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Manual Honeywell Hyperion 1300g

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Leitor

Hyperion 1300g Laser


Modelo substituto do Honeywell 3800g, o Hyperion
1300g proporciona desempenho e versatilidade
superiores na leitura linear. É um dos mais resistentes
leitores para aplicações gerais no mercado. Conheça o
Honeywell Hyperion 1300g.

www.bztech.com.br
Hyperion 1300g
General Purpose Handheld Linear Scanner

User’s Guide

Disclaimer
Honeywell International Inc. (“HII”) reserves the right to make changes in speci-
fications and other information contained in this document without prior notice,
and the reader should in all cases consult HII to determine whether any such
changes have been made. The information in this publication does not repre-
sent a commitment on the part of HII.
HII shall not be liable for technical or editorial errors or omissions contained
herein; nor for incidental or consequential damages resulting from the furnish-
ing, performance, or use of this material.
This document contains proprietary information that is protected by copyright.
All rights are reserved. No part of this document may be photocopied, repro-
duced, or translated into another language without the prior written consent of
HII.
 2010-2013 Honeywell International Inc. All rights reserved.
Other product names or marks mentioned in this document may be trademarks
or registered trademarks of other companies and are the property of their
respective owners.
Web Address: www.honeywellaidc.com
Product Agency Compliance

USA
FCC Part 15 Subpart B Class B
This device complies with part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to
the following two conditions:
1. This device may not cause harmful interference.
2. This device must accept any interference received, including interference
that may cause undesired operation.
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a
Class B digital device pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are
designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a
residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate
radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the
instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications.
However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular
installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or
television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off
and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or
more of the following measures:
• Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
• Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
• Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to
which the receiver is connected.
• Consult the dealer or an experienced radio or television technician for
help.

Caution: Any changes or modifications made to this equipment not


expressly approved by Honeywell International Inc. may void the
FCC authorization to operate this equipment.

Note: To maintain compliance with EMC Regulations, cables connected to


this device must be shielded cables. This unit has been tested with
cables less than 3 meters. Cables greater than 3 meters may not
meet class B performance.

UL Statement
UL listed: UL60950-1, 2nd Edition for I.T.E. product safety.
Note: Use only a Listed Limited Power Source (LPS) or Class 2 type power
supply with output rated 5 to 5.2Vdc, 1A.

Canada
Industry Canada ICES-003
This Class B digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003. Operation
is subject to the following conditions:
1. This device may not cause harmful interference.
2. This device must accept any interference received, including
interference that may cause undesired operation.
Note: To maintain compliance with EMC Regulations, cables connected to
this device must be shielded cables. This unit has been tested with
cables less than 3 meters. Cables greater than 3 meters may not
meet class B performance.

Note: Use only a Listed Limited Power Source (LPS) or Class 2 type power
supply with output rated 5 to 5.2Vdc, 1A.

Conformité à la règlementation canadienne


Cet appareil numérique de la Classe B est conforme à la norme NMB-003 du
Canada. Son fonctionnement est assujetti aux conditions suivantes :
1. Cet appareil ne doit pas causer de brouillage préjudiciable.
2. Cet appareil doit pouvoir accepter tout brouillage reçu, y compris le
brouillage pouvant causer un fonctionnement indésirable.

C-UL Statement
C-UL listed: CSA C22.2 No.60950-1-07, 2nd Edition for I.T.E. product safety.

Europe
The CE marking indicates compliance to 2004/108/EC EMC Directive
with Standards EN55022 CLASS B, EN55024, EN61000-3-2,
EN61000-3-3. In addition, complies to 2006/95/EC Low Voltage
Directive, when shipped with recommended power supply.
European Contact:
Hand Held Products Europe B.V.
Nijverheidsweg 9
5627 BT Eindhoven
The Netherlands
Honeywell shall not be liable for use of our product with equipment (i.e.,
power supplies, personal computers, etc.) that is not CE marked and does
not comply with the Low Voltage Directive.
Honeywell Scanning & Mobility Product
Environmental Information
Refer to www.honeywellaidc.com/environmental for the RoHS / REACH /
WEEE information.

Russia

Australia/NZ
C-Tick Statement

Conforms to AS/NZS 3548 EMC requirements.

Mexico

Applicable if NOM logo is marked on product. Conforms to


NOM-019.

South Korea
This product meets Korean agency approval.

Taiwan
BSMI Standard: CNS13438, CNS14336
依據標準 : CNS13438, CNS14336
International
LED Safety Statement
LEDs have been tested and classified as “EXEMPT RISK GROUP” to the
standard: IEC 62471:2006.
CB Scheme
Certified to IEC60950-1 Second Edition I.T.E. Product Safety.

Solids and Water Protection


The devices have a rating of IP41, immunity of foreign particles and dripping
water tested to Standard EN60259.

Patents
For patent information, refer to www.honeywellaidc.com/patents.
Required Safety Label Locations

Light Source

Item
Number,
Serial
Number
and Compliance
Revision Label location
Table of Contents

Chapter 1 - Getting Started


About This Manual ...................................................... 1-1
Unpacking the Scanner ............................................... 1-1
Connecting with USB .................................................. 1-1
Connecting with Keyboard Wedge .............................. 1-2
Connecting with RS-232 Serial Port............................ 1-3
Connecting with RS485............................................... 1-3
Reading Techniques ................................................... 1-4
Menu Bar Code Security Settings ............................... 1-5

Chapter 2 - Programming the Interface


Introduction ................................................................. 2-1
Programming the Interface - Plug and Play ................ 2-1
Keyboard Wedge................................................... 2-1
Laptop Direct Connect........................................... 2-1
RS232 Serial Port.................................................. 2-2
RS485 ................................................................... 2-2
OPOS Mode .......................................................... 2-3
USB IBM SurePos................................................. 2-4
USB PC or Macintosh Keyboard ........................... 2-5
USB HID POS ....................................................... 2-5
USB Serial Commands ............................................... 2-5
USB Serial Emulation............................................ 2-5
CTS/RTS Emulation .............................................. 2-6
ACK/NAK Mode..................................................... 2-6
Honeywell Bioptic Aux Port Configuration................... 2-6
Datalogic™ Magellan® Bioptic
Aux Port Configuration.............................................. 2-7
Wincor Mode A............................................................ 2-7
Keyboard Country Layout ........................................... 2-8
Keyboard Mode Options ........................................... 2-14
ALT Mode............................................................ 2-14
Keyboard Style .................................................... 2-15
Keyboard Modifiers ............................................. 2-16

i
RS232 Modifiers ........................................................ 2-19
RS-232 Baud Rate............................................... 2-19
RS-232 Word Length: Data Bits, Stop Bits,
and Parity ....................................................... 2-20
RS-232 Handshaking................................................. 2-22
RTS/CTS ............................................................. 2-22
XON/XOFF .......................................................... 2-22
ACK/NAK ............................................................. 2-22

Chapter 3 - Input/Output Settings


Good Read Indicators.................................................. 3-1
Beeper – Good Read ............................................. 3-1
Beeper Volume – Good Read................................ 3-1
Beeper Pitch – Good Read .................................... 3-2
Beeper Duration – Good Read .............................. 3-2
Beeper Pitch – Error .............................................. 3-3
LED – Good Read ................................................. 3-3
Number of Beeps – Good Read ............................ 3-3
Good Read Delay ........................................................ 3-4
User-Specified Good Read Delay.......................... 3-4
Trigger Modes.............................................................. 3-5
Manual/Serial Trigger ............................................ 3-5
Automatic Trigger .................................................. 3-5
Presentation Mode................................................. 3-6
Continuous Illumination Mode
(Manual Trigger only) ....................................... 3-6
Hands Free Time-Out .................................................. 3-6
Reread Delay............................................................... 3-7
User-Specified Reread Delay ................................ 3-8
Centering ..................................................................... 3-8
Output Sequence Overview....................................... 3-10
To Add an Output Sequence ............................... 3-10
Other Programming Selections............................ 3-10
Output Sequence Editor ...................................... 3-11
Output Sequence Editor ...................................... 3-13
Require Output Sequence ................................... 3-13

ii
Multiple Symbols ....................................................... 3-13
No Read .................................................................... 3-14
Video Reverse........................................................... 3-15

Chapter 4 - Data Editing


Prefix/Suffix Overview ................................................. 4-1
To Add a Prefix or Suffix ....................................... 4-1
To Clear One or All Prefixes or Suffixes................ 4-2
To Add a Carriage Return Suffix
to All Symbologies ........................................... 4-3
Prefix Selections.................................................... 4-3
Suffix Selections.................................................... 4-4
Function Code Transmit ........................................ 4-6
Intercharacter, Interfunction,
and Intermessage Delays ......................................... 4-6
Intercharacter Delay .............................................. 4-7
User Specified Intercharacter Delay...................... 4-7
Interfunction Delay ................................................ 4-8
Intermessage Delay .............................................. 4-8

Chapter 5 - Data Formatting


Data Format Editor Introduction .................................. 5-1
To Add a Data Format........................................... 5-1
Other Programming Selections ............................. 5-3
Interface / Terminal ID Table....................................... 5-4
Data Format Editor Commands .................................. 5-4
Send Commands................................................... 5-4
Move Commands .................................................. 5-7
Search Commands................................................ 5-8
Miscellaneous Commands .................................. 5-10
Data Format Editor .............................................. 5-14
Data Formatter .................................................... 5-14

Chapter 6 - Symbologies
Introduction ................................................................. 6-1

iii
All Symbologies ........................................................... 6-2
Codabar Start/Stop Characters ............................. 6-3
Codabar Check Character ..................................... 6-4
Codabar Concatenation ......................................... 6-5
Codabar Message Length ..................................... 6-6
Code 39 Start/Stop Characters ............................. 6-7
Code 39 Check Character ..................................... 6-7
Code 39 Message Length...................................... 6-8
Code 39 Append .................................................... 6-8
Full ASCII............................................................. 6-10
Code 39 Code Page ............................................ 6-10
Check Digit .......................................................... 6-11
Interleaved 2 of 5 Message Length ..................... 6-12
Code 93 Message Length.................................... 6-13
Code 93 Code Page ............................................ 6-13
Straight 2 of 5 Industrial Message Length ........... 6-15
Straight 2 of 5 IATA Message Length .................. 6-16
Matrix 2 of 5 Message Length ............................. 6-17
Check Digits Required ......................................... 6-18
Code 11 Message Length.................................... 6-19
ISBT 128 Concatenation...................................... 6-19
Code 128 Message Length.................................. 6-20
Code 128 Code Page .......................................... 6-20
Code 128 Function Code Transmit ...................... 6-21
Telepen Output .................................................... 6-22
Telepen Message Length .................................... 6-23
UPC A Check Digit .............................................. 6-24
UPC A Number System ....................................... 6-25
UPC A Addenda .................................................. 6-25
UPC A Addenda Required ................................... 6-26
UPC A Addenda Separator.................................. 6-26
UPC E0 and UPC E1 ........................................... 6-28
UPC E0 and UPC E1 Expand.............................. 6-29
UPC E0 and UPC E1 Addenda Required ............ 6-29
UPC E0 and UPC E1 Addenda Separator........... 6-30
UPC E0 Check Digit ............................................ 6-30
UPC E0 Number System ..................................... 6-31

iv
UPC E0 Addenda ................................................ 6-31
EAN/JAN 13 Check Digit..................................... 6-32
EAN/JAN 13 Addenda......................................... 6-33
EAN/JAN 13 Addenda Required ......................... 6-33
EAN/JAN 13 Addenda Separator ........................ 6-34
ISBN Translate .................................................... 6-34
EAN/JAN 8 Check Digit....................................... 6-35
EAN/JAN 8 Addenda........................................... 6-36
EAN/JAN 8 Addenda Required ........................... 6-36
EAN/JAN 8 Addenda Separator .......................... 6-37
MSI Check Character .......................................... 6-37
MSI Message Length .......................................... 6-38
Plessey Message Length .................................... 6-39
GS1 DataBar Expanded Message Length .......... 6-41
Korea Post Message Length ............................... 6-43
Codablock F Message Length............................. 6-44
Code 49 Message Length ................................... 6-45

