The page ‘Setup’ contains the ACU’s installation parameters. The page
displays a table with the parameters actually set. Each parameter value
is a hyper-link to a separate page which lets you change this parameter.
This parameter change page shows the actual parameter setting either in
an entry field or in a drop down box. You may change the parameter to
the desired value and then click to the ‘Submit’ button to pass the
changed value to the ACU ODM. The ACU automatically returns to the setup
page when the parameter has been changed. To cancel a parameter
modification you already started, either use the ‘Back’ button of you
web browser or click to the ‘Setup’ button on navigation bar. Both
returns to the setup page without changing the parameter you edited.
setup.gif
The table below lists the settings provided by this page.
General
This section of the setup page contains some general setup
parameters.
Note — The text you enter here appears as the title
of the main page of the ACU WebGUI. You may want to set this to a
descriptive name of the Antenna controlled by this ACU.
Date/time — By changing this value you can set the
internal clock of the ACU. The clock is set as soon you click to the
‘Submit’ button in the data entry dialog. The most precise method to set
the time is to enter a time one or two minutes ahead and click to
‘Submit’ when this time is reached.
Display refresh — With this parameter you select
the refresh-rate of the ACU’s main window.
Watchdog pulse on AUX8 — The AUX 8 output may be
configured to act as a heartbeat output. If enabled, the output switches
every 1000 ms between on/off. If using this signal for an external
watchdog circuit, be aware that in adaptive tracking mode delays of some
seconds are possible while the acu calculates the orbital model.
Axes control mode — The ACU knows two axes control
modes. The PARALLEL mode treats the azimuth/elevation axes
independently. If a new pointing is commanded, both motors are activated
in parallel, the antenna moves to the new location in the shortest
possible time. In SEQUENTIAL mode, the ACU does not move the elevation
axis while the azimuth motor is running. The antenna movement is done
sequentially: First azimuth, then elevation. You should prefer the
PARALLEL mode unless special conditions require a sequential antenna
movement. The performance of the ACU in terms of pointing speed and wind
load compensation will be much better in PARALLEL mode.
Antenna mount type — Sets if the antenna mount is
azimuth/elevation based or a Polamount.
RS232 address — With this parameter you select the
device address used to control the ACU through the RS232 interface. At
ACU-RMU and ACU19 this parameter has to be set to ‘NONE’. If you use a
sat-nms Handheld this parameter has to be set
to ‘TERM’. The Handheld function is not implemented in ACU-RMU and ACU19
Version.
RS232 baudrate — Sets the baudrate of the RS232
interface.
RS485 address — With this parameter you select the
device address used to control the ACU through the RS485 interface.
RS485 baudrate — Sets the baudrate of the RS485
interface.
Use cab open as hand held active — This controls
the way, the cab-open input is interpreted. OFF makes the ACU show a CAB
OPEN FAULT if this input is active, ON treats this input as an
indication that the ACU is controlled by an analog handheld unit.
Use hub fault as summary limit — This controls the
way, the hub-fault input is interpreted. OFF makes the ACU show a HUB
FAULT if this input is active, ON treats this input as a summary limit
switch input for all axes.
Antenna mount declination — The declination angle
of a polamount antenna. This parameter is not used with az/el based
mounts.
Show debug trace — Clicking to GO shows a list of
the recent debug messages issued by the ACU. the newest message is shown
on top, the list gets updated automatically every few seconds.
Azimuth / Elevation / Polarization
The ‘Azimuth’ / ‘Elevation’ / ‘Polarization’ sections contains the
parameters which are specific to the individual axis. They are the same
for each axis. ACUs equipped with a fourth axis show a ‘Polarization 2’
section as well.
Antenna diameter — Set this parameter to the dish
diameter. Units with the tracking function installed use this value to
estimate some tracking parameters. With offset antennas, the diameter
settings are different for the azimuth / elevation axes. This lets the
ACU calculate suitable tracking step sizes individually for each
axis.
Step delta — This parameter defines size of a step
the antenna moves when you click to the arrow buttons on the ACU main
page. If you are using the arrow buttons to fine-tune the antenna
pointing manually, the best value is the pointing hysteresis described
below. This lets you move the antenna the smallest possible step when
you click to an arrow button. For special applications however it might
be helpful to set the step delta to a much greater value.
Position sensor type — With this parameter you set
the type of position sensor the ACU shall read for this axis.
