Anacom Protection Switch Manual
Anacom Protection Switch Manual
ANASAT®-PS
Protection Switch System
Operating Manual
You have just received an AnaSat®-Protection Switch System, a cost-effective product
with no compromise on quality or reliability. This product should provide tireless
performance in any reasonable operating environment.
We, at ANACOM, have taken great care to provide a convenient, easy-to-use product
in a small outdoor package. The Protection Switch consist of a Protection Controller
outdoor box, and WR-229 and WR-137 waveguide switches for C-Band applications,
or a pair of WR-75 waveguide switches for Ku-Band applications. Should a situation
arise beyond the operator’s control, just give us a telephone call. Many situations can
be diagnosed and solved by ANACOM’s trained customer-service personnel over the
phone.
If you have any questions, require technical assistance or training please call
ANACOM directly at (408) 519-2062 or FAX to us at (408) 519-2063. You can also
send e-mail to [email protected] and one of our engineers will contact
you.
ANACOM, INC.
1996 Lundy Ave.
San Jose, CA 95131
Tel: (408) 519-2062
Fax: (408) 519-2063
2013 AnaCom, Inc. All rights reserved. The information furnished by AnaCom, Incorporated, in this publication is
believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by AnaCom for its use, nor any
infringements of patents or other rights of third parties resulting from its use. No license is granted by implication or
otherwise under any patent or patent right of AnaCom, Inc. AnaCom reserves the right to change circuitry and
specifications at any time without prior notice.
The following terms are trademarks of their respective holders:
AnaSat, AnaCom, Inc.
Polyswitch
Teflon
Duroid
VT52, VT100 Digital Equipment Corp.
INTELSAT
ANACOM 3073906
Operating Manual
for the
ANASAT®-PS
Table of Contents
Subject Page
Section 1. Product Introduction and Specifications ............................................... 1-1
Typical Operating Parameters........................................................................................ 1-3
Subject Page
Section 4. Theory of Operation............................................................................... 4-1
Switch Logic.................................................................................................................4-1
Receive Signal Switching ...................................................................................................4-1
Transmit Signal Switching..................................................................................................4-2
Switch Power Control.................................................................................................... 4-3
Monitor & Control......................................................................................................... 4-3
Appendices
Appendix A. M & C Command Set ................................................................... A-1
Appendix B. Alarm List ....................................................................................... B-1
Appendix C. Connector Wiring .......................................................................... C-1
Appendix D. Drawings and Diagrams ............................................................... D-1
Section 1. Introduction
RF ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS
A. TRANSMIT RF SWITCH
(1) Transmit RF Waveguide Relay Options
a) WR-137 C-Band
b) WR-75 Ku-
c) Type N Connection Option Band
CB d
(2) Maximum Power Level 1,000 Watts
(3) Switch Time 2 S maximum
(4) Off-line Load VSWR < 1.5:1
(5) Off-line Load Power Options for 20 through 1,000 Watts
B. TRANSMIT IF SPLITTER
(1) Connector Type Type N
(2) Frequency Range 50 to 2000 MHz
(3) Impedence 50 Ohms (75 Ohms optional)
(4) Insertion Loss 7 dB maximum
(5) Switch time 0 S (splitter)
C. RECEIVE RF SWITCH
(1) Receive RF Waveguide Relay Options
a) WR-229 C-Band
b) WR-75 Ku-
B d
(2) Switch Time 2 S maximum
(3) Off-line Load VSWR < 1.5:1
D. RECEIVE IF SWITCH
(1) Connector Type Type N
(2) Frequency Range 50 to 2000 MHz
(3) Impedence 50 Ohms (75 Ohms optional)
(4) Insertion Loss 1 dB maximum
(5) Switch Time 2 S maximum
E. POWER REQUIREMENTS
(1) Voltage +13VDC
(2) Current, nominal 0.1
during switching Amps 5
A k
(3) Source Transceiver M&C connector
MECHANICAL SPECIFICATIONS
A. WEIGHT
(1) Protection Switch unit 3 lbs (1.8 kg) max.
(2) RF Relays
WR-229 waveguide switch 6 lbs (2.73 kg) max.
WR-137 waveguide switch 2.5 lbs (1.14 kg) max.
WR-75 waveguide switch 1.5 lbs (0.68 kg) max..
Type N switch (option) 1.10 lbs (0.49 kg) max.
