PAGE 18 PROGRAM CODES
3. If there is a Directory Control Code (method 2):
If the alarms are assigned only to Directory A and Directory C, when the Directory Control Code is received, all
of the alarms that are assigned to Directory A will switch to use Directory B and all of the Alarms assigned to
Directory C will switch to use Directory D. When the Directory Control Code is received again, directories A
and C will become the active directories.
Alarms cannot be assigned to Directory B or Directory D when this mode of operation is selected.
The directory structure is made up of a list of lines with each line containing a sequence of instructions. The B1290
performs the actions defined in each line then waits for a response. If the expected response is not received, the
actions in the next line are carried out
Commands are placed into the directory line-by- line with a series of digits representing the required actions.
Commands that can be used in the directory and the digits used to select them are:
Dial + digits
Radio
Wait + 1-3 digits (seconds)
Alert
Two Tone Paging + (4 or 5 digits) + + (4 or 5 digits)
(frequencies in .1 Hz. ie: 12345 would be 1234.5 Hz)
Five Tone Paging + 5 digits (5 digit cap code)
or Five Tone Paging + 1digit + + 5 digits (preamble+ cap code)
Single tone + (4 or 5 digits), frequency in .1 Hz. ie: 12345 would be 1234.5 Hz
DTMF + 1-16 digits
Voice
Answer
When Program Code 2 is selected, the B1290 responds with the prompt:
B1290: "Enter Directory"
YOU: Directory A
Directory B
Directory C
Directory D
Help (speaks a summary of commands)
Quit
If one of the directories is selected, a typical response would be:
B1290: "Directory A, Line One is DIAL 4032559544 WAIT 3 SEC VOICE"
This is the command sequence in the first line of the directory and would result in the B1290 dialing the number
2559544, waiting for 3 seconds and then speaking the voice messages. At this time the following options are
available:
Change this line
Delete this line
Insert a new line before the current line
Quit
Next