Operating Instructions

OP1920102 REV 1 02/26/01
DTC Communications, Inc. Page 4 of 9
One of the Flex™ pager functions is “Turn Pager Off/On”. This is purely a Flex™ pager
function and refers only to the Flex™ pager circuitry. The Flex™ pager “Turn Pager
Off/On function will have
NO EFFECT
on operation of the T-2050 transmitter.
Operation
1.
Place the holder on a belt and load a Lithium AA battery into the pager. The pager
will power-up and beep, showing the date, time in the display. After about 10
seconds the display will blank and only show the power-on” symbol and the speaker
symbol.
2.
Pressing any button will re-activate the display. You may access the menus per the
Flex™ pager instructions, if you wish. NONE OF THE BUTTONS OR RELATED
FUNCTIONS WILL HAVE ANY EFFECT ON THE TRANSMITTER
WHATSOEVER IN THE FACTORY DEFAULT PROGRAM MODE.
3.
Slide the unit into the belt holder. The T-2050 is now operating.
4.
Remove the battery when not in use. The unit will transmit when an operating battery
is in place; there is no on/off switch in the default program mode. IT IS
IMPERATIVE TO DISCARD partially used batteries, as their remaining life is not
very predictable.
ALWAYS
start an operation with a fresh battery.
Unique T-2050 Features
Default Features
– These features are enabled at the factory:
Immediate TX-ON when battery is inserted
Active display
Active Beeper
Active clock
Low battery tone burst (triple beep) transmission every 60 seconds
User Channel Selection
1.
Channel selection is made by holding the main pager reset button (large oval button,
black with a green stripe) while inserting the battery (the selection of up to 4 pre-
programmed channels are available).
2.
If the button is held when the battery is inserted, the vibrator immediately emits a
series of pulses representing the number of the channel that was last used.
3.
If the button is released within three seconds of the last pulse, the unit selects the
same channel that was last used (i.e. no change).
4.
If the button is held for more than three seconds, another series of pulses are emitted
representing the next available channel. For example, if the first series of pulses
consisted of two pulses (representing channel 2), then the next series will consist of 3
pulses.