B. SIZE
(1) Protection Switch unit 8.5” x 9.5” x 4.0”
(215.9 x 241.3 x 101.6 mm)
(2) RF Relays
WR-229 waveguide switch 3.45” x 3.45” x 7.73” (87.6 x 87.6 x 196.3 mm)
WR-137 waveguide switch 2.25” x 2.25” x 5.12” (57.2 x 57.2 x 130 mm)
WR-75 waveguide switch (option) 2.20” x 2.20” x 4.07” (55.8 x 55.8 x 103.4 mm)
Type N switch (option) 2.00” x 2.00” x 3.05” (50.8 x 50.8 x 77.5 mm)
C. SURFACE FINISH
Painted Surface
ENVIRONMENTAL SPECIFICATIONS
A. AMBIENTTEMPERATURE CONDITIONS
(1) Operating –40 to +50°C
Section 2. Installation
The ANASAT®-PS Protection Switch system ANASAT®-PS Packing List
consists of the Protection Switch box, one TX
Waveguide (or possibly coax) Relay, and one RX
Protection Switch Box
Waveguide Relay as needed.
TX Waveguide (or coax) Relay
This chapter contains the general requirements RX Waveguide Relay
for installing the Protection Switch and associated This Manual
Relays on the antenna and making the cable and Quick Start Guide
waveguide connections. Specific mounting methods
may vary considerably depending upon particular an- Note: A cable kit containing several
tenna and site characteristics. Refer to the antenna possible cables may, or may not be
manufacturer’s instructions for more detailed instruc- included in this shipment.
tions.
ANASAT®-Protection Switch control box is
designed for installation and setup without removing
Table 2-1. ANASAT®-PS Packing List
the cover. The control box may be completely initial-
ized for normal operation using a Hand Held ASCII
terminal or a local computer. Safety Precautions
General
Removal of any cover may jeopardize
the weather seal which may cause Observe normal safety precautions
when operating this equipment.
! problems later.
!
Unpacking Ensure the Waveguide Relays and the Control
box are properly grounded. Do not rely on coaxial
Check to make sure that the Control box and cable shields for the ground connection.
the Waveguide Relays have not suffered any dam- If the cover is removed from any ANACOM
age in shipment. Compare contents of the crate to product, ensure that all:
ensure items received match those listed on the
packing slip. Retain all shipping containers for future gaskets are intact and free of damage prior
use. to reinstallation
mounting screws are properly installed
Tools and Test Equipment
Have on-hand a standard electrician’s tool kit Ensure all connectors are waterproofed.
and any tools listed in your antenna installation in-
structions. Power Supply
Power is obtained from the associated RF
equipment. No additional power is required. Al-
though the power feed from each transceiver is pro-
tected with a re-settable fuse, do not intentionally
short the power pins. Arcing may occur.
TYPE N
box must assume that all power comes from only one
of the transceivers. Therefore, these cables must be
kept as short as practically possible. AnaCom rec-
ommends a cable length of 10 ft. (3m) or less.
AnaCom further recommends that the +12 VDC
wire (pin 7), and the ground wire (pin 18) both be
made from 18 AWG wire or heavier. LNC B LNC A
Section 3. Operation
and properly terminated. Improper termination can
Preliminary Steps cause severe damage to amplifier components.
After all of the ANACOM®-PS hardware Open or leaking transmission
is mounted and verified, the antenna must be lines anywhere between the
aimed toward the desired satellite. Follow the power amplifiers, theTX relay,
antenna manufacturer’s instructions, using coor- and the antenna feed can
dinates provided by the satellite operator. ! cause personnel injury or
Do not transmit until you even death.
have received authoriza-
tion from the satellite net- Manual Operation
! work operation center, and
a transmit power level from The Protection Switch operation is very simple.
its engineering staff. There are five (5) push-button switches on the front
panel which are used to manually set operating con-
Both the on-line and the standby transceiv-
ditions of the Protection Switch. See Figure 3-1.
ers must be set up for the same TX frequency,
RX frequency, TX gain, and RX gain values. Four red lights show active alarms from the
transceivers. These lights are based on relay contact
Refer to the AnaSat Series Transceiver
closures in the radio equipment. If separate high
Operation Manual for details.
power amplifiers are used, their alarm relay contacts
Which transceiver is designated “A” and should be wired in parallel with the transceiver TX
which is “B” is arbitrary. However, once you alarm relay. Then an alarm in either the power am-
decide, the installation wiring, programming and plifier or the TX side of the transceiver will cause the
operation of the system must be consistent. red light to glow.
Before applying power to either transmitter, Four green lights show the present state of the
make sure that the transmit signal path is secure TX and the RX relays. There should be one TX and
one RX light active at any given time. If the light is
ANA COM Protection flashing, this indicates the relay is in Over-Ride mode
AUTO Switch and will not switch if a fault occurs.
If both A and B green lights are on for either
TX - A TX - B the TX or RX relay, this means the Protection Switch
ON-LINE cannot determine the state of the physical relay.