Chapter 7 - Interface Keys


Keyboard Function Relationships ............................... 7-1
Supported Interface Keys............................................ 7-2

Chapter 8 - Utilities
To Add a Test Code I.D. Prefix to All Symbologies..... 8-1
Show Software Revision ............................................. 8-1
Show Data Format ...................................................... 8-1
Resetting the Standard Product Defaults .................... 8-3

Chapter 9 - Serial Programming Commands


Conventions ................................................................ 9-1
Menu Command Syntax.............................................. 9-1
Query Commands ................................................. 9-2
Concatenation of Multiple Commands .................. 9-2
Responses ............................................................ 9-2
Examples of Query Commands ............................ 9-3

v
Trigger Commands ...................................................... 9-4
Resetting the Standard Product Defaults .................... 9-4
Menu Commands ........................................................ 9-5

Chapter 10 - Product Specifications


Hyperion 1300g Product Specifications..................... 10-1
Standard Connector Pinouts...................................... 10-2

Chapter 11 - Maintenance
Repairs ...................................................................... 11-1
Maintenance .............................................................. 11-1
Cleaning the Device............................................. 11-1
Inspecting Cords and Connectors ....................... 11-1
Replacing the Interface Cable ............................. 11-2
Troubleshooting ......................................................... 11-2

Chapter 12 - Customer Support


Limited Warranty........................................................ 12-1
Symbology Charts .......................................................A-1
Linear Symbologies ...............................................A-1
Postal Symbologies ...............................................A-3
ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252) ................A-3
Lower ASCII Reference Table .....................................A-5
ISO 2022/ISO 646 Character Replacements...............A-9

vi
1 Getting Started

About This Manual


This User’s Guide provides installation and programming instructions for the
Hyperion 1300g. Product specifications, dimensions, warranty, and customer
support information are also included.
Honeywell bar code scanners are factory programmed for the most common
terminal and communications settings. If you need to change these settings,
programming is accomplished by scanning the bar codes in this guide.
An asterisk (*) next to an option indicates the default setting.

Unpacking the Scanner


After you open the shipping carton containing the product, take the following
steps:
• Check for damage during shipment. Report damage immediately to the
carrier who delivered the carton.
• Make sure the items in the carton match your order.
• Save the shipping container for later storage or shipping.

Connecting with USB


A scanner can be connected to the USB port of a computer. The scanner emu-
lates the keyboard.
1. Connect the appropriate interface cable to the scanner first, then to the com-
puter.

2. The scanner beeps.

1-1
3. Verify the scanner operation by scanning a bar code from the Sample
Symbols in the back of this manual.
For additional USB programming and technical information, refer to the Honey-
well “USB Application Note,” available at www.honeywellaidc.com.

Connecting with Keyboard Wedge


A scanner can be connected between the keyboard and PC as a “keyboard
wedge,” where the scanner provides data output that is similar to keyboard
entries. The following is an example of a keyboard wedge connection:
1. Turn off power and disconnect the keyboard cables from the back of the ter-
minal/computer.
2. Connect the appropriate interface cable to the scanner and to the terminal/
computer.

only if
power
supply is
included

3. Turn the terminal/computer power back on. The scanner beeps.


4. Verify the scanner operation by scanning a bar code from the Sample
Symbols in the back of this manual. The scanner beeps once.
The unit defaults to an IBM PC AT and compatibles keyboard wedge interface
with a USA keyboard. A carriage return (CR) suffix is added to bar code data.

1-2
Connecting with RS-232 Serial Port
1. Turn off power to the terminal/computer.
2. Connect the appropriate interface cable to the scanner.

only if
power
supply is
included

3. Plug the serial connector into the serial port on your computer. Tighten the
two screws to secure the connector to the port.
4. Once the scanner has been completely connected, power up the computer.
5. This interface programs 38,400 baud, 8 data bits, no parity, and 1 stop bit.

Connecting with RS485


A scanner can be connected for an IBM POS terminal interface.

1-3
1. Connect the appropriate interface cable to the device, then to the computer.

2. Turn the terminal/computer power back on. The scanner beeps.


3. Verify the scanner operation by scanning a bar code from the Sample
Symbols in the back of this manual. The scanner beeps once.
4. For further RS485 settings, refer to RS485 on page 2-2.

Reading Techniques
The scanner has a bright red aiming beam that corresponds to its horizontal
field of view. The aiming beam should be centered horizontally over the bar
code; it will not read if the aiming beam is in any other direction.

Good Technique Bad Technique

Bad Technique

1-4
The best focus point for reading most code densities is about 5 inches (12.7 cm)
from the unit. To read a single bar code or multiple bar codes (on a page or on
an object), hold the scanner at an appropriate distance from the target, pull the
trigger, and center the aiming beam on the bar code.

Menu Bar Code Security Settings


Honeywell scanners are programmed by scanning menu bar codes or by send-
ing serial commands to the scanner. If you want to restrict the ability to scan
menu codes, you can use the Menu Bar Code Security settings. Contact Tech-
nical Support (seeCustomer Support on page 12-1) for further information.

Setting Custom Defaults


You have the ability to create a set of menu commands as your own, custom
defaults. To do so, scan the Set Custom Defaults bar code below before each
menu command or sequence you want saved. If your command requires scan-
ning numeric codes from the back cover, then a Save code, that entire
sequence will be saved to your custom defaults. Scan the Set Custom
Defaults code again before the next command you want saved to your custom
defaults.
When you have entered all the commands you want to save for your custom
defaults, scan the Save Custom Defaults bar code.

Set Custom Defaults

Save Custom Defaults


You may have a series of custom settings and want to correct a single setting.
To do so, just scan the new setting to overwrite the old one. For example, if you
had previously saved the setting for Beeper Volume at Low to your custom
defaults, and decide you want the beeper volume set to High, just scan the Set
Custom Defaults bar code, then scan the Beeper Volume High menu code,
and then Save Custom Defaults. The rest of the custom defaults will remain,
but the beeper volume setting will be updated.

1-5
Resetting the Custom Defaults
If you want the custom default settings restored to your scanner, scan the Acti-
vate Custom Defaults bar code below. This resets the scanner to the custom
default settings. If there are no custom defaults, it will reset the scanner to the
factory default settings. Any settings that have not been specified through the
custom defaults will be defaulted to the factory default settings.

Activate Custom Defaults

The Serial Programming Commands starting on page 9-1 lists the factory
default settings for each of the commands (indicated by an asterisk (*) on the
programming pages).

1-6
2 Programming the Interface

Introduction
This chapter describes how to program your system for the desired interface.

Programming the Interface - Plug and Play


Plug and Play bar codes provide instant scanner set up for commonly used
interfaces.
Note: After you scan one of the codes, power cycle the host terminal to have
the interface in effect.

Keyboard Wedge
If you want your system programmed for an IBM PC AT and compatibles key-
board wedge interface with a USA keyboard, scan the bar code below. Key-
board wedge is the default interface.
Note: The following bar code also programs a carriage return (CR) suffix.

IBM PC AT and Compatibles with CR Suffix

Laptop Direct Connect


For most laptops, scanning the Laptop Direct Connect bar code allows opera-
tion of the scanner in parallel with the integral keyboard. The following Laptop
Direct Connect bar code selects terminal ID 03, programs a carriage return
(CR) suffix and turns on Emulate External Keyboard (page 2-16).

Laptop Direct Connect


with CR suffix

2-1
RS232 Serial Port
The RS232 Interface bar code is used when connecting to the serial port of a
PC or terminal. The following RS232 Interface bar code also programs a car-
riage return (CR) and a line feed (LF) suffix, baud rate, and data format as indi-
cated below.

Option Setting
Baud Rate 38,400 bps
Data Format 8 data bits, no parity bit, 1 stop bit

RS232 Interface

RS485
Scan one of the following “Plug and Play” codes to program the scanner for an
IBM POS terminal interface.
Note: After scanning one of these codes, you must power cycle the cash
register.

IBM Port 5B Interface

IBM Port 9B
HHBCR-1 Interface

IBM Port 17 Interface

IBM Port 9B
HHBCR-2 Interface

2-2
Each bar code above also programs the following suffixes for each symbology:

Symbology Suffix Symbology Suffix


EAN 8 0C Code 39 00 0A 0B
EAN 13 16 Interleaved 2 of 5 00 0D 0B
UPC A 0D Code 128 * 00 0A 0B
UPC E 0A Code 128 ** 00 18 0B

* Suffixes programmed for Code 128 with IBM 4683 Port 5B, IBM 4683 Port 9B
HHBCR-1, and IBM 4683 Port 17 Interfaces
**Suffixes programmed for Code 128 with IBM 4683 Port 9 HHBCR-2 Interface

OPOS Mode
The following bar code configures your scanner for OPOS (OLE for Retail Point
of Sale) by modifying the following OPOS-related settings:

Option Setting
Interface RS232
Baud Rate 38400
RS232 Flow Control, No Timeout
Handshaking XON/XOFF Off
ACK/NAK Off
Data Bits, Stop 8 Data, 1 Stop, Parity None
Bits, and Parity
Prefix/Suffix Clear All Prefixes and Suffixes
Add Code ID and AIM ID Prefix
Add CR Suffix
Intercharacter Off
Delay
Symbologies Enable UPC-A with check digit and number system
Enable UPC-E0 with check digit
Enable EAN/JAN-8 with check digit
Enable EAN/JAN-13 with check digit
Enable Code 128
Enable Code 39
Enable OPOS with automatic disable off

2-3
OPOS Mode

USB IBM SurePos


Scan the following “Plug and Play” codes to program the scanner for an IBM
SurePos (USB handheld scanner) interface.
Note: After scanning the code below, you must power cycle the cash register.

USB IBM SurePos


(USB Handheld Scanner)
Interface

USB IBM SurePos


(USB Tabletop Scanner)
Interface

The bar code above also programs the following suffixes for each symbology:

Symbology Suffix Symbology Suffix


EAN 8 0C Code 39 00 0A 0B
EAN 13 16 Interleaved 2 of 5 00 0D 0B
UPC A 0D Code 128 00 18 0B
UPC E 0A Code 39 00 0A 0B

2-4
USB PC or Macintosh Keyboard
Scan one of the following codes to program the scanner for USB PC Keyboard
or USB Macintosh Keyboard. Scanning these codes also adds a CR and LF.

USB Keyboard (PC)

USB Keyboard (Mac)

USB HID POS


Scan the following code to program the scanner for USB HID POS bar code
scanners.

USB HID POS Bar Code


Scanner

USB Serial Commands


USB Serial Emulation
Scan the following code to program the scanner to emulate a regular RS232-
based COM Port. If you are using a Microsoft® Windows® PC, you will need to
download a driver from the Honeywell website (www.honeywellaidc.com). The
driver will use the next available COM Port number. Apple® Macintosh comput-
ers recognize the scanner as a USB CDC class device and automatically uses a
class driver.
Scanning this code also adds a CR and LF.

USB Serial Emulation

Note: No extra configuration (e.g., baud rate) is necessary.

2-5
CTS/RTS Emulation

CTS/RTS Emulation On

* CTS/RTS Emulation Off

ACK/NAK Mode

ACK/NAK Mode On

* ACK/NAK Mode Off

Honeywell Bioptic Aux Port Configuration


Scan the following Plug and Play code to program the scanner for a Honeywell
bioptic scanner auxiliary port configuration. This bar code sets the baud rate to
38400 bps and the data format to 8 data bits, no parity, 1 stop bit. Character
RTS/CTS with timeout and 232 ACK/NAK are also enabled.

