Alarm Masks; Active Alarms; Major Alarms; Minor Alarms - Radyne DMD20 Installation And Operation Manual

Universal satellite modem
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DMD20/20LBST Universal Satellite Modem

6.2.2 Alarm Masks

The modem performs a high degree of self-monitoring and fault isolation. The alarms for these
faults are separated into the following three categories:

Active Alarms

Common Equipment Alarms
Backward Alarms
A feature exists that allows the user to 'Mask' out certain alarms as explained below.
Masking alarms may cause undesirable modem performance .
CAUTION
When an alarm is masked, the Front Panel LEDs and the Fault Relays do not get asserted, but
the Alarm will still be displayed. This feature is very helpful during debugging or to lock out a
failure of which the user is already aware.
6.2.2.1
Active Alarms
6.2.2.1.1

Major Alarms

Major Alarms indicate a modem hardware failure. Major Alarms may flash briefly during modem
configuration changes and during power-up but should not stay illuminated. Alarms are grouped
into Transmit and Receive Alarms - Transmit and Receive are completely independent.
6.2.2.1.2

Minor Alarms

Minor Alarms indicate that a problem may persist outside the modem such as loss of Terrestrial
Clock, loss of terrestrial data activity, or a detected transmit or receive AIS condition.
Alarms are grouped into Transmit and Receive Alarms - Transmit and Receive are completely
independent.
6.2.2.1.3

Common Equipment Faults

Common equipment faults indicate hardware or configuration problems in the modem that effect
both transmit and receive operation. Most common faults indicate a hardware failure within the
modem, such as a bad power supply. Common faults for the External Reference and External
Clock indicate a bad modem configuration, not a hardware failure.
MN-DMD20-20LBST Revision 14
Maintenance and Troubleshooting
6–6

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