ALARM
This can happen if the cable to the relay is discon-
nected.
RX - A RX - B One red light is used to indicate a SWITCH
ON-LINE
FAULT. This is usually caused by a faulted TX or
RX relay, a cable fault, or may be due to an internal
ALARM
microprocessor fault.
SWITCH FAULT
AUTO Operation
By pushing the AUTO switch, the Protection
Figure 3-1 TX/RX Switch Panel Layout Switch is put into AUTOmatic mode for both TX and
will switch to the transceiver not having alarms. one can be in AUTO mode while the other has an
over-ride active.
If neither transceiver has an alarm (the normal
situation), then the Protection Switch takes no action.
However, should one of the on-line transceivers gen- M & C Operation
erate an alarm, then the Protection Switch will re-
move the faulted unit from service and switch the
Terminal Display
stand-by unit on-line.
Connect a terminal (or computer running termi-
AUTO mode is visually verified by noting the nal emulation software, switch.exe or Hyper termi-
green ON-LINE LED is steady, not flashing. nal) to the RS-232 serial port. Set the terminal to
1200 baud, eight data bits, no parity, and one stop bit
Note that TX and RX sides of the transceiver
(1200,N,8,1 protocol). Refer to Appendix C for wir-
are independent. It may be normal, for example, for
ing diagrams for the COM ports.
the A side TX to be on -line while the B side RX is
on-line. The M & C terminal display gives a complete
accounting of the Protection Switch alarms and sta-
Manual Over-ride Operation tus. The display is usually sent to the terminal every
By pushing one of the other four push button 30 seconds. This interval can be changed with the
switches, the Protection Switch will force the select- UTIMER command. (See Appendix A).
ed equipment to go on-line. Figure 3-1 shows what this status screen looks
For example, by pushing the TX A switch, the A like.
side transmitter will be switched on-line regardless of The top line shows the Protection Switch user
its alarm state. The Protection Switch will keep the label, hardware revision, and serial number.
A transmitter on-line until the AUTO switch is
pushed, or until the TX B switch is pushed. The second line shows any alarms which may
be active at the time. This includes summarized
Manual Over-ride mode is indicated by the transceiver alarms in addition to actual Protection
flashing green LED on the front panel. Switch alarms (see Appendix B).
Note that the switch is a “non-revertive” type. The third line shows the present setting of the
This means that when a momentary alarm causes a TX switch and if the switch is in AUTOMATIC or
switch action, the removal of the alarm does not MANUAL over-ride mode.
cause the switch to go back to the former equipment.
The fourth line shows the present setting of the
If a switch is forced using one of the push-but- RX switch and if the switch is in AUTOMATIC or
ton switches, the switch will not switch back again MANUAL over-ride mode.
when the AUTO button is pushed (unless there is an
alarm active). The fifth line gives details about the serial port
and how the port is presently set:
AUTO
This command puts the Protection Switch into
AUTOMATIC mode for both TX and RX switches.
TXA
This command switches the TX relay to the A
side regardless of alarm status. This also puts the
TX switch into manual over-ride mode.
TXB
This command switches the TX relay to the B
side regardless of alarm status. This also puts the
TX switch into manual over-ride mode.
RXA
Alarm Relay
A mechanical form C relay is used in the Pro-
tection Switch for external alarm indication.
The alarm relay has normally-closed contacts,
so it defaults to the alarm state when power is off.
Power Distribution
All power for the Protection Switch comes
from the AnaSat transceivers. Each transceiver has
a source of +13 Volts DC on its 18 pin M&C con-
nector.
Power is protected from accidental shorts with
a chemical fuse. This fuse opens when excessive
current is drawn from the transceiver, but recovers
automatically when the current drain is removed.
The transceiver also contains a steering diode
in its utility power output. The Protection Switch
simply connects the A and B power sources together
for its internal +12 volt supply.
The voltage is fed through another steering di-
ode and is available on the SWITCH M&C 18 pin
connector for use externally. The use of this voltage
should be limited to only a few milliamps at most.
Excessive current drawn from this utility output may
cause the protection fuses in the transceiver to open
7 5 GROUND 18
3 2 TX DATA 17
2 3 RX DATA 16
8 1 DCD 15
20 4 DTR 14
Note: Select either the 9 or 25 pin female “D” connector to match your particular data terminal.
Most terminals do not need the DTR, DSR, or DCD connections.
Figure 5-1. RS232 Serial Cable Connections. Computer or terminal connections.