Honeywell Bioptic Settings

Note: If you are having unexpected results with this programming code, scan
the Resetting the Custom Defaults bar code on page 1-6 first, then scan
the programming code above.

2-6
Datalogic™ Magellan® Bioptic
Aux Port Configuration
Scan the following Plug and Play code to program the scanner for a Datalogic
Magellan bioptic scanner auxiliary port configuration. This bar code sets the
baud rate to 9600 bps and the data format to 8 data bits, no parity, 1 stop bit.

Datalogic Magellan Bioptic Settings

Note: If you are having unexpected results with this programming code, scan
the Resetting the Custom Defaults bar code on page 1-6 first, then scan
the programming code above.

Wincor Mode A
Scan the following Plug and Play code to program the scanner for Wincor Mode
A mode. This bar code sets the baud rate to 9600 bps and the data format to 8
data bits, odd parity, 1 stop bit.

Wincor Mode A

Note: If you are having unexpected results with this programming code, scan
the Resetting the Custom Defaults bar code on page 1-6 first, then scan
the programming code above.

2-7
Keyboard Country Layout
Scan the appropriate country code below to program the keyboard layout for
your country or language. As a general rule, the following characters are sup-
ported, but need special care for countries other than the United States:
@ | $ # { } [ ] = / ‘ \ < > ~

* United States

Albania

Arabic

Azeri (Cyrillic)

Azeri (Latin)

Belarus

Belgium

Bosnia

Brazil

Brazil (MS)

Bulgaria (Cyrillic)

Bulgaria (Latin)

2-8
Keyboard Country (continued)

Canada (French legacy)

Canada (French)

Canada (Multilingual)

China

Croatia

Czech

Czech (Programmers)

Czech (QWERTY)

Czech (QWERTZ)

Denmark

Dutch (Netherlands)

Estonia

Faroese

2-9
Keyboard Country (continued)

Finland

France

Gaelic

Germany

Greek

Greek (220 Latin)

Greek (220)

Greek (319 Latin)

Greek (319)

Greek (Latin)

Greek (MS)

Greek (Polytonic)

Hebrew

Hungarian (101 key)

2 - 10
Keyboard Country (continued)

Hungary

Iceland

Ireland

Italian (142)

Italy

Japan ASCII

Kazakh

Korea

Kyrgyz (Cyrillic)

Latin America

Latvia

Latvia (QWERTY)

Lithuania

Lithuania (IBM)

2 - 11
Keyboard Country (continued)

Macedonia

Malta

Mongolian (Cyrillic)

Norway

Poland

Polish (214)

Polish (Programmers)

Portugal

Romania

Russia

Russian (MS)

Russian (Typewriter)

SCS

2 - 12
Keyboard Country (continued)

Serbia (Cyrillic)

Serbia (Latin)

Slovakia

Slovakia (QWERTY)

Slovakia (QWERTZ)

Slovenia

Spain

Spanish variation

Sweden

Switzerland (French)

Switzerland (German)

Tatar

Thailand

2 - 13
Keyboard Country (continued)

Turkey F

Turkey Q

Ukrainian

United Kingdom

United Stated (Dvorak right)

United States (Dvorak left)

United States (Dvorak)

United States (International)

Uzbek (Cyrillic)

Vietnam

Keyboard Mode Options


ALT Mode
If your bar code contains special characters from the extended ASCII chart for
example, an e with an accent grave (è), you will use ALT Mode. (See Extended
ASCII Characters on page A-6.)
Note: Scan the ALT mode bar code after scanning the appropriate Keyboard
Country code.

2 - 14
If your keystrokes require the ALT key and 4 characters, scan the 4 Characters
bar code. The data is then output with the special character(s). Default = Off.

* Off

4 Characters

Keyboard Style
This programs keyboard styles, such as Caps Lock and Shift Lock. Default =
Regular.
Regular is used when you normally have the Caps Lock key off.

* Regular

Caps Lock is used when you normally have the Caps Lock key on.

Caps Lock

Shift Lock is used when you normally have the Shift Lock key on (not common
to U.S. keyboards).

Shift Lock

2 - 15
Automatic Caps Lock is used if you change the Caps Lock key on and off.
The software tracks and reflects if you have Caps Lock on or off (AT and PS/2
only). This selection can only be used with systems that have an LED, which
notes the Caps Lock status.

Automatic Caps Lock

Autocaps via NumLock bar code should be scanned in countries (e.g., Ger-
many, France) where the Caps Lock key cannot be used to toggle Caps Lock.
The NumLock option works similarly to the regular Auotcaps, but uses the Num-
Lock key to retrieve the current state of the Caps Lock.

Autocaps via NumLock

Emulate External Keyboard should be scanned if you do not have an external


keyboard (IBM AT or equivalent).

Emulate External Keyboard

Note: After scanning the Emulate External Keyboard bar code, you must power
cycle your computer.

Keyboard Modifiers
This modifies special keyboard features, such as CTRL+ ASCII codes.

Control + X (Control + ASCII) Mode On: The scanner sends key combina-
tions for ASCII control characters for values 00-1F. Windows is the preferred
mode. All keyboard country codes are supported. DOS mode is a legacy
mode, and it does not support all keyboard country codes. New users should
use the Windows mode. Refer to Keyboard Function Relationships, page 7-1
for CTRL+ X Values.
Windows Mode Prefix/Suffix Off: The scanner sends key combinations for
ASCII control characters for values 00-1F (refer to ASCII Conversion Chart
(Code Page 1252) on page A-3 for non-reprintable characters), but it does not
translate any prefix or suffix information.

2 - 16
Default = Control + ASCII Off

Windows Mode Control + X


Mode On

* Control + X Mode Off

DOS Mode Control + X Mode


On

Windows Mode Prefix/Suffix Off

Numeric Keypad Mode: Sends numeric characters as if entered from a


numeric keypad. Default = Off

Numeric Keypad Mode On

* Numeric Keypad Mode Off

2 - 17
Automatic Direct Connect Mode: This selection can be used if you have an
IBM AT style terminal and the system is dropping characters. Default = Off

Automatic Direct
Connect Mode On

* Automatic Direct Connect


Mode Off

2 - 18
RS232 Modifiers
RS-232 Baud Rate
Baud Rate sends the data from the scanner to the terminal at the specified rate.
The host terminal must be set for the same baud rate as the scanner.
Default = 38,400.

300

600

1200

2400

4800

9600

19200

2 - 19
* 38400

57,600

115,200

RS-232 Word Length: Data Bits, Stop Bits, and Parity


Data Bits sets the word length at 7 or 8 bits of data per character. If an applica-
tion requires only ASCII Hex characters 0 through 7F decimal (text, digits, and
punctuation), select 7 data bits. For applications which require use of the full
ASCII set, select 8 data bits per character. Default = 8.
Stop Bits sets the stop bits at 1 or 2. Default = 1.
Parity provides a means of checking character bit patterns for validity.
Default = None.

2 - 20
Note: @ 7N1, the host must insert at least a 1 bit delay between characters
otherwise use a different word format.

7 Data, 1 Stop, Parity Even

7 Data, 1 Stop, Parity None


(see note above)

7 Data, 1 Stop, Parity Odd

7 Data, 2 Stop, Parity Even

7 Data, 2 Stop Parity None

7 Data, 2 Stop, Parity Odd

8 Data, 1 Stop, Parity Even

* 8 Data, 1 Stop, Parity None

8 Data, 1 Stop, Parity Odd

2 - 21
RS-232 Handshaking
RS232 Handshaking allows control of data transmission from the scanner using
software commands from the host device. When RTS/CTS is turned Off, no
data flow control is used.

RTS/CTS
The scanner asserts RTS when it has data to send, and waits indefinitely for
CTS to be asserted by the host.
Default = RTS/CTS Off.

RTS/CTS On

* RTS/CTS Off

XON/XOFF
Standard ASCII control characters can be used to tell the scanner to start send-
ing data (XON/XOFF On) or to stop sending data (XON/XOFF Off). When the
host sends the XOFF character (DC3, hex 13) to the scanner, data transmission
stops. To resume transmission, the host sends the XON character (DC1, hex
11). Data transmission continues where it left off when XOFF was sent.
Default = XON/XOFF Off.

XON/XOFF On

* XON/OFF Off

ACK/NAK
After transmitting data, the scanner waits for an ACK character (hex 06) or a
NAK character (hex 15) response from the host. If ACK is received, the commu-
nications cycle is completed and the scanner looks for more bar codes. If NAK
is received, the last set of bar code data is retransmitted and the scanner waits

2 - 22
for ACK/NAK again. Turn on the ACK/NAK protocol by scanning the ACK/NAK
On bar code below. To turn off the protocol, scan ACK/NAK Off. Default =
ACK/NAK Off.

ACK/NAK On

* ACK/NAK Off

2 - 23
2 - 24
3 Input/Output Settings

Good Read Indicators


Beeper – Good Read
The beeper may be programmed On or Off in response to a good read. Turning
this option off, only turns off the beeper response to a good read indication. All
error and menu beeps are still audible. Default = On.

* On

Off

Beeper Volume – Good Read


The beeper volume codes modify the volume of the beep the scanner emits on
a good read. Default = High.

Low

Medium

*High

Off

3-1
Beeper Pitch – Good Read
The beeper pitch codes modify the pitch (frequency) of the beep the scanner
emits on a good read. Default = Medium

Low (1600 Hz)

* Medium (2750 Hz)

High (4200 Hz)

Beeper Duration – Good Read


The beeper duration codes modify the length of the beep the scanner emits on
a good read. Default = Normal.

* Normal Beep

Short Beep

3-2
Beeper Pitch – Error
The beeper pitch codes modify the pitch (frequency) of the sound the scanner
emits when there is a bad read or error. Default = 100 Hz.

* Razz (100 Hz)

* Medium (2000 Hz)

High (4200 Hz)

LED – Good Read


The LED indicator can be programmed On or Off in response to a good read.
Default = On.

* On

Off

Number of Beeps – Good Read


The number of beeps of a good read can be programmed from 1 - 9. The same
number of beeps will be applied to the beeper and LED in response to a good
read. For example, if you program this option to have five beeps, there will be
five beeps and five LED flashes in response to a good read. The beeps and

3-3
LED flashes are in sync with one another. To change the number of beeps,
scan the bar code below and then scan a digit (1-9) bar code and the Save bar
code on the inside the back cover of this manual. Default = One.

Number of Pulses

Good Read Delay


This sets the minimum amount of time before the scanner can read another bar
code. Default = No Delay.

* No Delay

Short Delay (500 ms)

Medium Delay (1000 ms)

Long Delay (1500 ms)

User-Specified Good Read Delay


If you want to set your own length for the good read delay, scan the bar code
below, then set the delay (from 0-30,000 milliseconds) by scanning digits from
the inside back cover, then scanning Save.

User-Specified Good Read Delay

3-4
Trigger Modes
Manual/Serial Trigger
You can activate the scanner either by pressing the trigger, or using a serial trig-
ger command (see Trigger Commands on page 9-4). When in manual trigger
mode, the scanner scans until a bar code is read, or until the trigger is released.
When in serial mode, the scanner scans until a bar code has been read or until
the deactivate command is sent. In serial mode, the scanner can also be set to
turn itself off after a specified time has elapsed (see Read Time-Out, which fol-
lows).

* Manual/Serial Trigger

Read Time-Out
Use this selection to set a time-out (in milliseconds) of the scanner’s trigger
when using serial commands to trigger the scanner. Once the scanner has
timed out, you can activate the scanner either by pressing the trigger or using a
serial trigger command. After scanning the Read Time-Out bar code, set the
time-out duration (from 0-300,000 milliseconds) by scanning digits from the
inside back cover, then scanning Save. Default = 30,000.

