0 |
Device Properties |
1 |
Configurations:
3 Relays, 1 head
3 Relays, 2 heads
5 Relays, 1 head
5 Relays, 2 heads |
2 |
3 Relays, 1 Head |
3 |
3 Relays, 2 Heads |
4 |
5 Relays, 1 Head |
5 |
5 Relays, 2 Heads |
6 |
Transducer Type |
7 |
Transducer Types: 15m; 30m; 60m
Make sure that the correct transducer is selected.
Once the transducer is selected, all parameters saved for that particular channel will be deleted and the channel will revert to a distance mode of operation. |
8 |
15m sensor |
9 |
30m sensor |
10 |
60m sensor |
11 |
Channel Mode |
12 |
Choose between Distance, Level, or Differential. Differential option is only available with the dual unit. |
13 |
Distance |
14 |
Level |
15 |
Flow |
16 |
Differential |
17 |
Channel 2 Mode |
18 |
Empty Distance |
19 |
This is the distance from the face of the transducer to the bottom of the tank. |
20 |
.2f |
21 |
.3f |
22 |
.1f |
23 |
.0f |
24 |
Span |
25 |
This is the measusring range of the instrument, i.e. distance from the bottom of the tank to the highest point being measured. Remember, the material must not approach within 1.65 ft (for 15m sensor) of the transducer face or within the blanking distance of the transducer. |
26 |
Blanking |
27 |
This is the area where an echo cannot be processed because the return echo wouold be received whilst the transducer is still firing. |
28 |
Rate of Change |
29 |
This is used to set up the rate of change of the level output. The rate of change governs the rate at which the instrument output changes. By increasing the rate of change (Maximum: 13 ft/min), it will allow the LST400 to monitor rapid changes in level. If the level moves faster than 3.28 ft/min in measurement, increase the rate of change. If a more stable output is required, decrease the rate of change (Minimum: 1.0 ft/min). |
30 |
Units/min |
31 |
Applicaition |
32 |
This selection can be used to select either liquid, solid or AMS applications. The solid applications will provide more power to locate the correct echo. |
33 |
Liquids |
34 |
Solids |
35 |
AMS |
36 |
Temperature Compensation |
37 |
Sets temperature compensation on or off. |
38 |
Off |
39 |
On |
40 |
LossTime |
41 |
This is amount of time between last receiving a correct echo and going into the Fail-safe condition. This time period is timed in seconds. This cannot be reduced to less than 30 seconds. |
42 |
FailSafe Channel 1 |
43 |
FailSafe |
44 |
If a loss of echo condition is reached, then the 4-20mA output will follow the configured settings: 3.60mA, 4mA, 20mA, 21mA, or Hold the reading at the last recognized echo. This is usually due to a cable being cut or the instrument not being set up correctly. |
45 |
3.6 ma |
46 |
4 ma |
47 |
Hold |
48 |
20 ma |
49 |
21 ma |
50 |
Activate Linearizer |
51 |
Activate the Linerarizer. |
52 |
No |
53 |
|
54 |
Yes |
55 |
Software Build |
56 |
password int |
57 |
Access to Configuration Menus |
58 |
Enter new password |
59 |
LST400 Password |
60 |
Change Password |
61 |
Factory Reset |
62 |
Channel 1 |
63 |
Channel Setup |
64 |
Set up the parameters for the channel. |
65 |
Transducer |
66 |
Choose between 15m, 30m or 60m transducers. Please make sure that the correct transducer is selected. Once the transducer is selected all parameters saved for that particular channel will be deleted and the channel will revert to a distance mode of operation. |
67 |
Mode |
68 |
Channel 2 |
69 |
Setup Relay |
70 |
RELAY 1 State |
71 |
The relays can be used either for a high alarm or a low alarm. A high alarm has its reset below the set point, and a low alarm has its reset above the setpoint. The relays can also be set up to have pump cycling enabled. |
72 |
Low |
73 |
High |
74 |
Counter |
75 |
RELAY 1 Channel |
76 |
The channel to which the relay corresponds. |
77 |
RELAY 1 Pump Cycle |
78 |
Select the type of pump control that is required.