GND GROUND 18
no connect 485 enable 12
TX + RX DATA + 10
TX - RX DATA - 11
RX + TX DATA + 8
RX - TX DATA - 9
GND GROUND 18
no connect 485 enable 12
+ DATA + 10 RX +
– DATA – 11 RX -
8 TX +
9 TX -
Although not shown in the figures, a 120 Ohm However, the maximum length of the data cable
resistor should be wired across the + to - should be kept to less than 500 meters.
connection at each end of the cable on both data
wire pairs. IMPORTANT: Any multiple connection
system will ONLY work in data packet mode.
In the two wire case, a resistor should be added
to each end of the data pair. The ASCII interface normally associated with
RS-232 operation does NOT work with RS-485
multiple connections. Therefore, a simple dumb
RS-485 Data Terminal: terminal (or computer running DT or Procomm) will
not work either. Multiple connection RS-485 MUST
Multiple Connections use the packet protocol defined in Packet.txt.
RS-485 can be used to control / monitor several
different devices using one common data bus. AnaCom radios, as well as the Protection
Wiring for multiple devices is a simple extension of Switch unit normally have the RS-485 port in “packet
the single connection wiring shown above. mode” at power turn on. The port is automatically
switched to Terminal Mode (non-packet ASCII)
With multiple connections, the data cable is when several Carriage Returns are received. The
daisy-chained to as many devices as desired. De- port will also automatically switch to “packet mode”
vices can be separated by considerable distances. when a packet containing the STX character (ASCII
02) is received.
Figures 5-2 and 5-3 except that the wiring is chained the cable, insure that the cable is one continuous line
from one device to the next until all devices are and does not have “stub” lines in the middle. This
connected. Both four wire and two wire cables are could cause reflections and unreliable operation.
RX + RX - TX + TX - RX + RX - TX + TX - RX + RX - TX + TX -
COMPUTER
TX +
TX -
RX +
RX -
Figure 5-4 RS-485 wiring between a host computer and various devices
RS-232
COMPUTER
TO
OTHER
DEVICES
wiring which makes this translator function especially connect the radio A 18 pin connector to the switch
easy. ODU-A connector with 1-for-1 wiring. Similarly,
connect the radio B 18 pin connector to the switch
Inside the Protection Switch, the RS-485 lines ODU-B connector with 1-for-1 wiring.
are connected directly to the ODU-A and to the
ODU-B RS-485 lines. This allows both transceivers When using the Protection Switch as a transla-
and the Protection Switch unit to be automatically tor, the radio-to-switch cabling must reverse TX and
wired in the multi-connection RS-485 mode without RX wiring. This is shown in Figure 5-5 and below in
special daisy-chained cabling. Figure 5-6.
The three 18 pin connectors on the Protection Note that pin 12 MUST be wired to ground (pin
Switch have pins 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12 internally wired 18) before the radios will operate in RS-485. The
across. Protection Switch will operate in RS-485 with or
without this strap.
RADIO A RADIO B
RX + RX - TX + TX - RX + RX - TX + TX -
ODU-A
ODU-B
M&C
RS-232
COMPUTER
RX TX RX + RX - TX + TX -
PORT 1 PORT 0
MICROPROCESSOR
ELSAT or SSPA
IN
TX IF
M&C
18 PIN
COAX
30641-003
31197-003
COAX / WAVEGUIDE
OMT
M&C A
TX IF A
EQUIPMENT
Protection WR137 Switch 10928 C Band
WR75 Switch 10955 Ku Band
ANACOM
31048-010RS-232 / M&C
Switch
M&C 32314 10946-250 C band
31199-010RS-485 / M&C COAX / WAVEGUIDE
10958-250 Ku band
TX - RELAY (customer provided)
TX CONTROL CABLE
5-6
M&C B
* TX input cable should be 100% shielded:
TX IF B
6 PIN 30933-005 NOTE: Use coax cables only
low loss (Customer provided)
with 20W and below.
Note: Normal TX IF internal splitter is for IF inputs.