Read Time-Out

Automatic Trigger
The scanner scans continuously using internal LEDs to detect bar codes.

Automatic Trigger

3-5
Presentation Mode
Presentation Mode uses ambient light to detect bar codes. The LEDs are off for
ambient conditions until a change occurs in the scanner’s field of view. Then
the LEDS turn on automatically to read the code. If the light level in the room is
not high enough, Presentation Mode may not work properly.

Presentation Mode

Continuous Illumination Mode (Manual Trigger only)


If you have several bar codes that are close together, you may wish to have a
continuous aiming beam on in order to properly aim the scanner at one bar
code. Scan the Continuous Illumination On bar code to program the scanner
for this capability. Once you have the aiming beam over the correct bar code,
pull the trigger to read the code. Scan the Continuous Illumination Off bar
code to turn off this feature.

Continuous Illumination
Mode On

* Continuous Illumination
Mode Off

Hands Free Time-Out


The Automatic Trigger and Presentation Modes are referred to as “hands free”
modes. If the scanner’s trigger is pulled when using a hands free mode, the
scanner changes to manual trigger mode. You can set the time the scanner
should remain in manual trigger mode by setting the Hands Free Time-Out.
Once the time-out value is reached, (if there have been no further trigger pulls)
the scanner reverts to the original hands free mode.

3-6
Scan the Hands Free Time-Out bar code, then scan the time-out duration
(from 0-300,000 milliseconds) from the inside back cover, and Save. Default =
5,000 ms.

Hands Free Time-Out

Reread Delay
This sets the time period before the scanner can read the same bar code a sec-
ond time. Setting a reread delay protects against accidental rereads of the
same bar code. Longer delays are effective in minimizing accidental rereads at
POS (point of sale). Use shorter delays in applications where repetitive bar
code scanning is required. Default = Medium.
Reread Delay only works when in automatic trigger mode or presentation mode
(see page 3-5).

Short (500 ms)

* Medium (750 ms)

Long (1000 ms)

Extra Long (2000 ms)

3-7
User-Specified Reread Delay
If you want to set your own length for the reread delay, scan the bar code below,
then set the delay (from 0-30,000 milliseconds) by scanning digits from the
inside back cover, then scanning Save.

User-Specified Reread Delay

Centering
Use Centering to narrow the scanner’s field of view to make sure the scanner
reads only those bar codes intended by the user. For instance, if multiple codes
are placed closely together, centering will insure that only the desired codes are
read.
If a bar code is not touched by a predefined window, it will not be decoded or
output by the scanner. If centering is turned on by scanning Centering On, the
scanner only reads codes that pass through the centering window you specify
using the Left of Centering Window, or Right of Centering Window bar
codes.
In the example below, the red line is the full scanner field of view and the white
boxed area is the centering window. The centering window has been set to
20% left and 30% right, as shown in the legend at the bottom. Since Bar Code
1 passes through the centering window, it will be read. Bar Code 2 does not
pass through the centering window, so it will not be read.

Bar Code 1 Bar Code 2

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%

Scan Centering On, then scan one of the following bar codes to change the left
or right of the centering window. Then scan the percent you want to shift the
centering window using digits on the inside back cover of this manual. Scan
Save. Default Centering = 40% for Left, 60% for Right.

3-8
Centering On

* Centering Off

Left of Centering Window

Right of Centering Window

3-9
Output Sequence Overview
Output Sequence Editor
This programming selection allows you to program the scanner to output data
(when scanning more than one symbol) in whatever order your application
requires, regardless of the order in which the bar codes are scanned. Reading
the Default Sequence symbol programs the scanner to the Universal values,
shown below. These are the defaults. Be certain you want to delete or clear all
formats before you read the Default Sequence symbol.
Note: To make Output Sequence Editor selections, you’ll need to know the
code I.D., code length, and character match(es) your application
requires. Use the Alphanumeric symbols (inside back cover) to read
these options.

Note: You must hold the trigger while reading each bar code in a sequence.

To Add an Output Sequence


1. Scan the Enter Sequence symbol (see Require Output Sequence, page 3-
13).
2. Code I.D.
On the Symbology Charts on page A-1, find the symbology to which you
want to apply the output sequence format. Locate the Hex value for that
symbology and scan the 2 digit hex value from the Programming Chart
(inside back cover).
3. Length
Specify what length (up to 9999 characters) of data output will be acceptable
for this symbology. Scan the four digit data length from the Programming
Chart. (Note: 50 characters is entered as 0050. 9999 is a universal num-
ber, indicating all lengths.) When calculating the length, you must count any
programmed prefixes, suffixes, or formatted characters as part of the length
(unless using 9999).
4. Character Match Sequences
On the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3, find the Hex
value that represents the character(s) you want to match. Use the Program-
ming Chart to read the alphanumeric combination that represents the ASCII
characters. (99 is the Universal number, indicating all characters.)
5. End Output Sequence Editor
Scan F F to enter an Output Sequence for an additional symbology, or Save
to save your entries.

Other Programming Selections


•Discard
This exits without saving any Output Sequence changes.

3 - 10
Output Sequence Editor

Enter Sequence

Default Sequence

Output Sequence Example


In this example, you are scanning Code 93, Code 128, and Code 39 barcodes,
but you want the image scanner to output Code 39 1st, Code 128 2nd, and
Code 93 3rd, as shown below.
Note: Code 93 must be enabled to use this example.

A - Code 39

B - Code 128

C - Code 93

You would set up the sequence editor with the following command line:
SEQBLK62999941FF6A999942FF69999943FF
The breakdown of the command line is shown below:
SEQBLKsequence editor start command
62 code identifier for Code 39
9999 code length that must match for Code 39, 9999 = all lengths
41 start character match for Code 39, 41h = “A”
FF termination string for first code
6A code identifier for Code 128
9999 code length that must match for Code 128, 9999 = all lengths

3 - 11
42 start character match for Code 128, 42h = “B”
FF termination string for second code
69 code identifier for Code 93
9999 code length that must match for Code 93, 9999 = all lengths
43 start character match for Code 93, 43h = “C”
FF termination string for third code
To program the previous example using specific lengths, you would have to
count any programmed prefixes, suffixes, or formatted characters as part of the
length. If you use the example on page 3-11, but assume a <CR> suffix and
specific code lengths, you would use the following command line:
SEQBLK62001241FF6A001342FF69001243FF
The breakdown of the command line is shown below:
SEQBLK sequence editor start command
62 code identifier for Code 39
0012 A - Code 39 sample length (11) plus CR suffix (1) = 12
41 start character match for Code 39, 41h = “A”
FF termination string for first code
6A code identifier for Code 128
0013 B - Code 128 sample length (12) plus CR suffix (1) = 13
42 start character match for Code 128, 42h = “B”
FF termination string for second code
69 code identifier for Code 93
0012 C - Code 93 sample length (11) plus CR suffix (1) = 12
43 start character match for Code 93, 43h = “C”
FF termination string for third code

3 - 12
Output Sequence Editor

Enter Sequence

Default Sequence

Require Output Sequence


When an output sequence is Required, all output data must conform to an
edited sequence or the image scanner will not transmit the output data to the
host device. When it’s On/Not Required, the image scanner will attempt to get
the output data to conform to an edited sequence, but if it cannot, the image
scanner transmits all output data to the host device as is.
When the output sequence is Off, the barcode data is output to the host as the
image scanner decodes it.
Note: This selection is unavailable when the Multiple Symbols Selection is
turned on.

Required

On/Not Required

*Off

Multiple Symbols
When this programming selection is turned On, it allows you to read multiple
symbols with a single pull of the scanner’s trigger. If you press and hold the trig-
ger, aiming the scanner at a series of symbols, it reads unique symbols once,

3 - 13
beeping (if turned on) for each read. The scanner attempts to find and decode
new symbols as long as the trigger is pulled. When this programming selection
is turned Off, the scanner will only read the symbol closest to the aiming beam.

On

* Off

No Read
With No Read turned On, the scanner sends an “NR” to the host if you pull and
release the trigger without reading a code (e.g., bad bar code). If No Read is
turned Off, the “NR” will not be sent to the host.

On

* Off

If you want a different notation than “NR,” for example, “Error,” or “Bad Code,”
you can edit the output message using the Data Formatter (page 5-14). The
hex code for the No Read symbol is 9C.

3 - 14
Video Reverse
Video Reverse is used to allow the scanner to read bar codes that are inverted.
The “Off” bar code below is an example of this type of bar code.
Note: If additional menuing is required, Video Reverse must be disabled to read
the menu bar codes and then re-enabled after menuing is completed.

On

VIDREV0REV.
* Off

3 - 15
3 - 16
4 Data Editing

Prefix/Suffix Overview
When a bar code is scanned, additional information is sent to the host computer
along with the bar code data. This group of bar code data and additional,
user-defined data is called a “message string.” The selections in this section
are used to build the user-defined data into the message string.
Prefix and Suffix characters are data characters that can be sent before and
after scanned data. You can specify if they should be sent with all symbologies,
or only with specific symbologies. The following illustration shows the break-
down of a message string:

Prefix Scanned Data Suffix


1-11 variable length 1-11
alpha numeric alpha numeric
characters characters

Points to Keep In Mind


• It is not necessary to build a message string. The selections in this chapter
are only used if you wish to alter the default settings. Default prefix = None.
Default suffix = None.
• A prefix or suffix may be added or cleared from one symbology or all
symbologies.
• You can add any prefix or suffix from the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page
1252), page A-3, plus Code I.D. and AIM I.D.
• You can string together several entries for several symbologies at one time.
• Enter prefixes and suffixes in the order in which you want them to appear on
the output.
• When setting up for specific symbologies (as opposed to all symbologies), the
specific symbology ID value counts as an added prefix or suffix character.
• The maximum size of a prefix or suffix configuration is 200 characters, which
includes header information

To Add a Prefix or Suffix


Step 1. Scan the Add Prefix or Add Suffix symbol (page 4-3).
Step 2. Determine the 2 digit Hex value from the Symbology Chart (included in
Appendix A) for the symbology to which you want to apply the prefix or
suffix. For example, for Code 128, Code ID is “j” and Hex ID is “6A”.

4-1
Step 3. Scan the 2 hex digits from the inside the back cover of this manual or
scan 9, 9 for all symbologies.
Step 4. Determine the hex value from the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page
1252), page A-3, for the prefix or suffix you wish to enter.
Step 5. Scan the 2 digit hex value from the inside the back cover of this man-
ual.
Step 6. Repeat Steps 4 and 5 for every prefix or suffix character.
Step 7. To add the Code I.D., scan 5, C, 8, 0.
To add AIM I.D., scan 5, C, 8, 1.
To add a backslash (\), scan 5, C, 5, C.
Note: To add a backslash (\) as in Step 7, you must scan 5C twice – once to
create the leading backslash and then to create the backslash itself.

Step 8. Scan Save to exit and save, or scan Discard to exit without saving.
Repeat Steps 1-6 to add a prefix or suffix for another symbology.

Example: Add a Suffix to a specific symbology


To send a CR (carriage return)Suffix for UPC only:
Step 1. Scan Add Suffix.
Step 2. Determine the 2 digit hex value from the Symbology Chart (included in
the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3) for UPC.
Step 3. Scan 6, 3 from the inside the back cover of this manual.
Step 4. Determine the hex value from the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page
1252), page A-3, for the CR (carriage return).
Step 5. Scan 0, D from the inside the back cover of this manual.
Step 6. Scan Save, or scan Discard to exit without saving.