The LST400 has two pump cycling routines which can be used to efficiently distribute the run cycles between various pumps that serve a common purpose. |
79 |
FIFO |
80 |
Rotate |
81 |
RELAY 1 Setpoint |
82 |
This is the value where the relay will set. |
83 |
8.2f |
84 |
RELAY 1 Resetpoint |
85 |
This is the value where the relay will reset. |
86 |
RELAY 1 Count |
87 |
Choose a value where the counter will increment for a certain unit of flow between 1-1000000 when in Flow mode. |
88 |
RELAY 1 Clear |
89 |
Clears the number of cycles as well as the run hours recorded for the particular relay specified. |
90 |
RELAY 1 Units |
91 |
Units for this relay. |
92 |
RELAY 2 State |
93 |
RELAY 2 Channel |
94 |
RELAY 2 Pump Cycle |
95 |
RELAY 2 Setpoint |
96 |
RELAY 2 Resetpoint |
97 |
RELAY 2 Count |
98 |
RELAY 2 Clear |
99 |
RELAY 2 Units |
100 |
RELAY 3 State |
101 |
RELAY 3 Channel |
102 |
RELAY 3 Pump Cycle |
103 |
RELAY 3 Setpoint |
104 |
RELAY 3 Resetpoint |
105 |
RELAY 3 Count |
106 |
RELAY 3 Clear |
107 |
RELAY 3 Units |
108 |
RELAY 4 State |
109 |
RELAY 4 Channel |
110 |
RELAY 4 Pump Cycle |
111 |
RELAY 4 Setpoint |
112 |
RELAY 4 Resetpoint |
113 |
RELAY 4 Count |
114 |
RELAY 4 Clear |
115 |
RELAY 4 Units |
116 |
RELAY 5 State |
117 |
RELAY 5 Channel |
118 |
RELAY 5 Pump Cycle |
119 |
RELAY 5 Setpoint |
120 |
RELAY 5 Resetpoint |
121 |
RELAY 5 Count |
122 |
RELAY 5 Clear |
123 |
RELAY 5 Units |
124 |
State |
125 |
Channel |
126 |
Units |
127 |
Setpoint |
128 |
Resetpoint |
129 |
Pump Cycle |
130 |
Count |
131 |
Clear |
132 |
Relay 1 |
133 |
Relay 2 |
134 |
Relay 3 |
135 |
Relay 4 |
136 |
Relay 5 |
137 |
Setup Relays |
138 |
Relay |
139 |
Channel |
140 |
1) |
141 |
2) |
142 |
3) |
143 |
4) |
144 |
5) |
145 |
Height 01 |
146 |
Height is the distance from the bottom of the tank to a corresponding point where a suitable percentage can be determined. |
147 |
Percent 01 |
148 |
Enter the percentage volume of the vessel at a corresponding height. |
149 |
Height 02 |
150 |
Percent 02 |
151 |
Height 03 |
152 |
Percent 03 |
153 |
Height 04 |
154 |
Percent 04 |
155 |
Height 05 |
156 |
Percent 05 |
157 |
Height 06 |
158 |
Percent 06 |
159 |
Height 07 |
160 |
Percent 07 |
161 |
Height 08 |
162 |
Percent 08 |
163 |
Height 09 |
164 |
Percent 09 |
165 |
Height 10 |
166 |
Percent 10 |
167 |
Height 11 |
168 |
Percent 11 |
169 |
Height 12 |
170 |
Percent 12 |
171 |
Height 13 |
172 |
Percent 13 |
173 |
Height 14 |
174 |
Percent 14 |
175 |
Height 15 |
176 |
Percent 15 |
177 |
Height 16 |
178 |
Percent 16 |
179 |
Height 17 |
180 |
Percent 17 |
181 |
Height 18 |
182 |
Percent 18 |
183 |
Height 19 |
184 |
Percent 19 |
185 |
Height 20 |
186 |
Percent 20 |
187 |
Height 21 |
188 |
Percent 21 |
189 |
HEIGHT |
190 |
Linearization Values |
191 |
|
192 |
Height |
193 |
Percent |
194 |
6) |
195 |
7) |
196 |
8) |
197 |
9) |
198 |
10) |
199 |
11) |
200 |
12) |
201 |
13) |
202 |
14) |
203 |
15) |
204 |
16) |
205 |
17) |
206 |
18) |
207 |
19) |
208 |
20) |
209 |
21) |
210 |
Linearizer |
211 |
Linearizer Channel 1 |
212 |
Linearizer Channel 2 |
213 |
Channel 1 Threshold Data |
214 |
Channel 1 Signal Data |
215 |
Channel 2 Threshold Data |
216 |
Channel 2 Signal Data |
217 |
X axis origin |
218 |
X axis max |
219 |
Blanking Position |
220 |
Echo Amplitude |
221 |
Instant Distance |
222 |
Gain |
223 |
Power |
224 |
Signal Quality |
225 |
Echo |
226 |
Noise |
227 |
Loss of Echo |