Principally, the ACU is capable to read SSI, RESOLVER and ANALOG type
position sensors. The selected sensor type must match
the type of interface board installed in your ACU. It is not possible to
switch from SSI to RESOLVER or vice versa without changing the interface
module.When selecting a SSI type position encoder, also the number of
bits and the encoding scheme must be selected. For the position sensor
type parameter these values are combined to one name. E.g. ‘SSI-13G’
means 13 bit, Graycode SSI sensor, ‘SSI-24B’ means 24 bit binary encoded
SSI sensor.Beside the SSI-xxX, RESOLVER and ANALOG selections this
parameter offers the choice ‘NONE’ which tells the ACU not to read a
position encoder at all. With this selection you can tell the ACU if the
polarization is not to be controlled by the ACU.If you are using
multiturn SSI encoders you will have to scale the reading (See
‘Calibration scale’ below).
Prescale offset — The pre-scale calibration offset
is added to the raw position encoder reading before scaling is
applied. The pre scale offset is defined as an 8-digit hexadecimal value
in normalized position encoder ticks (00000000-FFFFFFFF equivalent to
the full range of the encoder (0-360° with single turn encoders).The pre
scale offset must be adjusted to avoid any 7FFFFFF to 8000000 overflow
within the used range of the encoder. The value is added to the encoder
reading, neglecting an overfly eventually occurring. Thus, the offset
implements a 360° turnaround automatically.The pre scale offset may be
computed and set manually or by assistance of the ACU’s automatic
calibration function as described below.
Post scale offset — The post scale calibration
offset is added to the position value before the angle value is
displayed, but after the scaling is applied. The post scale offset is
defined in degrees of AZ/EL/POL.The ACU provides a function to calculate
and set both, the pre-scale and the post-scale offset from a known
pointing:
Set the calibration scale / gear ratio for the axis (this
calibration parameter is described with the next paragraph).
Set the soft limits of the axis to preliminary values. In most cases
this needs not to be very accurate, the ACU needs this information to
calculate the pre-scale offset to shift the encoder overflow outside the
used range.
Optimize the satellite pointing for the reception from a satellite
for which the azimuth and elevation values are known.
Click to the ‘calc’ label beside the calibration offset.
Enter the known pointing angle for the satellite and click to
submit.
The ACU calculates and sets the calibration offsets to a value so
that the actual pointing is displayed as the angle you entered.
For the azimuth axis there is another offset which also is taken into
account, the ‘Antenna course’. This value is provided for mobile
applications where a compass reading has to be included into the azimuth
value.
Calibration scale — Normally the ACU assumes that
the full range of a position sensor corresponds 360°. If you are using a
multiturn position sensor or if the position sensor is mounted to the
shaft of a gear rather than to the antenna axis directly, the position
sensor reading must be scaled. The displayed angle is computed as
follows: displayed-value = ((raw-reading+pre-scale-offs) * scale) +
pos-scale-offs. Mathematically a scale value of 1.0 disables the
scaling. Beside this, the ACU also accepts the special value 0 to
disable scaling at all. If you set 1.0, the ACU performs the scaling
with this factor. With the value 0 the scaling is skipped completely,
including the conversion of the reading to floating point. This ensures,
that the full accuracy is retained in cases where no scaling is
necessary.
Sense invert — With this parameter you easily can
reverse the sense of a position sensor. The sense should be as follows:
Azimuth: The antenna looks more to the west for larger values.
Elevation: Larger values mean higher elevation.
Polarization: The feed turns clockwise (when looking through the
antenna to the satellite) for increasing values. When operated on the
southern hemisphere, the polarization sense must be set the other way
round.
Motor driver type — The ACU knows two different
configuration modes to control a motor driver. They are called DIR-START
and DUAL-START. In DIR-START mode, the FWD signal switches the motor
on/off, the REV signal controls the motor direction. This is the
configuration many frequency inverters use. In DUAL-START mode, the FWD
signal switches the motor on in forward direction, REV activates the
motor in reverse direction. This configuration mode is convenient to
control a motor with relays. Beside the modes DIR-START and DUAL-START
you may set the motor driver type to NONE which prevents the ACU from
controlling the motor at all.
Low speed threshold — The ACU controls a motor at
two speeds. If the actual position is far away from the target value,
the ACU commands the motor to use the fast speed. Once the antenna comes
close to the target value, the ACU slows down the motor. The low speed
threshold sets the angle deviation which lets the ACU use the fast motor
speed.
Pointing hysteresis — The ACU performs the motor
control as a closed loop: if the angle reading and the target value
differ, the motor is switched on to compensate the difference. If the
difference is less than the hysteresis value, the ACU leaves the motor
switched off. This prevents the antenna from oscillating around the
target value.
