication formats 5-16, 8-1
computer 3-15, 8-29, 8-30
Config 5-5
configuration 5-11
automation communication
format 5-16
auxiliary relay 3-1, 5-6, 5-13, 5-19, 5-20,
5-21
B
backup battery 3-14, 5-20
battery
backup 5-6, 5-20
Backup Cfg 5-6
menu item 5-5, 5-6, 5-12
Battery Low 7-2
Battery Low Restore 7-2
battery/alert relay wiring harness 1-6
baud rate 5-5, 5-11
BFSK 1-3, 4-21, 6-3
billing delay 5-26, 5-38
Bkp
Auto Comp 5-5, 5-6, 5-12
Printer 5-5, 5-6
Bkup
Computer Restore 7-3
Computer Trouble 7-3
Printer Off Line 7-3
Printer Paper Out 7-3
Printer Restore 7-3
buffer
full 5-5, 5-6, 5-12
limit 5-23
Burglary condition code 8-22
Bypass condition code 8-22
C
call
history 4-15
pending 5-5, 5-6, 5-12
separator 4-15, 4-19
tally 4-24
Caller ID 5-26, 5-32, 5-37
Cancel condition code 8-22
CareTaker EX 6-3
CareTaker Plus 1-3, 6-3, 8-14, 8-21, 8-26
central station
lock 5-38
receiver 1-6
Centronics 3-9
changing
date/time flag 5-40
Hunt Group 5-38
listen-in account timeout 5-34
mode of listen-in account 5-33
number of rings 5-32
checksum/control field 8-25
CID 4-21
Clear
Acct./SCode 5-27
Line Cards 5-27
SCode Table 5-27
User option 5-43
clearing
a user 5-46
account from trap list 5-36
initialization string 5-15
line cards 5-42
listen-in account 5-35
SCode 5-40
Closing Report condition code 8-22
coin-operated telephones 2-1
Com Port 1 4-24, 5-4, 5-5, 5-10, 5-11, 5-
14
Com Port 2 4-24, 5-4, 5-5, 5-10, 5-11, 5-
14
Commander 1-3, 6-3, 8-14, 8-21
Commander 2000 1-3, 6-3, 8-14, 8-21
communication
error 7-2
general option items 5-6
group 1-5
options 5-10
Computer Interface Standard 8-2
computer port baud rate 3-16
condition codes 8-22
configure printer 4-16, 4-20
connecting
AC power cord 3-11
parallel printer 3-8
Contact ID 8-21
copy
existing line cards 5-41
line cards 5-27
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Index-2
corrupted data 7-1
CPU
Low Battery condition code 8-22
Low Battery Restoral condition
code 8-23
time 5-4, 5-8
type 5-4, 5-8
CS-5000
Installation/Operation Manual 1-6
model numbers 1-2
D
DACTs (digital alarm communicator
transmitters) 2-3
data
string description 8-3
stripping or sending bad data 5-21
Date
Display 5-8
Format 5-3, 5-9
Date/Time (in event format) 4-19
date/time flag, changing 5-40
Datetime 4-15
Daylight Savings 5-3, 5-8, 5-9
DC
Bkp 5-6
Input Low 7-4
Input Low Restore 7-3
DCS 4-21
default
settings 1-4
user codes 4-7
deleting
line cards 5-42
SCode 5-39
user 5-46
device number 4-15, 4-19
Diagnostics 4-21, 5-10
direct
panel connection 3-16, 5-31
setting 5-31
display options 5-3, 5-4, 5-8
DTMF 4+2 1-3
E
earth ground, verifying 3-13
Echo Suppress 5-26
Edit
Acct./SCode 5-27
Event Format 4-19
Evnt Format 4-15
Line Card 5-24, 5-25
User option 5-43
editing 5-35
account from trap list 5-36
existing user 5-45
line cards 5-28
listen-in account 5-35
SCode 5-39
English 5-8
Enter Program Mode 5-1
error messages 7-1
ESC character name 8-29
Escape character name 8-29
European Commander 6-3, 8-14, 8-21
Event Log 4-23
Exit Fault condition code 8-22
Expander Trouble 7-2
Expander Trouble Restore 7-2