228 |
2v |
229 |
Counts making up device waveform |
230 |
Relative distance of device waveform |
231 |
Signal Ch 1 |
232 |
Signal |
233 |
Threshold Ch 1 |
234 |
Threshold |
235 |
Channel 1 Waveform |
236 |
Waveform |
237 |
Show LST400 Wavefrom |
238 |
Channel 1 Waveform Parameters |
239 |
Waveform Parameters |
240 |
ERROR -- Old password invalid |
241 |
ERROR -- Invalid channel number selected(12) |
242 |
ERROR -- Invalid units code selected(18) |
243 |
WARNING -- Span was also adjusted to the nearest valid value |
244 |
ERROR -- Invalid relay number selected(9) |
245 |
ERROR -- Invalid Clear Code(10) |
246 |
ERROR -- Invalid Pump Cycle(11) |
247 |
ERROR -- Operation not possible. Neither channel in flow mode(13) |
248 |
ERROR -- Invalid Count Value(15) |
249 |
ERROR -- Invalid relay setting(28) |
250 |
WARNING -- Setpoint set to the nearest possible value.(30) |
251 |
WARNING -- Resetpoint set to the nearest possible value.(31) |
252 |
WARNING -- Head value set to nearest possible value |
253 |
ERROR -- Invalid pointnumber |
254 |
WARNING -- Volume value set to nearest possible value |
255 |
WARNING -- Point set to nearest possible value |
256 |
WARNING -- The new linearization point triggered changes in other table points. The new point was possibly set to the nearest value as well. Check the entire table for changes. |
257 |
LST400 |
258 |
ABB |
259 |
Upper Sensor Limit |
260 |
Lower Sensor Limit |
261 |
Minimum Span |
262 |
Damping Value |
263 |
8.3f |
264 |
Serial Number |
265 |
7d |
266 |
Classification |
267 |
Classification help |
268 |
PV PDQ |
269 |
PV LS |
270 |
PV Fmly stat |
271 |
pv Dev fmly |
272 |
pv Update Period |
273 |
Field Device Variable Unit- Engineering unit to be displayed with the Digital Value representation, Minimum Span, Upper Range Value, Lower Range Value, Lower Sensor Limit, and Upper Sensor Limit. For FLOW mode, the only selection available is special units! |
274 |
LEVEL |
275 |
Level Classification |
276 |
Level PDQ |
277 |
Level LS |
278 |
Level Fmly stat |
279 |
sv Dev fmly |
280 |
sv Update Period |
281 |
PV Information |
282 |
LST400 Specific |
283 |
Device Parameters |
284 |
Relays |
285 |
ABB Assistance |
286 |
For assistance in Setup, Commissioning, Troubleshooting
or to schedule a service technician onsite visit,
please contact us at:
Phone: +86 (21) 61056666
Fax: +86 (21) 61056677
For manuals and other info:
Website: www.abb.com/level |
287 |
PV Analog Channel Saturated |
288 |
PV Analog Channel Fixed |
289 |
Wireless |
290 |
WirelessHART Device |
291 |
IEEE 802.15.4 2.4GHz DSSS with O-QPSK Modulation |
292 |
Primary |
293 |
Primary Analog Channel |
294 |
Secondary |
295 |
Secondary Analog Channel |
296 |
Tertiary |
297 |
Tertiary Analog Channel |
298 |
Quaternary |
299 |
Quaternary Analog Channel |
300 |
Quinary |
301 |
Quinary Analog Channel |
302 |
Critical Power Failure |
303 |
Lock all |
304 |
Trim not supported |
305 |
Configuration cannot be changed |
306 |
Locked by gateway |
307 |
Analog Input Channel |
308 |
Analog Output Channel |
309 |
Secondary Analog Channel Saturated |
310 |
Tertiary Analog Channel Saturated |
311 |
Quaternary Analog Channel Saturated |
312 |
Quinary Analog Channel Saturated |
313 |
Secondary Analog Channel Fixed |
314 |
Tertiary Analog Channel Fixed |
315 |
Quaternary Analog Channel Fixed |
316 |
Quinary Analog Channel Fixed |
317 |
Simulation active |
318 |
