User manual

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required to reach this distance and the start time of Profile 1 are also calculated. The endurance
calculation involves some approximations and assumptions, but the date is a reasonable estimate.
Calculated pair
duration
Calculated
burst duration
Reference time
is in the future
after Profile 0
Endurance
calculation for
the deployment
parameters of
the ongoing
example
Checking entries . . . done.
All entries are within allowed ranges.
Checking profile schedule . . . done.
Calculated minimum profile pair duration: 05:02:08
Profile schedule selections are consistent.
Checking burst schedule . . . done.
Calculated burst duration: 003 00:00:00
Burst schedule selections are consistent.
Estimated Profile 1 start time: 02/18/2002 00:00:00
Profiling distance will reach 1 million meters
on 07/13/2002 after 500 profiles.
Accept and store schedule selections (Yes/No) [Y] ?
Figure G-53: Endurance Check
The endurance calculation will generate warnings if the calculated date is later than 2038
or if the number of profiles required to reach 1 million meters exceeds the maximum number of
profiles allowed under current file system restrictions. These warnings are more common when
an MMP is scheduled for short profiles.
When the deployment definition parameters are consistent (or have been approved by the
operator) and the results of the endurance calculation have been displayed, the system prompts
the operator to store the parameters in the EEPROM.
A ‘no’ response returns to the deployment menu for further parameter entry. This feature
can be used to quickly loop through the range and consistency checks and the endurance
calculation while making iterative adjustments to the deployment parameters. This loop can be a
useful tool when developing profiling schedules for a deployment.
A ‘yes’ response stores the deployment definition parameters in the EEPROM and then
runs a single iteration of Diagnostics, the Main Menu utility that scrolls system status
information. Diagnostics includes the 10 V and 7.5 V battery warning checks. A warning
message displays if more than ~90% of the energy in the battery has been used.
The system then prompts the operator to ‘Proceed with the deployment (Yes/No) [N] ?’
and the operator must choose to start the deployment or return to the Main Menu (the default
response is ‘No’). Committing to the deployment requires two separate keystrokes so that an
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