Extended ID for ITI Panels (XID) 5-18
F
FBI 8-22
FBI 4+3+1 4-22
FCC 2-1
Fire Emergency condition code 8-22
Fire Protection Signaling Use 2-2
firmware information 4-12
FONSAFE 1-3, 6-3, 8-13, 8-15, 8-21
Force Arm condition code 8-22
force hang up request 8-31
Form C 1-1, 5-21
format
group 5-30
type 4-15
types 4-19
Format (of Event Log report) 4-23
Franklin 3+1 1-3, 6-1
Franklin/Sescoa 3/1 format 6-3
FSK0 4-21
FSK1 4-21
FSK2 4-21
fuse 3-1
G
general options 5-3
generic revision 5-17, 5-18
grounding 3-13
H
handshake
delay 5-24
delay time 5-30
duration 5-24
duration time 5-30
frequency 6-1
group 5-24
sequence 5-24, 5-28, 5-29, 5-30
format group 5-30
number 5-29
wait time 5-30
Handshake Sequence (HS) Number 5-24
hang up requests 8-3, 8-31
HarborGard 1-3, 6-3, 8-21
hardware
features 1-1
requirements 2-2
HeartBeat 5-5, 5-11, 8-9
disabling 5-16
enabling 5-16
Time of 5-5
time of 5-11
time period of 5-16
hexadecimal values 8-1
Hold Last Event 5-4, 5-9
Hunt Group 5-26
changing 5-38
I
Illegal Specifier 7-1
immediate
meter reports 8-27
voltage reports 8-27
Improper Security Code condition code
8-22
initialization string 5-11, 5-14, 5-15
installing
back-up battery 3-14
line cards 3-6
ITI (Sprint) FONSAFE 6-3
ITI 300 Baud 5-27
ITI CareTaker EX 6-3
ITI CareTaker Plus 1-3, 6-3
ITI Commander 1-3, 6-3
ITI Commander 2000 1-3, 6-3
ITI Comp 8-1
ITI Computer Interface format 5-17, 8-
17
ITI Euro Commander 6-1
ITI flags 5-8, 5-9
ITI FONSAFE 1-3
ITI format 4-21, 5-18
ITI Generic 5-17, 8-1, 8-11, 8-13
ITI HarborGard 1-3, 6-3
ITI LifeGard 1-3
ITI MeterMinder 1-3, 6-3, 8-1
ITI Options 5-27, 5-28
ITI Order Processing 1-2
ITI PhoneWatch 1-3
ITI RF Commander 1-3, 6-3
ITI SCode Menus 5-27
ITI Security Code 5-38, 5-41
ITI SecurityPro 4000 1-3
ITI Simon 1-3, 6-3
ITI SX-III 6-3
ITI SX-IVB 6-3
ITI SX-V 1-3, 6-3
ITI SX-V Special 1-3, 6-3
ITI Technical Support 1-6
ITI UltraGard 1-3, 6-3
ITIComp Revision 5-18
Index
Index-3
K
Key Access
Closing Report condition code 8-23
Opening Report condition
code 8-23
L
language
display 5-9
format 5-9
option in menu 5-3, 5-8
LC Debug 4-24
LC Statistics 4-24
LCD
contrast 4-4
display 4-3
setting 5-9
LED 4-3
LifeGard 1-3, 8-21
Line Card 5-5, 5-6
line card
adding 5-27
busy 8-29
description 1-6
editing 5-28
errors 7-1
menu 5-23
number 5-24
number, invalid 8-29
options 5-12
record added 7-4
record deleted 7-4
setting for direct panel connection
5-31
statistics 4-24
line cards
clearing 5-42
connecting to phone line 3-8
copying 5-41
debugging 4-24
deleting 5-42
removing 3-7
viewing 5-42
line connection 3-8
Line Fault 5-5, 5-6, 5-12, 5-32, 7-4
Line Fault Restore 7-4
line options 5-25, 5-28, 5-31, 5-36
Line Terminator 4-16
line voltage 3-1
LineCard ID 5-26
Linecard Running ROM Code 7-4
link test 8-10
Listen In 5-13
Listen Mode 5-26
Listen-in 4-25
definition 1-5
listen-in
account edit 5-26
extend 8-33
menu option 5-5, 5-6, 5-12, 5-26
on edit line card list 5-28
options, audio mode 5-41
PBX 8-34
request 8-33
requests 8-3
UL requirements for 4-25
listen-in account
adding 5-35
changing mode 5-33
changing timeout 5-34