For C band SSPA applications, use 32314-C
COAX
For Ku band SSPA applications use 32314-K
18 PIN
30641-003
31197-003
COAX / WAVEGUIDE
IN
TX OUT
TX IF
M&C 10945 WR-137 waveguide, C Band
ELSAT or SSPA 10956 WR-75 waveguide, Ku Band
11706 Andrew PNR-HC/F1PNM-H C Band
Serial Ports
ANACOM 3073906
Section 6. Maintenance
If a command is not recognized, an error message is returned. For example, if “foo <cr>” is
entered, the following is returned:
??????? foo
Command Page
ALARMS .............................................................................................................................. A-2
AUTO ................................................................................................................................... A-2
BAUDRATE ......................................................................................................................... A-2
CLEAR_PASSWORD ......................................................................................................... A-2
CLS ........................................................................................................................................ A-2
CRLF ..................................................................................................................................... A-2
DIGIPEAT ............................................................................................................................. A-2
DTE ....................................................................................................................................... A-3
ECHO .................................................................................................................................... A-3
HELP ..................................................................................................................................... A-3
LABEL .................................................................................................................................. A-3
LOCK PASSWORD ............................................................................................................. A-3
MODE ................................................................................................................................... A-3
MODEM_MODE ................................................................................................................. A-3
MODEM_STRING ............................................................................................................... A-4
PC_MODE ............................................................................................................................ A-4
RESET ................................................................................................................................... A-4
RXA . ..................................................................................................................................... A-4
RXB ....................................................................................................................................... A-4
SAVE ..................................................................................................................................... A-4
SET_PASSWORD ................................................................................................................ A-4
STANDBY_MODE .............................................................................................................. A-4
TERMTYPE ......................................................................................................................... A-5
TXA ....................................................................................................................................... A-5
TXB ....................................................................................................................................... A-5
UNLOCK PASSWORD ....................................................................................................... A-5
UTIMER ............................................................................................................................... A-5
ANASAT®-Protection Switch
M & C Commands
ALARMS
This command returns a list of raised alarms for the Protection Switch. The possible
alarms are: RXA, RXB, TXA, TXB, SWITCH, and PROMERR.
If there are no alarms then “ALARMS CLEAR” is returned. Status of all individual
alarms is evaluated ten times a second.
ALARMS
RXA raised when the receive section of transceiver A gives an alarm.
RXB raised when the receive section of transceiver B gives an alarm.
TXA raised when the transmit section of transceiver A gives an alarm.
TXB raised when the transmit section of transceiver B gives an alarm.
SWITCH raised when either the TX or RX waveguide relay confirmation does
not match the desired switch state.
PROMERR raised if a write or erase operation in the PROM fails.
AUTO
This command sets the Protection Switch into AUTOmatic mode. The Protection
Switch is free to switch both TX and RX waveguide relays based on the alarm state of trans-
ceiver A and transceiver B.
BAUDRATE [ 300 | 1200 | 2400 | 4800 | 9600 | 19200 | 38400 | 57600]
This command sets the baudrate of the serial channel the user is presently connected to.
The serial port has been programmed for 8 bits, no parity and 1 stop bit. These parameters
are not changeable.
CLEAR_PASSWORD [PASSWORD]
This command will clear an existing password. Note that the password must be given in
order for it to be cleared.
CLS
In terminal mode, 25 line feeds are sent to the terminal, effectively clearing the screen.
CRLF [ON | OFF]
This command is only relevant to dumb-terminal mode. It sets (or returns) carriage-re-
turn/line-feed status. “CRLF ON” will command the M & C computer to insert a line-feed in
display output following a carriage return. This can be necessary to make some terminal dis-
plays operate properly. In other cases this would be redundant.
DIGIPEAT [ON | OFF]
In packet mode, packets received on one port are transmitted out of the other port. In
this manner, the Protection Switch acts as a bi-directional digital repeater.
This command gets [sets] specific parameters for a specific serial port. If the command
is left out, all port settings are returned. Port 0 is RS-485 and port 1 is RS-232. This com-
mand can be given from either port. Acceptable commands include: ECHO, CRLF,
BAUDRATE, TERMTYPE, PACKET_MODE, TERMINAL_MODE, UTIMER.
ECHO [ON | OFF]
This command is only relevant in dumb-terminal mode. It sets (or returns) character
echo mode. For example, if the operator is running a terminal emulation program on his PC
with local echo disabled, type
ECHO ON
to enable echo back from the M & C computer. If the terminal is displaying doubled up char-
acters, use ECHO OFF.
HELP
?
H
This command displays a menu of available commands for quick reference.
LABEL [TEXT]
This command erases or [sets] an alphanumeric string up to 32 characters long that the
user can use to “title” or describe the purpose of the given device. This label appears on ev-
ery status screen.
LOCK PASSWORD
With this command most M & C functions will be locked and further user access will be
denied until the UNLOCK command is given. Those commands which remain user accessible
are: UNLOCK, CLS, and ALARMS.
If a password has been established with the SET_PASSWORD command then that
password must be used with the LOCK command. If there is no established password (if
CLEAR_PASSWORD has been used, for instance), then M & C functions will be locked; but
they can be unlocked without a password. There is only one solution to the problem of hav-
ing a locked unit and/or a forgotten password:
If the unit is attached to a modem, and presently accessible remotely,
telephone ANACOM.
MODE
This command returns either MODEM_MODE or PC_MODE. Example: MODE
might return MODE MODEM_MODE when the user is connected to the unit via a phone line
and a Hayes compatible modem.