Motor timeout — The ACU monitors the position
readings while the motor is running. If there is no change in the
position readings for some time, the ACU assumes to motor to be blocked
and switches it off. This ‘motor timeout’ fault must be reset by the
operator to release it. A timeout value 0 disables the timeout.
Lower limit — The minimum target value accepted at
the user interface and via remote control. This software limit prevents
the ACU from running the antenna to the limit position under normal
conditions.
Upper limit — The maximum target value accepted at
the user interface and via remote control. This software limit prevents
the ACU from running the antenna to the limit position under normal
conditions.
Beacon Receiver
Beacon RX type — Selects the source of the beacon
level the ACU shall use. Available options are
sat-nms and VOLTAGE. In
sat-nms mode the ACU reads the beacon level
from a sat-nms beacon receiver via UDP, in
VOLTAGE mode the A/D converter input of the ACU is read. Please mention,
that in sat-nms mode, the beacon receiver must
be set to send UDP datagrams to the ACU/ODM.
Beacon RX IP address — The IP address of the beacon
receiver. Applicable only in sat-nms
mode.
Beacon RX voltage scale — The scale factor for the
analog beacon level input. The value must match the scaling of the
beacon level signal.
Beacon RX 0V level — The beacon level which is
displayed if the ACU recognizes 0V beacon level input.
Location
GPS receiver type — Defines the type of GPS
receiver the ACU uses to read its geodetic location.’NONE’ tells the ACU
that no GPS receiver is connected. The geodetic position of the Antenna
has to be entered manually. The ACU synchronized its internal clock to
the CMOS clock chip on the board.’NMEA’ tells the ACU to expect messages
from a NMEA GPS receiver connected to the serial interface at CON8, pins
1-3. The ACU automatically sets the antenna’s geodetic location to the
values received and synchronizes the clock to the GPS timestamps. If no
NMEA messages are received, the ACU states a fault.
Antenna course — The Antenna course is an
additional offset which is included into the azimuth calibration. It is
used for mobile antennas to set the orientation of the antenna without
recalibrating it. For stationary antennas this value always should be
set to 180°.
Antenna longitude — The geodetic longitude of the
antenna. For a precise orbit to pointing calculation this value should
be entered with 0.001° accuracy.
Antenna latitude — The geodetic latitude of the
antenna. For a precise orbit to pointing calculation this value should
be entered with 0.001° accuracy.
Antenna abs. altitude — The absolute altitude over
sea of the antenna location.
Orientation
Compasstype — Applicable only for car-mobile
variants of the ACU
Inclinometer type — Applicable only for car-mobile
variants of the ACU
Nick offset — Applicable only for car-mobile
variants of the ACU
Roll offset — Applicable only for car-mobile
variants of the ACU
SNMP Control
From Software version 2.1.007 or higher, the
sat-nms ACU contains an SNMP agent listening
at UDP port 161. The SNMP agent provides a common subset of the MIB-II
system / interface parameters and gives full access to the remote
control capabilities of the sat-nms ACU with a
number of MIB objects placed in the private.enterprises tree.
The actual MIB file defining the ACU’s private MIB may be downloaded
from the ACU itself by FTP (user ‘service’, password ‘service’). The
file ‘ACUODM.MIB’ contains all necessary information.
SNMP read community — Sets the SNMP community
string expected for read access. The default is ‘public’.
SNMP write community — Sets the SNMP community
string expected for write access. The default is ‘public’.
SNMP trap community — Sets the SNMP community
string sent with traps. The default is ‘public’.
SNMP traps — This parameter decides if the SNMP
traps are enabled or disabled.
SNMP system name — The ACU replies to MIB-II
sysName requests with the text entered at this place.
SNMP system location — The ACU replies to MIB-II
sysLocation requests with the text entered at this place
SNMP system contact — The ACU replies to MIB-II
sysContact requests with the text entered at this place.
MIB File — click here to download the MIB file
SNMP trap IP 1-4 — Enter up to 4 trap destination
IP addresses (dotted quad notation) to make the ACU sending traps by UDP
to these hosts. Setting the parameter to 0.0.0.0 disables the trap
generation.
Access Control
User password — Here you can define the password
for the ‘user’ login. Default password is ‘user’. When you are logged in
as ‘user’ you can command the antenna pointing, set the tracking
parameters (if applicable) and store / recall targets. You can’t modify
the setup parameters or issue low level commands on the test page while
logged in as ‘user’.
Admin password — Here you can define the password
for the ‘admin’ login. Default password is ‘admin’. When you are logged
in as “admin� you have full access to all parameters of the ACU,
including the setup and the tweaks on the test page.