clearing 5-35
editing 5-35
listen-in account list 5-34, 5-35
editing 5-34, 5-35
listen-in accounts
adding 8-31
deleting 8-31
Listen-in Begin 7-2
Listen-in End 7-2
Local Program
Begin User # 7-2
End User # 7-2
Fail User # 7-2
log
off 4-8
on 4-8
only 5-3, 5-7
rec 8-25
record 8-25
recs 5-17, 5-18
logging on and off remotely 8-30
long calls 8-6
Low Battery condition code 8-22
M
main
computer restore 7-3
computer trouble 7-3
menu option items by profile 4-7
printer off line 7-3
printer paper out 7-3
printer restore 7-3
main menu 4-10
maneuver
around in program mode 5-1
through main menu 4-11
manual
(common) listen-in 4-25
operation 5-7
Max Buf Limit 5-6
maximum handshake
acknowledge duration 5-25
wait 5-25
MCPU 1-5
Medical/Auxiliary Emergency condition
code 8-22
message
format 8-4
Que (Queue) 4-22
queue 5-22
Queue Full 7-3
Queue Full restore 7-3
queue options 5-6
Queue Warning 7-4
Queue Warning Restore 7-4
meter
account 12 5-4, 5-9
account 5 5-4, 5-9
reports 8-27
test record 8-29
MeterMinder 1-3, 4-22, 5-5, 5-6, 5-10, 5-
12, 5-13, 6-3, 8-14, 8-21, 8-26
miscellaneous line options 5-26, 5-28
model number 1-2, 4-12
MODEM IIE 4-22
modifier codes 8-6
Monthly Voltage Events Reports 8-27
mother board
removing 7-5
replacing 7-6
mounting the CS-5000 3-4
N
NACK character name 8-29
NACKing 8-9, 8-17
Network Security 8-21
NFPA standards 2-2
No Ack 7-1
No Battery Bkp 5-6
No Data Character for Automation
Record (NoDataCh) 5-18
No Data Received 7-1
No DataCh 5-17
NoData 8-25
NoDataCh 5-18
normal mode 4-9
number of rings (line options) 5-25
Nutone 8-21
O
off-line time 4-16
Okay Record 8-16
Okidata Microline 320 Turbo 1-2
on-board annunciator 5-19
Opening Report condition code 8-22
operation
mode 5-3, 5-7
Options menu 5-38
Model CS-5000 Central Station Receiver Installation/Operation Manual
Index-4
P
panel
format 6-3
requested re-send 7-2
rev 5-4, 5-8
type characters 8-21
Par (parallel) 5-4
Par Port 5-5
Para Port 4-24
Parallel (Par) 5-10
parallel port 5-11, 5-14
parallel printer, connecting to 3-8
party line telephone services 2-1
PBX
listen-in mode 8-34
listen-in string 8-34
string 4-26, 5-33, 8-34
string, invalid 8-29
phantom menu 4-21
phone line connection 3-8
Phone Line Sample Rate 5-33
phone lock 5-38
Phone Test condition code 8-23
PhoneWatch 1-3, 6-3, 8-13
PIN 1-5, 4-7, 5-43, 5-44, 5-45
Pin Point 8-21
pin-outs, on printer cable 3-9
Police Emergency condition code 8-22
port functions 5-4, 5-10, 5-13
Port Status 4-24
Possible Incomplete Call 7-2
power cable 1-6
Power Failure condition code 8-22
power supply assembly
removing 7-5
replacing 7-6
power up 4-5
print
Call History 4-16
menu 4-15
report 4-15, 4-16
system configuration 4-17
System History 4-17
test page 4-18
printer
cable 3-9
configuring 4-20
menu item 5-10
menu option 5-5, 5-6
output options, setting 5-9
Program Menu 4-20
programming
choices 5-2
fields 5-2
requirements 2-3
Protector 8-21
PZT 1-5
R
Radionics
3+1 Checksum 1-3, 6-1
3/1 format 6-3
BFSK 8-21
Hex Pulses format 6-1
receiver
ID 4-12, 5-6, 5-20, 5-21
mounting screws 1-6
software, updating 7-6
Record Structure 8-18