MODEM_MODE
This command is used to tell the M & C computer that a Hayes compatible modem is
attached (or is about to be attached) to the serial port. The way this would be used is a user
would enter this command from a PC using a null modem cable, then disconnect the PC and
attach a modem directly to the port via a modem cable. RX, TX, DCD and signal GND
lines must be properly connected.
Once MODEM_MODE is activated, the M & C computer will no longer display dumb
terminal display updates or generate packets in packet mode until the DATA-
CARRIER_DETECT line becomes active, indicating the modem is off-hook and connected to
another modem.
When the M & C computer is in modem mode it will periodically send a Hayes compat-
ible initialization string of up to 40 characters to the modem to make sure it is properly config-
ured. The user can get [set] this string via this command. The default string as part of fac-
tory settings is:
MODEM_STRING AT S0=1 &C1 &S0 \Q0 E0
PC_MODE
This is the converse of MODEM_MODE. At any time, the user may type PC_MODE
and the M & C computer will again behave as if a PC or network is directly attached to the
serial port rather than a modem.
RESET
This command resets the M & C computer. This should not normally cause the Protec-
tion Switch to change state.
RXA
This command forces the RX switch to the A side and into MANUAL mode. The RX
switch will remain on the A side regardless of any RX alarms. Use the AUTO command to
revert the RX switch to automatic operation.
RXB
This command forces the RX switch to the B side and into MANUAL mode. The RX
switch will remain on the B side regardless of any RX alarms. Use the AUTO command to
revert the RX switch to automatic operation.
SAVE
This command saves present M & C operating parameters to a FLASH EEPROM.
Note that the Protection Switch state of RX and TX relays is NOT saved. This is only used to
store serial port operating parameters.
SET_PASSWORD [PASSWORD] [PASSWORD]
The M & C computer supports password control of M & C functions. One potential
use of this feature would be for leaving the Protection Switch unit connected to a modem on
an open telephone line. A valid password must be an alphanumeric string with no imbedded
blanks, and between four and eight characters long inclusive. It must be given twice to ensure
accuracy.
An existing password must first be cleared before setting a new password. This is done
with the CLEAR_PASSWORD command.
STANDBY_MODE [HOT | WARM]
Conventionally, when a protection system has been set up, the unit in standby mode is in
a HOT standby mode. This means that the TX function is ON and the standby unit is trans-
mitting into a load through a baseball switch. Beginning with REV 11 of the protection switch
firmware, and REV 48 of the ODU firmware, this command can be used to select a WARM
standby mode instead. In this state, the transmitter will be muted and will not be transmitting
while in standby mode. The positive aspect of this feature is that the system will draw only
half the current, since the TX function in the standby ODU will be muted. The negative as-
pect is that the transmit function in the standby unit will not be monitored for alarms until it is
brought back online.
Entering this command without an argument will return its present state. Use the SAVE
command to make the setting permanent.
Note: unplugging the control cable that runs from the protection switch to the ODU will
remove the mute control line being asserted by the protection switch, and the ODU will return
to full output power!
TERMTYPE [TTY | VT52 | VT100] (OLD UNITS,OBSOLETE)
This command is only relevant to dumb-terminal mode. It sets (or returns) the terminal
emulation mode.
TTY Terminal Mode: this is a basic 80 character by 25 line ASCII “dumb” terminal
mode.
VT52 Mode: This is a standard terminal emulation, more intelligent than TTY.
VT100 Mode: This in an enhanced communications terminal emulator with a fixed dis-
play window.
There are some control characters that will be filtered by the terminal driver when the
M & C computer is in terminal mode. These control characters will be ignored in packet
mode.
CTRL-E: This will erase the screen, similar to the CLS command.
CTRL-Q: refer to the description of CTRL-S.
CTRL-S: Periodic screen updates will be squelched until the user has
finished entering present command or hits CTRL-Q.
CTRL-BS: (Backspace) The present input command will be erased.
TXA
This command forces the TX switch to the A side and into MANUAL mode. The TX
switch will remain on the A side regardless of any TX alarms. Use the AUTO command to
revert the TX switch to automatic operation.
This command forces the TX switch to the A side and into MANUAL mode. The TX
switch will remain on the A side regardless of any TX alarms. Use the AUTO command to
revert the TX switch to automatic operation.
TXB
This command forces the TX switch to the B side and into MANUAL mode. The TX
switch will remain on the B side regardless of any TX alarms. Use the AUTO command to
revert the TX switch to automatic operation.
UNLOCK PASSWORD
This command will unlock M & C functions for user access.