To Clear One or All Prefixes or Suffixes


You can clear a single prefix or suffix, or clear all prefixes/suffixes for a symbol-
ogy. When you Clear One Prefix (Suffix), the specific character you select is
deleted from the symbology you want. When you Clear All Prefixes (Suffixes),
all the prefixes or suffixes for a symbology are deleted.
Step 1. Scan the Clear One Prefix or Clear One Suffix symbol.
Step 2. Determine the 2 digit Hex value from the Symbology Chart (included in
Appendix A) for the symbology from which you want to clear the prefix
or suffix.

4-2
Step 3. Scan the 2 digit hex value from the inside the back cover of this man-
ual or scan 9, 9 for all symbologies.
Your change is automatically saved.

To Add a Carriage Return Suffix to All Symbologies


Scan the following bar code if you wish to add a carriage return suffix to all sym-
bologies at once. This action first clears all current suffixes, then programs a
carriage return suffix for all symbologies.

Add CR Suffix
All Symbologies

Prefix Selections

Add Prefix

Clear One Prefix

Clear All Prefixes

4-3
Suffix Selections

Add Suffix

Clear One Suffix

Clear All Suffixes

Transmit Alternate Extended ASCII Characters


You may need to emulate special keyboard functions, such as up or down
arrows, Alt/Make or Alt/Break commands, that are not supported in the
Extended ASCII Character table. Refer to Alternate Extended ASCII Charac-
ters (page 4-5) for a range of keyboard function keys and corresponding deci-
mal and hex characters. If you scan the Transmit Alternate Extended ASCII
code, any hex entries in a prefix or suffix will result in the corresponding Key-
board Function output.
Example: Transmit Alternate Extended ASCII is enabled, and you scan Add
Suffix, then scan 9 9 8 9. All symbologies (99) would have a suffix
of a Page Down (hex 89) added to them.
When Transmit Normal Extended ASCII is selected, the normal extended
ASCII character is transmitted (see ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252)
on page A-3).
Example: Transmit Normal Extended ASCII is enabled, and you scan Add
Suffix, then scan 9 9 8 9. All symbologies (99) would have a suffix
of a ‰ character added to them.
Default = Transmit Alternate Extended ASCII.

Transmit Alternate Extended


ASCII

* Transmit Normal Extended


ASCII

4-4
Alternate Extended ASCII Characters
DEC HEX Keyboard Function DEC HEX Keyboard Function
128 80 up arrow ↑ 152 98 F9
129 81 down arrow ↓ 153 99 F10
130 82 right arrow → 154 9A F11
131 83 left arrow ← 155 9B F12
132 84 Insert 156 9C Numeric Keypad +
133 85 Delete 157 9D Numeric Keypad -
134 86 Home 158 9E Numeric Keypad *
135 87 End 159 9F Caps Lock
136 88 Page Up 160 A0 Num Lock
137 89 Page Down 161 A1 Left Alt
138 8A Right ALT 162 A2 Left Ctrl
139 8B Right CTRL 163 A3 Left Shift
140 8C Reserved 164 A4 Right Shift
141 8D Reserved 165 A5 Print Screen
142 8E Numeric Keypad Enter 166 A6 Tab
143 8F Numeric Keypad / 167 A7 Shift Tab
144 90 F1 168 A8 Enter
145 91 F2 169 A9 Esc
146 92 F3 170 AA Alt Make
147 93 F4 171 AB Alt Break
148 94 F5 172 AC Control Make
149 95 F6 173 AD Control Break
150 96 F7 174 AE Alt Sequence with 1 Character
151 97 F8 175 AF Ctrl Sequence with 1 Character

4-5
Function Code Transmit
When this selection is enabled and function codes are contained within the
scanned data, the scanner transmits the function code to the terminal. Charts
of these function codes are provided in Supported Interface Keys starting on
page 7-2. When the scanner is in keyboard wedge mode, the scan code is con-
verted to a key code before it is transmitted. Default = Enable.

* Enable

Disable

Intercharacter, Interfunction, and Intermessage


Delays
Some terminals drop information (characters) if data comes through too quickly.
Intercharacter, interfunction, and intermessage delays slow the transmission of
data, increasing data integrity.
Each delay is composed of a 5 millisecond step. You can program up to 99
steps (of 5 ms each) for a range of 0-495 ms.

4-6
Intercharacter Delay
An intercharacter delay of up to 495 milliseconds may be placed between the
transmission of each character of scanned data. Scan the Intercharacter
Delay bar code below, then scan the number of steps in 5 millisecond incre-
ments and the Save bar code using the inside the back cover of this manual.

Prefix Scanned Data Suffix

1 2 3 4 5

Intercharacter Delay

Intercharacter Delay

To remove this delay, scan the Intercharacter Delay bar code, then set the
number of steps to 0. Scan the Save bar code using the inside the back cover
of this manual.
Note: Intercharacter delays are not supported in USB serial.

User Specified Intercharacter Delay


An intercharacter delay of up to 495 milliseconds may be placed after the trans-
mission of a particular character of scanned data. Scan the Delay Length bar
code below, then scan the number of steps in 5 millisecond increments and the
Save bar code using the inside the back cover of this manual.
Next, scan the Character to Trigger Delay bar code, then the 2-digit hex value
for the ASCII character that will trigger the delay ASCII Conversion Chart (Code
Page 1252), page A-3. The range is 00-FF.

Delay Length

Character to Trigger Delay

4-7
To remove this delay, scan the Delay Length bar code, and set the number of
steps to 0. Scan the Save bar code using the inside the back cover of this
manual.

Interfunction Delay
An interfunction delay of up to 495 milliseconds may be placed between the
transmission of each control character in the message string. Scan the Inter-
function Delay bar code below, then scan the number of steps in 5 millisecond
increments and the Save bar code using the inside the back cover of this man-
ual.

Prefix Scanned Data Suffix

STX 1 HT 2 3 4 5 CR LF

Interfunction Delays

Interfunction Delay

To remove this delay, scan the Interfunction Delay bar code, then set the num-
ber of steps to 0. Scan the Save bar code using the inside the back cover of
this manual.

Intermessage Delay
An intermessage delay of up to 495 milliseconds may be placed between each
scan transmission. Scan the Intermessage Delay bar code below, then scan
the number of steps in 5 millisecond increments and the Save bar code using
the inside the back cover of this manual.

1st Scan Transmission 2nd Scan Transmission


Intermessage Delay

Intermessage Delay

4-8
To remove this delay, scan the Intermessage Delay bar code, then set the
number of steps to 0. Scan the Save bar code using the inside the back cover
of this manual.

4-9
4 - 10
5 Data Formatting

Data Format Editor Introduction


You may use the Data Format Editor to change the scanner’s output. For exam-
ple, you can use the Data Format Editor to insert characters at certain points in
bar code data as it is scanned. The selections in the following pages are used
only if you wish to alter the output. Default Data Format setting = None.
Normally, when you scan a bar code, it gets outputted automatically; however
when you do a format, you must use a “send” command (see Send Commands
on page 5-4) within the format program to output data.
Multiple formats may be programmed into the scanner. They are stacked in the
order in which they are entered. However, the following list presents the order
in which formats are applied:
1. Specific Term ID, Actual Code ID, Actual Length
2. Specific Term ID, Actual Code ID, Universal Length
3. Specific Term ID, Universal Code ID, Actual Length
4. Specific Term ID, Universal Code ID, Universal Length
5. Universal Term ID, Actual Code ID, Actual Length
6. Universal Term ID, Actual Code ID, Universal Length
7. Universal Term ID, Universal Code ID, Actual Length
8. Universal Term ID, Universal Code ID, Universal Length
The maximum size of a data format configuration is 256 bytes, which includes
header information. No format can contain more than 50 bytes.
If a bar code is read that fails the first data format, the next data format, if there
is one, will be used on the bar code data. If there is no other data format, the
raw data is output.
If you have changed data format settings, and wish to clear all formats and
return to the factory defaults, scan the Default Data Format code below.

* Default Data Format

To Add a Data Format


Step 1. Scan the Enter Data Format symbol (page 5-14).
Step 2. Select Primary/Alternate Format
Determine if this will be your primary data format or one of 3 alternate
formats. This allows you to save a total of 4 different data formats. To

5-1
program your primary format scan 0 using the inside the back cover of
this manual. If you are programming an alternate format, scan 1, 2, or
3, depending on which alternate format you are programming.
Step 3. Terminal Type
Refer to the Supported Terminals Chart (page 5-4) and locate the Ter-
minal ID number for your PC. Scan three numeric bar codes on the
inside back cover to program the scanner for your terminal ID (you must
enter 3 digits). For example, scan 0 0 3 for an AT wedge.
Note: The wildcard for all terminal types is 099.

Step 4. Code I.D.


In Appendix A find the symbology to which you want to apply the data
format. Locate the Hex value for that symbology and scan the 2 digit
hex value from the inside the back cover of this manual.
Step 5. Length
Specify what length (up to 9999 characters) of data will be acceptable
for this symbology. Scan the four digit data length from the inside the
back cover of this manual. (Note: 50 characters is entered as 0050.
9999 is a universal number, indicating all lengths.)
Step 6. Editor Commands
Refer to the Format Editor Commands Chart (page 5-4). Scan the
symbols that represent the command you want to enter. 94 alphanu-
meric characters may be entered for each symbology data format.
Step 7. Scan Save from the inside the back cover of this manual to save your
entries.

Enter Data Format

Save

Discard

5-2
Other Programming Selections
• Clear One Data Format
This deletes one data format for one symbology. If you are clearing the
primary format, scan 0 from the inside the back cover of this manual. If you
are clearing an alternate format, scan 1, 2, or 3, depending on the alternate
format you are clearing. Scan the Terminal Type (refer to the Supported
Terminals Chart on page 5-4), Code I.D. (refer to the Symbology Charts on
page A-1), and the bar code data length for the specific data format that you
want to delete. All other formats remain unaffected.
• Save from the inside the back cover of this manual
This exits, saving any Data Format changes.
• Discard from the inside the back cover of this manual
This exits without saving any Data Format changes.

Clear One Data Format

Clear All Data Formats

Save

Discard

5-3
Interface / Terminal ID Table
Interface Terminal ID
USB PC keyboard (HID) 124
Mac Keyboard 125
PC Keyboard (Japanese) 134
Serial (COM driver required) 130
HID POS 131
USB SurePOS Handheld 128
USB SurePOS Tabletop 129
Serial RS232 TTL 000
RS232 True 000
RS485 (IBM-HHBCR 1+2, 46xx) 051
Keyboard PS2 compatibles 003
AT compatibles 002

Data Format Editor Commands


When working with the Data Format Editor, a virtual cursor is moved along your
input data string. The following commands are used to both move this cursor to
different positions, and to select, replace, and insert data into the final output.

Send Commands

Send all characters


F1 Include in the output message all of the characters from the input
message, starting from current cursor position, followed by an insert
character. Syntax = F1xx where xx stands for the insert character’s hex
value for the CP1252 character. Refer to the ASCII Conversion Chart
(Code Page 1252), page A-3 for decimal, hex and character codes.

Send a number of characters


F2 Include in the output message a number of characters followed by an
insert character. Start from the current cursor position and continue for
“nn” characters or through the last character in the input message,
followed by character “xx.” Syntax = F2nnxx where nn stands for the
numeric value (00-99) for the number of characters, and xx stands for
the the insert character’s hex value for the CP1252 character. Refer to
the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3 for decimal,
hex and character codes.

