Alarm Types and Sources | 459
Aprisa SR+ User Manual 1.11.1
Component Failure Alarm Events
Alarm to indicate that a
hardware component has
failed.
Power off and restart radio.
If fault persists replace
radio.
Alarm to indicate that the
input power source is outside
the operating limits of 10 to
30 VDC
Check DC connection to
radio. Replace power supply.
Alarm to indicate that the
3.3 volt power rail is outside
defined limits.
Power off and restart radio.
If fault persists replace
radio.
Alarm to indicate that the
5.0 volt power rail is outside
defined limits.
Power off and restart radio.
If fault persists replace
radio.
Alarm to indicate that the
7.2 volt power rail is outside
defined limits.
Power off and restart radio.
If fault persists replace
radio.
Alarm to indicate that the 15
volt power rail is outside
defined limits.
Power off and restart radio.
If fault persists replace
radio.
Alarm to indicate that the RF
calibration has failed.
Power off and restart radio.
If fault persists replace
radio.
Configuration Not
Supported
Alarm to indicate that a
configuration has entered
that is invalid.
Restore previous
configuration, remove out of
range or invalid parameters,
updated software.
Remote
Communications
Lost
Alarm to indicate that a
remote radio is not receiving
packets from the base
station.
Check RF configuration
settings.
Network
Configuration
Warning
Alarm to indicate a network
configuration problem e.g.
remote not registered.
Check for invalid parameters.
Audit network settings.
Alarm to indicate that there
is an alarm in the radio
network e.g. a remote radio
has not registered or
duplicate IP address.
Check for duplicate or invalid
parameters. Audit network
settings.
Software Restart
Required
Alarm to indicate that a
configuration has changed
that requires a software
reboot.
Software
Activation
Pending
Alarm to indicate that a
software activation is about
to occur. The activation can
be on a software pack,
configuration pack or
security profile.
No action required. This is a
warning to indicate that a
type of software activation is
about to happen. The
information in the event
history log will describe the
type of activation