UTIMER [NUMBER]
This command is only relevant to dumb-terminal mode. It sets (or returns) the number of
seconds between automatic display updates. Note that changing baud rate will automatically
revert to a default appropriate for that particular baudrate.
ALARMS
TXA there is a summary TX fault on the A transceiver
TXB there is a summary TX fault on the B transceiver
RXA there is a summary RX fault on the A transceiver
RXB there is a summary RX fault on the B transceiver
PROMERR the M & C PROM checksum fails
SWITCH one of the waveguide relays or the RX IF relay has not switched
properly
5 1
1 6
4 5 6 2
2 4
3 3
1
10 1112 1 11
2 12
9 17 18 13 2 3 13 17 10
18 9
16 14
8 15 3 14 16
4 15
7 4 8
6 5
5 6 7
10 1112 1 1 11
9 17 18 13 2 2 12
16 3 13 17 109
8 3 18
15 14 16
7 4 14 15
4 8
6 5 5
6 7
COAX / WAVEGUIDE
TX OUT
ODU - A
COAX
RX IF
TX IF
M&C
LNC
COAX
COAX
LNC-A
18
T/R OMT
6
RX IF A
TX IF A
M&C A
LNC-B
RX - RELAY RX CONTROL
COAX
TX IF CABLE
TO MODEM Protection
COAX /
EQUIPMENT Switch WAVEGUIDE
RX IF
COAX
RX IF B
TX IF B
M&C B
6
TX - RELAY
TX CONTROL
CABLE
COAX
COAX
18
RX IF
TX IF
M&C
TX OUT
COAX / WAVEGUIDE
ODU - B
LNC
COAX
TX IF
M&C
LNC
COAX / WAVEGUIDE
WR229 Switch 10927 C Band
10958 Ku band
10947 C band
WR75 Switch 10955 Ku Band
30641-003
30641-003
31197-003
18 PIN
LNC-A
COAX
COAX
TX IF A
M&C A
LNC-B
RX - RELAY
* COAX TX IF
TO MODEM
EQUIPMENT * COAX Protection WR137 Switch 10928 C Band
RX IF
31048-010RS-232 / M&C
Switch WR75 Switch 10955 Ku Band
M&C 32313 10946-250 C band
31199-010RS-485 / M&C
RX IF B
TX IF B
M&C B
COAX / WAVEGUIDE
D-3
10958-250 Ku band
TX - RELAY (customer provided)
COAX / WAVEGUIDE
* IFL cables should be 100% shielded: TX CONTROL CABLE
Belden 9913 or equivalent 6 PIN 30933-005
(Customer provided)
30641-003
31197-003
30641-003
ANACOM
COAX
COAX
18 PIN
TX IF
M&C
TX OUT
10956 WR-75 waveguide, Ku Band
TRANSCEIVER - B 11706 Andrew PNR-HC/F1PNM-H C Band
LNC
COAX 31198-010
ANACOM 1 + 1 Redundancy Protection Switch Cabling Diagram
(C Band, Single Enclosure)
(Ku Band, Single Enclosure) ANACOM 30908 REV07
3090807_PS Block.vsd. 11/07/2013
ANACOM ANASAT®–Protection Switch
3073906
TX OUT
COAX HPA - A
30641-005
M&C
TRANSCEIVER - A COAX
RX IF
TX IF
M&C
LNC 31198-010
WAVEGUIDE
WR229 Switch 10927 C Band
30952-010 Xicom
WR75 Switch 10955 Ku Band
30641-003
30641-003
COAX
LNC-A
18
TX IF A
M&C A 30933-010
LNC-B
RX - RELAY
* COAX TX IF
TO MODEM
EQUIPMENT * COAX
RX IF
Protection WR137 Switch 10928 C Band
WR75 Switch 10955 Ku Band
31048-010RS-232 M&C Switch
31199-010RS-485 M&C M&C Load depends
RX IF B
TX IF B
M&C B
6 on HPA power WAVEGUIDE
w RS232--RS485 adapter
D-4
TX - RELAY (customer provided)
30933-005
WAVEGUIDE
30641-003
30641-003
30756-003 RS-232
* Optional TRF should be
ANACOM
COAX
COAX
* IFL cables should be 100% shielded: 31197-003 RS-485 32126-010 AnaSat SSPA
used if not included with
18
Belden 9913 or equivalent 30952-010 Xicom
(Customer provided) 31059-010 Xicom / MTN antenna feed system
M&C
RX IF
TX IF
M&C
COAX
TX OUT HPA - B
30641-005
TRANSCEIVER - B
COAX
LNC
31198-010
ANACOM 1 + 1 Redundancy Protection Switch Cabling Diagram
