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Using the Click 111
The Click 111 provides a contact closure interface to the Swarco controller that is used in Russian intersection
systems. A custom rack was designed by Swarco to support the Autoscope Phoenix camera contact closure
cards, and the Click 111 was designed to be a plug-in replacement to the Phoenix card. The physical size and
electrical outputs were designed based on specifications for the above mentioned Swarco system.
Physical Features
The following sections describe the physical features of the Click 111 card.
16 Contact
Closures
Menu
1
2
3
4
Menu
LEDs
RD
TD
MF
PWR
Mode
Mode
Switch
Detection
1–4
Detection
5–8
LEDs
9–12
13–16
RS-485
Connectors
Bus 1
RS-485
Connectors
Bus 2
Click 111
Communication Ports
The Click 111 contains two independent serial communications ports, each of which can be connected to a sensor
(so two sensors can talk to each card). Each port is made up of two RJ-11 connectors, which make it simple to
daisy-chain multiple Click 111 cards together and create a RS-485 bus. The two RJ-11 RS-485 data buses can be
connected to a SmartSensor through a Click surge protection module, or through a serial data converter.
The buses are labeled as Bus 1 and Bus 2, though as both buses are identical it does not matter which is used
WX-501-0552 • 01.22
Rack Connector
DIP Switches
0517
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Summary of Contents for Wavetronix Click 111

  • Page 1 A custom rack was designed by Swarco to support the Autoscope Phoenix camera contact closure cards, and the Click 111 was designed to be a plug-in replacement to the Phoenix card. The physical size and electrical outputs were designed based on specifications for the above mentioned Swarco system.
  • Page 2: Push-Button

    DIP Switches Just behind the faceplate of the Click 111, on the circuit board, is a set of DIP switches. These switches are used to configure the Click 111 in Hardware mode. All settings are also configurable via Software mode (front panel menu, or Click Supervisor). See the DIP Switches section for more information.
  • Page 3: Installation And Wiring

    2. Insert two cards into the rack. 3. Connect a patch cable from one of the RJ-11 jacks on the faceplate of the first Click 111 to the surge protector (Click 200, 222 or 223) being used for one of your two sensors.
  • Page 4 2. Insert two cards into the rack. 3. Connect a patch cable from one of the RJ-11 jacks labeled Bus 1 on the faceplate of the first Click 111 to the surge protector (Click 200, 222 or 223) being used for your sensor.
  • Page 5 Preparing the SmartSensor In addition to wiring the SmartSensor to the Click 111, you must also make sure that the SmartSensor is configured correctly. Because the Click 111 device receives serial datagrams from the sensor, the sensor must be configured to report data properly for each application.
  • Page 6: Fault State

    Configuration The Click 111 can be configured in three ways: DIP switches, the front panel menu, and Click Supervisor. These three different configuration methods can configure different sets of options; some of these parameters can be set using multiple configuration methods, and some of them can only be set using one particular method.
  • Page 7: Dip Switches

    The side of the faceplate contains information on configuring using the DIP switches, as shown in the figure below. The Click 111 features four DIP switches labeled S1, S2, S3 and S4 on the label and in the picture above. These...
  • Page 8 Base Channel This parameter selects how the Click 111 maps the incoming sensor outputs to the card’s outputs. The setting determines the starting sensor channel that will be mapped to the associated bus’s output channel 1.
  • Page 9: Channel Allocation

    Note. This parameter can also be changed using the front panel menu or Click Supervisor. As was discussed earlier, there are sixteen output channels on the Click 111 that can be distributed in various ways betweeen the two buses (see Table 1 and the preceding text for more information). This parameter allows you to choose how many of those sixteen channels each bus should have.
  • Page 10: Data Enable

    This parameter may be useful if you know a bus will not be receiving any data—for instance, if you’re only using one sensor with your Click 111. If a bus is disabled from receiving data, then its associated channels will not go into a fault state, even if that bus is not receiving any data.
  • Page 11 Warning. If you don’t have switch 1 on (flipped up) to set it to Hardware mode, anything you set on switches 2 and 3 will be ignored by the Click 111. Fault The last parameter the DIP switches can set is fault settings.
  • Page 12: Front Panel Menu

    The two upper banks of LEDs, labeled Menu, and the first push-button, labeled Mode Switch, are used for navigating through Menu mode. This section will cover how to use these features and the menu to configure the Click 111. The multicolored bank of LEDs will be referred to as Level 1 and is used is selecting menu options. The yellow bank will be referred to as Level 2 and is used in configuring the menu options.
  • Page 13 The only way to exit at this point is to press the push-button once. Note. Certain older Click 111 devices may have slightly different labels; be aware that anywhere the label differs from the text in this document, the document is correct.
  • Page 14 This parameter may be useful if you know a bus will not be receiving any data—for instance, if you’re only using one sensor with your Click 111. If a bus is disabled from receiving data, then its associated channels will not go into a fault state, even if that bus is not receiving any data.
  • Page 15 If the Click 111 is successful in communicating with a SmartSensor, it will display the baud rate found, using the same Level 2 LED system used in selecting the baud rate (covered in the Baud Rate section and the table below).
  • Page 16 Note. This parameter can also be changed using the DIP switches or Click Supervisor. As mentioned earlier, the Click 111 device has sixteen output channels that can be distributed in various ways betweeen the two buses. This parameter allows you to choose how many of those sixteen channels each bus should have.
  • Page 17 Note. This parameter can also be changed using the DIP switches or Click Supervisor. This parameter lets you choose the polarity of the calls placed by the Click 111. A call can be indicated by either high voltage or low voltage, depending on how you configure the device. The Channel Output Polarity parameter affects both buses.
  • Page 18 This parameter is much like channel output polarity, except that it affects the polarity of calls sent not based on detection but based on the Click 111 going into a fault state. When the device goes into a fault state it will send a call on the master fault output;...
  • Page 19: Reset To Default Settings

    See the Navigating through the Menu and the Menu Operation Example sections for how to view this parameter. After the Click 111 has reset to factory defaults, it will check the DIP switches; if any of them are set to Hardware mode, it will apply those settings to the parameter in question.
  • Page 20 After you have made configuration changes on the driver and saved it to the Click device, the word “current” will appear after it to indicate the driver is currently loaded onto the device. The Backups option can be used to read configurations that have previously been saved to a file. Expert Driver The Expert driver contains two tabs, System and Diagnostics;...
  • Page 21 Firmware Version Shows the version of firmware your device currently has installed. If Click Supervisor detects a discrepancy between this version and the most current version it currently has access to, you will be prompted to upgrade when you connect to the device. This information cannot be changed. Subnet ID Shows the subnet ID number.
  • Page 22 Lets you choose the polarity of the output channels (whether the voltage is low or high when there is a call on that channel). Fault Enable Lets you enable or disable the card’s fault state. If it’s disabled, the Click 111 will never go into a fault state. Fault State Lets you select what happens when the Click 111 is in a fault state (whether that triggers a call or not).
  • Page 23 © 2022 Wavetronix LLC. All rights reserved. Protected in the US by patents viewable at www.wavetronix.com/en/legal. Protected by Canadian Patent Nos. 2461411; 2434756; 2512689; and European Patent Nos. 1435036; 1438702; 1611458. Other US and international patents pending. Wavetronix, SmartSensor, Click, Command and all associated logos are trademarks of Wavetronix LLC. All other product or brand names as they appear are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders.

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