The device is in simulation mode and the level output is not representative of the process. |
319 |
Non-Volatile memory failure |
320 |
The Non-Volatile memory check is invalid or maybe corrupt, or the battery of a battery-backed memory has failed. |
321 |
Volatile memory error |
322 |
The RAM memory check is invalid or maybe corrupt |
323 |
Watchdog reset executed |
324 |
A watchdog reset has been performed |
325 |
Voltage conditions out of range |
326 |
A voltage condition is outside its allowable range |
327 |
Environmental conditions out of range |
328 |
An internal or environmental condition is beyond acceptable limits. |
329 |
Electronic failure |
330 |
A hardware problem not related to the sensor has been detected. |
331 |
Subdevice list changed |
332 |
Duplicate master detected |
333 |
Capacity Denied |
334 |
The device was unable to acquire the communication bandwidth required to support the Burst Messaging specified |
335 |
Bandwidth allocation pending |
336 |
Block transfer pending |
337 |
Battery life |
338 |
Percent range |
339 |
Loop current |
340 |
Primary variable |
341 |
Secondary variable |
342 |
Tertiary variable |
343 |
Quaternary variable |
344 |
Read receive time |
345 |
Write date and time |
346 |
Non-Volatile Clock |
347 |
When set the device contains a battery-backed clock. In this case, the clock does not need to be reset if there is a power failure. |
348 |
Clock Uninitialized |
349 |
The real-time clock has never been set with the date and time. For example, the clock is volatile and power was removed from and restored to the device. |
350 |
None |
351 |
No restrictions |
352 |
SI Only |
353 |
Restricted to SI Unit codes only |
354 |
Process automation device |
355 |
Discrete device |
356 |
Hybrid:Process automation+discrete |
357 |
I/O System |
358 |
WirelessHART Process automation device |
359 |
WirelessHART Discrete device |
360 |
WirelessHART Process automation+discrete |
361 |
WirelessHART Gateway |
362 |
WirelessHART Access point |
363 |
WirelessHART Process adapter |
364 |
WirelessHART Discrete adapter |
365 |
WirelessHART enabled handheld/portable maintenance tool |
366 |
Device Profile |
367 |
US |
368 |
United States of America |
369 |
JP |
370 |
Japan |
371 |
DE |
372 |
Germany |
373 |
FR |
374 |
France |
375 |
ES |
376 |
Spain |
377 |
RU |
378 |
Russian Federation |
379 |
CN |
380 |
People's Republic of China |
381 |
Secondary Master |
382 |
Primary Master |
383 |
Device Diagnostic Status 0 |
384 |
Device Diagnostic Status 1 |
385 |
I/O and Subdevice Status |
386 |
WirelessHART Status |
387 |
Time Set Option |
388 |
Real Time Clock Flags |
389 |
Country |
390 |
Country of intended device installation |
391 |
SI Unit Control |
392 |
Indicates if device should only display SI unit codes |
393 |
Time Stamp |
394 |
Relative time value on network |
395 |
8u |
396 |
Dynamic Variables Returned for Device Variables |
397 |
Command Response Truncated |
398 |
Configuration Change Counter Mismatch |
399 |
Status bytes mismatch |
400 |
Device Variable |
401 |
Enter New password |
402 |
Verifying Password |
403 |
Bad Password sent |
404 |
Enter LST400 password |
405 |
Enter Old password |
406 |
Setting password |
407 |
Error setting password! |
408 |
Setting factory defaults |
409 |
Error setting defaults |
410 |
Enter new counter value: |
411 |
Sending Parameters |
412 |
Relay Clear Successful |
413 |
Relay Failed |