(External HPA)
Appendix D
ANACOM 30909 Rev 05
3090905 .vsd. 11/07/2013
Appendix D
3073905
10959 Ku adapter
User Supplied Cable Block Down Converter
L-Band Out
31052-014
11013
COAX HPA - A Part of 50 ohm
TX OUT Optional Ganged
30641-005
M&C RX Coax Switch
TRANSCEIVER - A COAX Block Down Converter
10990 Ku band
RX IF
TX IF
M&C
LNC 31198-010
WAVEGUIDE
WR229 Switch 10927 C Band
30952-010 Xicom
WR75 Switch 10936 Ku Band
30641-003
30641-003
COAX
LNC-A
18
TX IF A
M&C A
30933-010
LNC-B
RX - RELAY
* COAX 31053-014 Ku
TX IF
TO MODEM
EQUIPMENT * COAX Protection WR137 Switch 10928 C Band 31052-014 C
D-5
RX IF
31048-010 RS-232 M&C Switch WR75 Switch 10955 Ku Band
31199-010 RS-485 M&C M&C
RX IF B
TX IF B
M&C B
6 WAVEGUIDE
w RS232--RS485 adapter TX - RELAY (customer provided)
30933-005
TX CONTROL
CABLE
WAVEGUIDE
30641-003
30641-003
30756-003 RS-232
* Optional TRF should be
COAX
COAX
18
Belden 9913 or equivalent 30952-010 Xicom used if not included with
(Customer provided) 31059-010 Xicom / MTN antenna feed system
M&C
RX IF
TX IF
M&C
COAX
TX OUT
30641-005
HPA - B
TRANSCEIVER - B
COAX
LNC
31198-010
ANACOM 1 + 1 Redundancy Protection Switch Cabling Diagram
(External HPA)
ANACOM 30909 Rev 05
3090905 -L.vsd. 11/07/2013
Appendix D
3073905
10945-003 (1 meter)
TX OUT
WAVEGUIDE
BUC - A
COAX
TX IF
M&C
31198-010
30641-003
31197-003
LNB-A
COAX
Termination
C Band TRF 10917 *
10947
RX CONTROL CABLE T/R OMT
RX IF A
6 PIN 30933-010
TX IF A
M&C A
LNB-B
RX - RELAY
* COAX TX IF
TO MODEM
EQUIPMENT * COAX Protection Switch WR137 Switch 10928
RX IF
RS-232 / M&C 32313-L WAVEGUIDE
M&C 10946
31336-010 (customer provided,
RX IF B
TX IF B
M&C B
D-6
TX - RELAY installation)
* IFL cables should be 100% shielded: TX CONTROL CABLE
Belden 9913 or equivalent 6 PIN 30933-005
(Customer provided)
31197-003
30641-003
COAX
ANACOM
18 PIN
COAX 31198-010
NOTE: RX side cables can be ordered
M&C
TX IF
included with antenna feed system
BUC - B
10945-003 (1 meter)
TX OUT
WAVEGUIDE
ANACOM 1 + 1 Redundancy Protection Switch Cabling Diagram
(Wave guide C Band, BUC + LNB)
ANACOM 31302-L Rev 02
31302-L Block.vsd. 11/07/2013
Appendix D
3073905
N connector
11706-003 (1 meter)
TX OUT
LOW LOSS COAX
BUC - A
TX IF
M&C
31198-010
COAX
30641-003
31197-003
LNB-A
COAX
Termination
C Band TRF 10917 *
10947
RX CONTROL CABLE T/R OMT
6 PIN 30933-010
TX IF A
M&C A
LNB-A
LNB-B
RX - RELAY
* COAX
TO MODEM TX IF
* COAX
EQUIPMENT RX IF Protection Switch WR137 Switch 10928
RS-232 / M&C 32313-L WAVEGUIDE
M&C 10946
31336-010 (customer provided,
TX IF B
M&C B
Termination
LNB-B
length depends on
D-7
TX - RELAY installation )
* IFL cables should be 100% shielded: TX CONTROL CABLE
Belden 9913 or equivalent 6 PIN 30933-005
(Customer provided) N to waveguide
31197-003
30641-003
adapter (2)
COAX
COAX 31198-010
ANACOM
18 PIN
10948
NOTE: RX side cables can be ordered
M&C
TX IF
included with antenna feed system
N connector
BUC - B
11706-003 (1 meter)
TX OUT
LOW LOSS COAX
ANACOM 1 + 1 Redundancy Protection Switch Cabling Diagram
(N Type C Band , BUC + LNB)
ANACOM 31258-L Rev 02
31258 -L Block.vsd. 11/07/2013
ANACOM 3073906