Option Module Identification; Product Conformance Certificate; Conventions Used In This Guide - Emerson SI-DeviceNet User Manual

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2.5

Option Module identification

SI-DeviceNet can be identified by:
1. The label located on the top of the Option Module.
2. The color coding across the front of the SI-DeviceNet (dark grey).
Figure 2-4 SI-DeviceNet labels
1 Topside module label
2 Underside module label
2.5.1
Date code format
The date code is split into two sections: a letter followed by a number. The letter
indicates the year, and the number indicates the week number (within the year) in which
the Option Module was built.The letters go in alphabetical order, starting with A in 1990
(B in 1991, C in 1992 etc).
Example:
A date code of V35 would correspond to week 35 of year 2012.
2.6

Product Conformance Certificate

SI-DeviceNet has been awarded full DeviceNet Conformance Certification by the Open
DeviceNet Vendors Association (ODVA). A copy of the certificate is available on request
from your supplier or local Control Techniques Drive Centre.
2.7

Conventions used in this guide

The configuration of the host drive and Option Module is done using menus and
parameters. A menu is a logical collection of parameters that have similar functionality.
In the case of an Options Module, the parameters will appear in menu 15, 16 or 17
depending on which slot the module is installed to. The menu is determined by the
number before the decimal point.
The method used to determine the menu or parameter is as follows:
Pr S.mm.ppp - Where S signifies the Option module slot number and mm.ppp
signifies the menu and parameter number of the Option module's internal menus
and parameters.
Pr MM.ppp - Where MM signifies the menu allocated to the Option module set-up
menu and ppp signifies the parameter number.
Pr mm.000 - Signifies parameter number 000 in any drive menu.
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SI-DeviceNet
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SI-DeviceNet User Guide
Issue Number: 2
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