5-4
F2 Example: Send a number of characters

Send the first 10 characters from the bar code above, followed by a
carriage return. Command string: F2100D
F2 is the “Send a number of characters” command
10 is the number of characters to send
0D is the hex value for a CR
The data is output as: 1234567890

F2 and F1 Example: Split characters into 2 lines


Send the first 10 characters from the bar code above, followed by a
carriage return, followed by the rest of the characters.
Command string: F2100DF10D
F2 is the “Send a number of characters” command
10 is the number of characters to send for the first line
0D is the hex value for a CR
F1 is the “Send all characters” command
0D is the hex value for a CR
The data is output as: 1234567890
ABCDEFGHIJ
<CR>

Send all characters up to a particular character


F3 Include in the output message all characters from the input message,
starting with the character at the current cursor position and continuing
to, but not including, the search character “ss,” followed by an insert
character. The cursor is moved forward to the “ss” character. Syntax
= F3ssxx where ss stands for the search character’s hex value for the
CP1252 character, and xx stands for the insert character’s hex value for
the CP1252 character.
Refer to the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3 for
decimal, hex and character codes.
F3 Example: Send all characters up to a particular character

Using the bar code above, send all characters up to but not including
“D,” followed by a carriage return.
Command string: F3440D
F3 is the “Send all characters up to a particular character” command

5-5
44 is the hex value for a 'D”
0D is the hex value for a CR
The data is output as: 1234567890ABC
<CR>

Send all but the last characters


E9 Include in the output message all but the last “nn” characters, starting
from the current cursor position. The cursor is moved forward to one
position past the last input message character included. Syntax = E9nn
where nn stands for the numeric value (00-99) for the number of
characters that will not be sent at the end of the message.

Insert a character multiple times


F4 Send “xx” character “nn” times in the output message, leaving the
cursor in the current position. Syntax = F4xxnn where xx stands for the
insert character’s hex value for the CP1252 character, and nn is the
numeric value (00-99) for the number of times it should be sent. Refer
to the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3 for
decimal, hex and character codes.
E9 and F4 Example: Send all but the last characters, followed by
2 tabs

Send all characters except for the last 8 from the bar code above, fol-
lowed by 2 tabs.
Command string: E908F40902
E9 is the “Send all but the last characters” command
08 is the number of characters at the end to ignore
F4 is the “Insert a character multiple times” command
09 is the hex value for a horizontal tab
02 is the number of time the tab character is sent
The data is output as: 1234567890AB <tab><tab>

Insert symbology name


B3 Insert the name of the bar code’s symbology in the output message,
without moving the cursor. Only symbologies with a Honeywell ID are
included (see Symbology Charts on page A-1). Refer to the ASCII
Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3 for decimal, hex and
character codes.

5-6
Insert bar code length
B4 Insert the bar code’s length in the output message, without moving the
cursor. The length is expressed as a numeric string and does not
include leading zeroes.
B3 and B4 Example: Insert the symbology name and length

Send the symbology name and length before the bar code data from
the bar code above. Break up these insertions with spaces. End with
a carriage return.
Command string: B3F42001B4F42001F10D
B3 is the “Insert symbology name” command
F4 is the “Insert a character multiple times” command
20 is the hex value for a space
01 is the number of time the space character is sent
B4 is the “Insert bar code length” command
F4 is the “Insert a character multiple times” command
20 is the hex value for a space
01 is the number of time the space character is sent
F1 is the “Send all characters” command
0D is the hex value for a CR
The data is output as: Code128 20 1234567890ABCDEFGHIJ
<CR>

Move Commands

Move the cursor forward a number of characters


F5 Move the cursor ahead “nn” characters from current cursor position.
Syntax = F5nn where nn is the numeric value (00-99) for the number
of characters the cursor should be moved ahead.
F5 Example: Move the cursor forward and send the data

Move the cursor forward 3 characters, then send the rest of the the bar
code data from the bar code above. End with a carriage return.
Command string: F503F10D
F5 is the “Move the cursor forward a number of characters” command

5-7
03 is the number of characters to move the cursor
F1 is the “Send all characters” command
0D is the hex value for a CR
The data is output as: 4567890ABCDEFGHIJ
<CR>

Move the cursor backward a number of characters


F6 Move the cursor back “nn” characters from current cursor position.
Syntax = F6nn where nn is the numeric value (00-99) for the number
of characters the cursor should be moved back.

Move the cursor to the beginning


F7 Move the cursor to the first character in the input message. Syntax =
F7.

Move the cursor to the end


EA Move the cursor to the last character in the input message. Syntax =
EA.

Search Commands

Search forward for a character


F8 Search the input message forward for “xx” character from the current
cursor position, leaving the cursor pointing to the “xx” character.
Syntax = F8xx where xx stands for the search character’s hex value for
the CP1252 character.
Refer to the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3 for
decimal, hex and character codes.
F8 Example: Send bar code data that starts after a particular
character

Search for the letter “D” in bar codes and send all the data that follows,
including the “D.” Using the bar code above:
Command string: F844F10D
F8 is the “Search forward for a character” command
44 is the hex value for “D”
F1 is the “Send all characters” command
0D is the hex value for a CR
The data is output as: DEFGHIJ
<CR>

5-8
Search backward for a character
F9 Search the input message backward for “xx” character from the current
cursor position, leaving the cursor pointing to the “xx” character. Syntax
= F9xx where xx stands for the search character’s hex value for the
CP1252 character.
Refer to the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3 for
decimal, hex and character codes.

Search forward for a string


B0 Search forward for “s” string from the current cursor position, leaving
cursor pointing to “s” string. Syntax = B0nnnnS where nnnn is the string
length (up to 9999), and S consists of the ASCII hex value of each
character in the match string. For example, B0000454657374 will
search forward for the first occurrence of the 4 character string “Test.”
Refer to the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3 for
decimal, hex and character codes.
B0 Example: Send bar code data that starts after a string of char-
acters

Search for the letters “FGH” in bar codes and send all the data that fol-
lows, including “FGH.” Using the bar code above:
Command string: B00003464748F10D
B0 is the “Search forward for a string” command
0003 is the string length (3 characters)
46 is the hex value for “F”
47 is the hex value for “G”
48 is the hex value for “H”
F1 is the “Send all characters” command
0D is the hex value for a CR
The data is output as: FGHIJ
<CR>

Search backward for a string


B1 Search backward for “s” string from the current cursor position, leaving
cursor pointing to “s” string. Syntax = B1nnnnS where nnnn is the string
length (up to 9999), and S consists of the ASCII hex value of each
character in the match string. For example, B1000454657374 will
search backward for the first occurrence of the 4 character string “Test.”
Refer to the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3 for
decimal, hex and character codes.

5-9
Search forward for a non-matching character
E6 Search the input message forward for the first non-“xx” character from
the current cursor position, leaving the cursor pointing to the non-“xx”
character. Syntax = E6xx where xx stands for the search character’s
hex value for the CP1252 character. Refer to the ASCII Conversion
Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3 for decimal, hex and character
codes.
E6 Example: Remove zeroes at the beginning of bar code data

This example shows a bar code that has been zero filled. You may
want to ignore the zeroes and send all the data that follows. E6
searches forward for the first character that is not zero, then sends all
the data after, followed by a carriage return. Using the bar code
above:
Command string: E630F10D
E6 is the “Search forward for a non-matching character” command
30 is the hex value for 0
F1 is the “Send all characters” command
0D is the hex value for a CR
The data is output as: 37692
<CR>

Search backward for a non-matching character


E7 Search the input message backward for the first non-“xx” character
from the current cursor position, leaving the cursor pointing to the non-
“xx” character. Syntax = E7xx where xx stands for the search
character’s hex value for the CP1252 character. Refer to the ASCII
Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3 for decimal, hex and
character codes.

Miscellaneous Commands

Suppress characters
FB Suppress all occurrences of up to 15 different characters, starting at the
current cursor position, as the cursor is advanced by other commands.
When the FC command is encountered, the suppress function is
terminated. The cursor is not moved by the FB command.
Syntax = FBnnxxyy . .zz where nn is a count of the number of
suppressed characters in the list, and xxyy .. zz is the list of characters
to be suppressed.

5 - 10
FB Example: Remove spaces in bar code data

This example shows a bar code that has spaces in the data. You may
want to remove the spaces before sending the data. Using the bar
code above:
Command string: FB0120F10D
FB is the “Suppress characters” command
01 is the number of character types to be suppressed
20 is the hex value for a space
F1 is the “Send all characters” command
0D is the hex value for a CR
The data is output as: 34567890
<CR>

Stop suppressing characters


FC Disables suppress filter and clear all suppressed characters. Syntax =
FC.

Replace characters
E4 Replaces up to 15 characters in the output message, without moving
the cursor. Replacement continues until the E5 command is
encountered. Syntax = E4nnxx1xx2yy1yy2...zz1zz2 where nn is the total
count of of the number of characters in the list (characters to be
replaced plus replacement characters); xx1 defines characters to be
replaced and xx2 defines replacement characters, continuing through
zz1 and zz2.
E4 Example: Replace zeroes with CRs in bar code data

If the bar code has characters that the host application does not want
included, you can use the E4 command to replace those characters
with something else. In this example, you will replace the zeroes in the
bar code above with carriage returns.
Command string: E402300DF10D
E4 is the “Replace characters” command
02 is the total count of characters to be replaced, plus the replacement
characters (0 is replaced by CR, so total characters = 2)
30 is the hex value for 0
0D is the hex value for a CR (the character that will replace the 0)

5 - 11
F1 is the “Send all characters” command
0D is the hex value for a CR
The data is output as: 1234
5678
ABC
<CR>

Stop replacing characters


E5 Terminates character replacement. Syntax = E5.

Compare characters
FE Compare the character in the current cursor position to the character
“xx.” If characters are equal, move the cursor forward one position.
Syntax = FExx where xx stands for the comparison character’s hex
value for the CP1252 character.
Refer to the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3 for
decimal, hex and character codes.

Compare string
B2 Compare the string in the input message to the string “s.” If the strings
are equal, move the cursor forward past the end of the string. Syntax
= B2nnnnS where nnnn is the string length (up to 9999), and S consists
of the ASCII hex value of each character in the match string. For
example, B2000454657374 will compare the string at the current
cursor position with the 4 character string “Test.”
Refer to the ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3 for
decimal, hex and character codes.

Check for a number


EC Check to make sure there is an ASCII number at the current cursor
position. The format is aborted if the character is not numeric.
EC Example: Only output the data if the bar code begins with a
number
If you want only data from bar codes that begin with a number, you can
use EC to check for the number.
Command string: ECF10D
EC is the “Check for a number” command
F1 is the “Send all characters” command
0D is the hex value for a CR

If this bar code is read, the next data format,

if there is one, will be used on the data. If there is no other format, the
format fails and the raw data is output as AB1234.

5 - 12
If this bar code is read: the data is output as:

1234AB
<CR>

Check for non-numeric character


ED Check to make sure there is a non-numeric ASCII character at the
current cursor position. The format is aborted if the character is
numeric.
ED Example: Only output the data if the bar code begins with a
letter
If you want only data from bar codes that begin with a letter, you can
use ED to check for the letter.
Command string: EDF10D
ED is the “Check for a non-numeric character” command
F1 is the “Send all characters” command
0D is the hex value for a CR

If this bar code is read, the next data format, if

there is one, will be used on this data. If there is no other format, the
format fails and the raw data is output as 1234AB.

If this bar code is read: the data is output as:

AB1234
<CR>

Insert a delay
EF Inserts a delay of up to 49,995 milliseconds (in multiples of 5), starting
from the current cursor position. Syntax = EFnnnn where nnnn stands
for the delay in 5ms increments, up to 9999. This command can only
be used with keyboard emulation.

5 - 13
Data Format Editor

Enter Data Format

* Default Data Format

Clear One Data Format

Clear All Data Formats

Save

Discard

Data Formatter
When Data Formatter is turned off, the bar code data is output to the host as
read (including prefixes and suffixes). Choose one of the following options.

5 - 14
Default = Data Formatter On.

