Graco 312353B Manuel D’Utilisation

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System Administrator Screens 
36
312353B
5.
As the transceiver initializes itself on power-up, 
watch the LED lights on the side of the transceiver. 
You should see the lights flicker briefly with a burst 
of activity. You may see occasional flickering of the 
lights after this initial burst.
6.
After the brief burst of LED activity, open the trans-
ceiver setup screen in the PC software and check 
the “Last Power-up Settings”. If they show the Net-
work ID = H and Transceiver ID = H settings as 
described above, the serial connection between the 
PC and the transceiver is functioning properly.
7.
Close the transceiver setup screen.
8.
Power down the transceiver and restore the dip 
switch settings to their Network ID = A, Transceiver 
ID = A settings.
9.
Power up the transceiver.
10. After the initialization activity reflected by the lights 
on the transceiver, open the transceiver setup 
screen and confirm that the “Last Power-up Set-
tings” read Network ID = A and Transceiver ID = A.
If the “Last Power-up Settings” do not update, one or 
more things may be happening. 
First, the serial port selected on the transceiver setup 
screen may not be the one the serial cable is plugged 
into. Many newer computers have only one serial port 
on the back of the computer; the port may or may not be 
COM1. It could easily be another COM number, so if 
other COM ports show up in the transceiver setup 
screen’s drop down list for Serial Port selection, try 
using each of those in turn and repeat the above steps. 
Many new computers have no serial ports at all, in which 
case a USB to RS232 converter is required to supply at 
least one serial port. Graco recommends the purchase 
of Edgeport brand USB to RS232 converters, available 
from 
. Follow the installation instruc-
tions for the converter carefully and make sure you 
reboot the computer when complete. Again, don’t 
assume the COM port number—the documentation with 
the converter should help explain what COM port num-
ber the converter will provide.
When the Matrix PC software starts up, one of the first 
things it does is check with Windows to find out what 
serial ports (COM ports) exist in the system. These 
ports are the ones listed in the Serial Port drop down list 
on the transceiver setup screen. If a port you expect is 
not listed there, it is because it is not registered as a 
valid port with Windows.
Second, the selected COM port may be in use by 
another program on the PC. In this case, even if the 
Serial Port selection on the transceiver setup screen 
matches the port the cable is plugged into, no Matrix 
communication will happen because a different software 
program “owns” the port. The only way to get it to work 
is to either shut down the other program or configure 
either the other program or Matrix to use a different 
COM port. Software programs that use serial ports 
include fax software and PDA software.
Third, the cable between the PC and the transceiver 
could be either bad or wired improperly. The latter is 
most likely to occur when an RS422 connection is used; 
the former could happen with either serial cable choice. 
Make sure the cables are firmly connected, so that there 
isn’t a chance the plug or wire is falling out on either 
end.
Repeat this setup for each Transceiver ensuring that no 
two Transceivers use the same Network and Transceiver 
IDs. If you have only one transceiver, Graco recom-
mends using the default Network ID and Transceiver ID 
settings.
Matrix Client PC Setup
The lower portion of the System Configuration page is 
used to register a networked PC client in the Matrix sys-
tem. Without registration here, a client PC will have lim-
ited functionality (such as not being able to submit work 
orders to meters or viewing system-wide alerts/errors) 
even though many of the screens will still be viewable 
from the client.
Note that by default, the PC client table on this page has 
one entry; this entry corresponds to the Matrix Server 
and always must be present. Graco recommends you 
not change this entry’s name/address field from 
127.0.0.1, nor the port number from 8082 unless there 
are known port conflicts.
Every PC client in the Matrix system is either a “shop cli-
ent” or a “primary client”. Exactly one PC in the system 
can be the primary client. Both types can view the 
Matrix screens and run reports, but only primary clients 
can access the Matrix setup screens and display sys-
tem-wide alerts/error messages. The Matrix Server can 
always access the setup screens, regardless of the cli-
ent type it is set to.