reference number 4-15, 4-19
remote
alert output 3-10
log on and log off 8-30
removing
line card 3-7
mother board 7-5
power supply 7-5
replacing
mother board 7-6
power supply assembly 7-6
Report Record 8-19
reports 8-27
requirements
hardware 2-2
operational 2-3
programming 2-3
restoral condition code 8-22
RF Commander 1-3, 6-3, 8-14, 8-21
Ring Off Time 5-32
Ring On Time 5-32
ring threshold voltage 5-32
rings, changing number of 5-32
Rollins System 6 6-3
S
safe mode 7-6
Sample Time 5-25
SBUS 1-1, 1-5
SCC (Sequence Control Character) 8-25
SCode
(Security Code) menu 5-38
adding 5-39
adding to table 5-40
clearing from table 5-40
deleting from table 5-39
editing 5-39
Security Industry Association 8-11
SecurityPro 4000 1-3, 6-3, 8-14, 8-21
sending bad data 5-21
Sequence Control Character (SCC) 8-25
Sescoa 3+1 1-3
Sescoa 3+1 format 6-1
set time & date 4-13
SIA 2000 1-3, 6-3, 8-21
SIA CIS 8-9
SIA D1 4-21, 8-22
SIA D1 Checksum 4-21
SIA DCS 1-3, 6-3, 8-21
SIA Digital Compatibility 1-4
SIA P1 format 6-1
SIA P2 format 6-1
SIA P3 6-1, 6-3
SIA P4 6-1, 6-3
SIA-2000 4-22, 8-1, 8-11
SIA-CIS 8-1
Simon 1-3, 6-3, 8-14, 8-21
SK 4/2 6-3
software
date code 4-12
features 1-2
revision 4-12
special character descriptions 8-3
Sprint 6-3
Status Report condition code 8-22
strain relief tie wrap 1-6
Strip/Send Bad 5-6, 5-20
stripping bad data 5-21
SupCh (Supervisory Character) 5-17, 5-
18
supervisory
character (SupCh) 5-18
condition code 8-22
record 8-24
Switch Delay Time 4-16
SX-III 1-3, 8-13, 8-21
SX-IVA 1-3, 6-3, 8-21
SX-IVB 1-3, 8-13, 8-21
SX-V 1-3, 8-13, 8-21
SX-V Special 1-3, 8-14, 8-21
system
configuration 4-15
Date Changed User # 7-2
history 4-12, 4-15
information 4-12
options 5-6, 5-20
power up 7-2
status messages 8-8
Time Changed User # 7-2
T
Tamper condition code 8-22
telephone
cord 1-6
line connection 3-8
requirements 2-1
test
page 4-15, 4-18
test record 8-16, 8-23
testing the system 4-26
Index
Index-5
time
display 5-3, 5-8
format 5-9
of HeartBeat 5-5, 5-11
out 7-1
Tone Burst 6-1
touchpad buttons 4-2
trap account
adding 8-34
deleting 8-34
trap list
adding account 5-36
clearing account 5-36
editing account 5-36
menu option 5-26, 5-28
Trouble condition code 8-22
U
UL 2-2, 3-4, 3-8, 4-25
UltraGard 1-3, 6-3, 8-14, 8-21
unauthorized access 8-29
undefined
alarm condition code 8-22
event 7-1
unsupported
event 7-1
format message 7-2
updating receiver software 7-6
user
adding 5-43, 5-44
clearing 5-43, 5-46
deleting 5-46
editing 5-43, 5-45
list 5-43
login 7-4
logout 7-4
V
Validation byte (V-byte) 8-31, 8-32, 8-
33, 8-34, 8-35
V-byte (Validation byte) 8-31, 8-32, 8-
33, 8-34, 8-35
VEMS 4-22
version control 5-17
View Line Cards 5-27
viewing line cards 5-42
voltage
events reports 8-27
reports 8-27
W
warning-off level, setting 5-22
warning-on level, setting 5-22
Westec Touch Tone 8-21
X
XID (Extended ID for ITI Panels) 5-5, 5-
17, 5-18
XOR checksum 8-25
651/777-2690
© 1999 Interactive Technologies, Inc.
Document number 466-1337
Specifications subject to change.
651/779-4890

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