* Data Formatter On,


but Not Required

Data Formatter Off

When Data Formatter is required, all input data must conform to an edited for-
mat or the scanner does not transmit the input data to the host device.

Data Format On, Format Required

5 - 15
5 - 16
6 Symbologies

Introduction
This programming section contains the following menu selections. Refer to
Chapter 9 for settings and defaults.

• All Symbologies • GS1 DataBar Expanded


• China Post Code • Interleaved 2 of 5
• Codabar • Label Code
• Codablock F • Matrix 2 of 5
• Code 11 • MSI
• Code 39 • Plessey Code
• Straight 2 of 5 IATA (two-bar
• Code 32 Pharmaceutical (PARAF) start/stop)
• Straight 2 of 5 Industrial
• Code 49 (three-bar start/stop)
• Code 93 • Telepen
• Code 128 • Trioptic Code
• UPC-A/EAN-13 with Extended
Coupon Code • UPC A

• EAN/JAN 8 • UPC E
• Straight 2 of 5 IATA (two-bar
• GS1 DataBar Omnidirectional start/stop)
• Straight 2 of 5 Industrial
• GS1 DataBar Limited (three-bar start/stop)

6-1
All Symbologies
If you want to decode all the symbologies allowable for your scanner, scan the
All Symbologies On code. If on the other hand, you want to decode only a
particular symbology, scan All Symbologies Off followed by the On symbol for
that particular symbology.

All Symbologies On

All Symbologies Off

Message Length
You are able to set the valid reading length of some of the bar code symbologies.
If the data length of the scanned bar code doesn’t match the valid reading length,
the scanner will issue an error beep. You may wish to set the same value for
minimum and maximum length to force the scanner to read fixed length bar code
data. This helps reduce the chances of a misread.

6-2
EXAMPLE: Decode only those bar codes with a count of 9-20 characters.
Min. length = 09 Max. length = 20
EXAMPLE: Decode only those bar codes with a count of 15 characters.
Min. length = 15 Max. length = 15
For a value other than the minimum and maximum message length defaults,
scan the bar codes included in the explanation of the symbology, then scan the
digit value of the message length and Save bar codes on the inside the back
cover of this manual. The minimum and maximum lengths and the defaults are
included with the respective symbologies.

Codabar
<Default All Codabar Settings>

Codabar

*On

Off

Codabar Start/Stop Characters


Start/Stop characters identify the leading and trailing ends of the bar code. You
may either transmit, or not transmit Start/Stop characters.

6-3
Default = Don’t Transmit.

Transmit

* Don’t Transmit

Codabar Check Character


Codabar check characters are created using different “modulos.” You can pro-
gram the scanner to read only Codabar bar codes with Modulo 16 check char-
acters. Default = No Check Character.
No Check Character indicates that the scanner reads and transmits bar code
data with or without a check character.
When Check Character is set to Validate and Transmit, the scanner will only
read Codabar bar codes printed with a check character, and will transmit this
character at the end of the scanned data.
When Check Character is set to Validate, but Don’t Transmit, the unit will only
read Codabar bar codes printed with a check character, but will not transmit the
check character with the scanned data.

* No Check Character

Validate Modulo 16, but


Don’t Transmit

Validate Modulo 16 and Transmit

6-4
Codabar Concatenation
Codabar supports symbol concatenation. When you enable concatenation, the
scanner looks for a Codabar symbol having a “D” start character, adjacent to a
symbol having a “D” stop character. In this case the two messages are concat-
enated into one with the “D” characters omitted.
Character Start Stop Start Stop

Codabar

A12D D34A

Select Require to prevent the scanner from decoding a single “D” Codabar sym-
bol without its companion. This selection has no effect on Codabar symbols
without Stop/Start D characters.

On

* Off

Require

6-5
Codabar Message Length
Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 2-60. Minimum Default = 4, Maximum Default = 60.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

6-6
Code 39
< Default All Code 39 Settings >

Code 39

*On

Off

Code 39 Start/Stop Characters


Start/Stop characters identify the leading and trailing ends of the bar code. You
may either transmit, or not transmit Start/Stop characters. Default = Don’t
Transmit.

Transmit

* Don’t Transmit

Code 39 Check Character


No Check Character indicates that the scanner reads and transmits bar code
data with or without a check character.
When Check Character is set to Validate, but Don’t Transmit, the unit only
reads Code 39 bar codes printed with a check character, but will not transmit
the check character with the scanned data.

6-7
When Check Character is set to Validate and Transmit, the scanner only reads
Code 39 bar codes printed with a check character, and will transmit this charac-
ter at the end of the scanned data. Default = No Check Character.

* No Check Character

Validate, but Don’t Transmit

Validate and Transmit

Code 39 Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 0-48. Minimum Default = 0, Maximum Default = 48.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

Code 39 Append
This function allows the scanner to append the data from several Code 39 bar
codes together before transmitting them to the host computer. When this func-
tion is enabled, the scanner stores those Code 39 bar codes that start with a
space (excluding the start and stop symbols), and does not immediately trans-
mit the data. The scanner stores the data in the order in which the bar codes

6-8
are read, deleting the first space from each. The scanner transmits the
appended data when it reads a Code 39 bar code that starts with a character
other than a space. Default = Off.

On

*Off

Code 32 Pharmaceutical (PARAF)


Code 32 Pharmaceutical is a form of the Code 39 symbology used by Italian
pharmacies. This symbology is also known as PARAF. Default = Off.

On

* Off

6-9
Full ASCII
If Full ASCII Code 39 decoding is enabled, certain character pairs within the bar
code symbol will be interpreted as a single character. For example: $V will be
decoded as the ASCII character SYN, and /C will be decoded as the ASCII
character #. Default = Off.

NUL %U DLE $P SP SPACE 0 0 @ %V P P ‘ %W p +P


SOH $A DC1 $Q ! /A 1 1 A A Q Q a +A q +Q
STX $B DC2 $R “ /B 2 2 B B R R b +B r +R
ETX $C DC3 $S # /C 3 3 C C S S c +C s +S
EOT $D DC4 $T $ /D 4 4 D D T T d +D t +T
ENQ $E NAK $U % /E 5 5 E E U U e +E u +U
ACK $F SYN $V & /F 6 6 F F V V f +F v +V
BEL $G ETB $W ‘ /G 7 7 G G W W g +G w +W
BS $H CAN $X ( /H 8 8 H H X X h +H x +X
HT $I EM $Y ) /I 9 9 I I Y Y i +I y +Y
LF $J SUB $Z * /J : /Z J J Z Z j +J z +Z
VT $K ESC %A + /K ; %F K K [ %K k +K { %P
FF $L FS %B , /L < %G L L \ %L l +L | %Q
CR $M GS %C - - = %H M M ] %M m +M } %R
SO $N RS %D . . > %I N N ^ %N n +N ~ %S
SI $O US %E / /O ? %J O O _ %O o +O DEL %T

Character pairs /M and /N decode as a minus sign and period respectively.


Character pairs /P through /Y decode as 0 through 9.

Full ASCII On

* Full ASCII Off

Code 39 Code Page


Code pages define the mapping of character codes to characters. If the data
received does not display with the proper characters, it may be because the bar
code being scanned was created using a code page that is different from the
one the host program is expecting. If this is the case, scan the bar code below,
select the code page with which the bar codes were created from the chart,

6 - 10
ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3, and scan the value and
the Save bar code from the inside the back cover of this manual. The data
characters should then appear properly.

Code 39 Code Page

Interleaved 2 of 5
< Default All Interleaved 2 of 5 Settings >

Interleaved 2 of 5

* On

Off

Check Digit
No Check Digit indicates that the scanner reads and transmits bar code data
with or without a check digit.
When Check Digit is set to Validate, but Don’t Transmit, the unit only reads
Interleaved 2 of 5 bar codes printed with a check digit, but will not transmit the
check digit with the scanned data.

6 - 11
When Check Digit is set to Validate and Transmit, the scanner only reads
Interleaved 2 of 5 bar codes printed with a check digit, and will transmit this digit
at the end of the scanned data. Default = No Check Digit.

* No Check Digit

Validate, but Don’t Transmit

Validate and Transmit

Interleaved 2 of 5 Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 2-80. Minimum Default = 4, Maximum Default = 80.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

6 - 12
Code 93
< Default All Code 93 Settings >

Code 93

* On

Off

Code 93 Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 0-80. Minimum Default = 0, Maximum Default = 80.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

Code 93 Code Page


Code pages define the mapping of character codes to characters. If the data
received does not display with the proper characters, it may be because the bar
code being scanned was created using a code page that is different from the
one the host program is expecting. If this is the case, scan the bar code below,

6 - 13
select the code page with which the bar codes were created from the chart,
ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3, and scan the value and
the Save bar code from the inside the back cover of this manual. The data
characters should then appear properly.

Code 93 Code Page

6 - 14
Straight 2 of 5 Industrial (three-bar start/stop)
<Default All Straight 2 of 5 Settings>

Straight 2 of 5 Industrial

* On

Off

Straight 2 of 5 Industrial Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 1-48. Minimum Default = 4, Maximum Default = 48.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

6 - 15
Straight 2 of 5 IATA (two-bar start/stop)
<Default All Code IATA 2 of 5 Settings>

Straight 2 of 5 IATA

On

Off

Straight 2 of 5 IATA Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 1-48. Minimum Default = 4, Maximum Default = 48.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

6 - 16
Matrix 2 of 5
<Default All Matrix 2 of 5 Settings>

Matrix 2 of 5

On

* Off

Matrix 2 of 5 Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 1-80. Minimum Default = 4, Maximum Default = 80.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

6 - 17
Code 11
<Default All Code 11 Settings>

Code 11

On

* Off

Check Digits Required


This option sets whether 1 or 2 check digits are required with Code 11 bar
codes. Default = Two Check Digits.

One Check Digit

* Two Check Digits

6 - 18
Code 11 Message Length
Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 1-80. Minimum Default = 4, Maximum Default = 80.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

Code 128
<Default All Code 128 Settings>

Code 128

* On

Off

ISBT 128 Concatenation


In 1994 the International Society of Blood Transfusion (ISBT) ratified a standard
for communicating critical blood information in a uniform manner. The use of
ISBT formats requires a paid license. The ISBT 128 Application Specification
describes 1) the critical data elements for labeling blood products, 2) the current
recommendation to use Code 128 due to its high degree of security and its

6 - 19
space-efficient design, 3) a variation of Code 128 that supports concatenation
of neighboring symbols, and 4) the standard layout for bar codes on a blood
product label. Use the bar codes below to turn concatenation on or off. Default
=Off.

On

* Off

Code 128 Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 0-80. Minimum Default = 0, Maximum Default = 80.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

Code 128 Code Page


Code pages define the mapping of character codes to characters. If the data
received does not display with the proper characters, it may be because the bar
code being scanned was created using a code page that is different from the
one the host program is expecting. If this is the case, scan the bar code below,
select the code page with which the bar codes were created from the chart,
ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252), page A-3, and scan the value and
the Save bar code from the inside the back cover of this manual. The data
characters should then appear properly.

6 - 20
Code 128 Code Page

Code 128 Function Code Transmit


By default, Code 128 function codes are not transmitted with Code 128 bar
code data. However, if you wish to transmit Code 128 function codes with the
bar code data, scan the Function Codes On bar code, below. Default = Off

* Function Codes Off

Function Codes On

Telepen
<Default All Telepen Settings>

6 - 21
Telepen

On

* Off

Telepen Output
Using AIM Telepen Output, the scanner reads symbols with start/stop pattern 1
and decodes them as standard full ASCII (start/stop pattern 1). When Original
Telepen Output is selected, the scanner reads symbols with start/stop pattern 1
and decodes them as compressed numeric with optional full ASCII (start/stop
pattern 2). Default = AIM Telepen Output.

*AIM Telepen Output

Original Telepen Output

6 - 22
Telepen Message Length
Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 1-60. Minimum Default = 1, Maximum Default = 60.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

6 - 23
UPC A
<Default All UPC A Settings>

UPC A

* On

Off

UPC A Check Digit


This selection allows you to specify whether the check digit should be transmit-
ted at the end of the scanned data or not. Default = On.

* On

Off

6 - 24
UPC A Number System
The numeric system digit of a U.P.C. symbol is normally transmitted at the
beginning of the scanned data, but the unit can be programmed so it will not
transmit it. Default = On.

* On

Off

UPC A Addenda
This selection adds 2 or 5 digits to the end of all scanned UPC A data.
Default = Off for both 2 Digit and 5 Digit Addenda.

2 Digit Addenda On

* 2 Digit Addenda Off

5 Digit Addenda On

* 5 Digit Addenda Off

6 - 25
UPC A Addenda Required
When Addenda Required is set to on, the scanner will only read UPC A bar
codes that have addenda. Default = Not Required.

Required

* Not Required

UPC A Addenda Separator


When this feature is on, there is a space between the data from the bar code
and the data from the addenda. When turned off, there is no space.
Default = On.

* On

Off

6 - 26
UPC-A/EAN-13
with Extended Coupon Code
Use the following codes to enable or disable UPC-A and EAN-13 with Extended
Coupon Code. Default = On.

On

* Off

6 - 27
UPC E
<Default All UPC E Settings>

UPC E0 and UPC E1


Most U.P.C. bar codes lead with the 0 number system. For these codes, use
the UPC E0 selection. If you need to read codes that lead with the 1 number
system, use the UPC E1 selection. Default = On (UPC E0) and Off (UPC E1).

* UPC E0 On

UPC E0 Off

UPC E1 On

* UPC E1 Off

6 - 28
UPC E0 and UPC E1 Expand
UPC E Expand expands the UPC E code to the 12 digit, UPC A format.
Default = Off.

On

* Off

UPC E0 and UPC E1 Addenda Required


When Addenda Required is set to on, the scanner will only read UPC E bar
codes that have addenda. Default = Not Required.

Required

* Not Required

6 - 29
UPC E0 and UPC E1 Addenda Separator
When this feature is on, there is a space between the data from the bar code
and the data from the addenda. When turned off, there is no space.
Default = On.

* On

Off

UPC E0 Check Digit


Check Digit specifies whether the check digit should be transmitted at the end
of the scanned data or not. Default = On.

* On

Off

6 - 30
UPC E0 Number System
The numeric system digit of a U.P.C. symbol is normally transmitted at the
beginning of the scanned data, but the unit can be programmed so it will not
transmit it. Default = On.

* On

Off

UPC E0 Addenda
This selection adds 2 or 5 digits to the end of all scanned UPC E data.
Default = Off for both 2 Digit and 5 Digit Addenda.

2 Digit Addenda On

* 2 Digit Addenda Off

5 Digit Addenda On

* 5 Digit Addenda Off

6 - 31
EAN/JAN 13
<Default All EAN/JAN Settings>

EAN/JAN 13

* On

Off

EAN/JAN 13 Check Digit


This selection allows you to specify whether the check digit should be transmit-
ted at the end of the scanned data or not. Default = On.

* On

Off

6 - 32
EAN/JAN 13 Addenda
This selection adds 2 or 5 digits to the end of all scanned EAN/JAN 13 data.
Default = Off for both 2 Digit and 5 Digit Addenda.

2 Digit Addenda On

* 2 Digit Addenda Off

5 Digit Addenda On

* 5 Digit Addenda Off

EAN/JAN 13 Addenda Required


When Addenda Required is set to on, the scanner will only read EAN/JAN 13
bar codes that have addenda. Default = Not Required.

Required

* Not Required

6 - 33
EAN/JAN 13 Addenda Separator
When this feature is on, there is a space between the data from the bar code
and the data from the addenda. When turned off, there is no space.
Default = On.

* On

Off
Note: If you want to enable or disable EAN13 with Extended Coupon Code,
refer to UPC-A/EAN-13 with Extended Coupon Code on page 6-27.

ISBN Translate
This selection causes EAN-13 Bookland symbols to be translated into their
equivalent ISBN number format. Default = Off.

On

* Off

EAN/JAN 8
<Default All EAN/JAN 8 Settings>

6 - 34
EAN/JAN 8

* On

Off

Off

EAN/JAN 8 Check Digit


This selection allows you to specify whether the check digit should be transmit-
ted at the end of the scanned data or not. Default = On.

* On

Off

6 - 35
EAN/JAN 8 Addenda
This selection adds 2 or 5 digits to the end of all scanned EAN/JAN 8 data.
Default = Off for both 2 Digit and 5 Digit Addenda.

2 Digit Addenda On

* 2 Digit Addenda Off

5 Digit Addenda On

* 5 Digit Addenda

* 5 Digit Addenda Off

EAN/JAN 8 Addenda Required


When Addenda Required is set to on, the scanner will only read EAN/JAN 8 bar
codes that have addenda. Default = Not Required.

Required

* Not Required

6 - 36
EAN/JAN 8 Addenda Separator
When this feature is on, there is a space between the data from the bar code
and the data from the addenda. When turned off, there is no space.
Default = On.

* On

Off

MSI
<Default All MSI Settings>

MSI

On

* Off

MSI Check Character


Different types of check characters are used with MSI bar codes. You can
program the scanner to read MSI bar codes with Type 10 check characters.
Default = Validate Type 10, but Don’t Transmit.

6 - 37
When Check Character is set to Validate and Transmit, the scanner will only
read MSI bar codes printed with the specified type check character, and will
transmit this character at the end of the scanned data.
When Check Character is set to Validate, but Don’t Transmit, the unit will only
read MSI bar codes printed with the specified type check character, but will not
transmit the check character with the scanned data.

* Validate Type 10, but Don’t


Transmit

Validate Type 10 and Transmit

MSI Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 4-48. Minimum Default = 4, Maximum Default = 48.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

Plessey Code
<Default All Plessey Code Settings>

6 - 38
Plessey Code

On

* Off

Plessey Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 4-48. Minimum Default = 4, Maximum Default = 48.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

GS1 DataBar Omnidirectional


< Default All GS1 DataBar Omnidirectional Settings >

6 - 39
GS1 DataBar Omnidirectional

* On

Off

GS1 DataBar Limited


< Default All GS1 DataBar Limited Settings >

GS1 DataBar Limited

* On

Off

GS1 DataBar Expanded


< Default All GS1 DataBar Expanded Settings >

6 - 40
GS1 DataBar Expanded

* On

Off

GS1 DataBar Expanded Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 4-74. Minimum Default = 4, Maximum Default = 74.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

China Post Code


<Default All China Post Code Settings>

6 - 41
China Post Code

On

* Off

China Post Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 2-80. Minimum Default = 4, Maximum Default = 80.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

6 - 42
Korea Post Code
<Default All Korea Post Code Settings>

Korea Post Code

On

* Off

Korea Post Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 2-80. Minimum Default = 4, Maximum Default = 48.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

6 - 43
Codablock F
<Default All Codablock F Settings>

Codablock F

On

* Off

Codablock F Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 1-2048. Minimum Default = 1, Maximum Default = 2048.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

6 - 44
Code 49
<Default All Code 49 Settings>

Code 49

On

* Off

Code 49 Message Length


Scan the bar codes below to change the message length. Refer to Message
Length on page 6-2 for additional information. Minimum and Maximum
lengths = 1-81. Minimum Default = 1, Maximum Default = 81.

Minimum Message Length

Maximum Message Length

6 - 45
Trioptic Code
Trioptic Code is used for labeling magnetic storage media.

On

Off

GS1 Emulation
The scanner can automatically format the output from any GS1 data carrier to
emulate what would be encoded in an equivalent GS1-128 or GS1 DataBar
symbol. GS1 data carriers include UPC-A and UPC-E, EAN-13 and EAN-8,
ITF-14, GS1-128, and GS1-128 DataBar and GS1Composites. If GS1-128
Emulation is selected, the AIM Symbology Identifier will be reported as “]C1”. If
GS1 DataBar Emulation is selected, the AIM Symbology Identifier will be
reported as “]e0.” Any application that accepts GS1 data can be simplified
since it only needs to recognize one data carrier type. Default = GS1 Emulation
Off.

GS1 Data Bar Emulation

GS1-128 Emulation

* GS1 Emulation Off

6 - 46
Label Code
The standard Label Code is used in library situations. Default = Off.

On

* Off

6 - 47
6 - 48
7 Interface Keys

Keyboard Function Relationships


The following Keyboard Function Code, Hex/ASCII Value, and Full ASCII
“CTRL”+ relationships apply to all terminals that can be used with the scanner.
Refer to Windows Mode Control + X Mode On (page 2-17) to enable Control +
ASCII mode.

Function Code HEX/ASCII Value Full ASCII “CTRL” +


NUL 00 2
SOH 01 A
STX 02 B
ETX 03 C
EOT 04 D
ENQ 05 E
ACK 06 F
BEL 07 G
BS 08 H
HT 09 I
LF 0A J
VT 0B K
FF 0C L
CR 0D M
SO 0E N
SI 0F O
DLE 10 P
DC1 11 Q
DC2 12 R
DC3 13 S
DC4 14 T
NAK 15 U
SYN 16 V
ETB 17 W
CAN 18 X
EM 19 Y
SUB 1A Z
ESC 1B [
FS 1C \
GS 1D ]
RS 1E 6
US 1F -

7-1
Supported Interface Keys
IBM AT/XT and
PS/2 Compatibles,
WYSE PC/AT
ASCII HEX Supported Keys
NUL 00 Reserved
SOH 01 Enter (KP)
STX 02 Cap Lock
ETX 03 ALT make
EOT 04 ALT break
ENQ 05 CTRL make
ACK 06 CTRL break
BEL 07 CR/Enter
BS 08 Reserved
HT 09 Tab
LF 0A Reserved
VT 0B Tab
FF 0C Delete
CR 0D CR/Enter
SO 0E Insert
SI 0F Escape
DLE 10 F11
DC1 11 Home
DC2 12 Print
DC3 13 Back Space
DC4 14 Back Tab
NAK 15 F12
SYN 16 F1
ETB 17 F2
CAN 18 F3
EM 19 F4
SUB 1A F5
ESC 1B F6
FS 1C F7
GS 1D F8
RS 1E F9
US 1F F10
* IBM 3191/92, 3471/72, 3196/97, 3476/77,
Telex (all models)

7-2
Supported Interface Keys
Apple Mac/iMac
ASCII HEX Supported Keys
NUL 00 Reserved
SOH 01 Enter/Numpad Enter
STX 02 CAPS
ETX 03 ALT make
EOT 04 ALT break
ENQ 05 CNTRL make
ACK 06 CNTRL break
BEL 07 RETURN
BS 08 APPLE make
HT 09 TAB
LF 0A APPLE break
VT 0B TAB
FF 0C Del
CR 0D RETURN
SO 0E Ins Help
SI 0F ESC
DLE 10 F11
DC1 11 Home
DC2 12 Prnt Scrn
DC3 13 BACKSPACE
DC4 14 LSHIFT TAB
NAK 15 F12
SYN 16 F1
ETB 17 F2
CAN 18 F3
EM 19 F4
SUB 1A F5
ESC 1B F6
FS 1C F7
GS 1D F8
RS 1E F9
US 1F F10
DEL 7F BACKSPACE

7-3
7-4
8 Utilities

To Add a Test Code I.D. Prefix to All Symbologies


This selection allows you to turn on transmission of a Code I.D. before the
decoded symbology. (See the Symbology Charts (page A-1) for the single
character code that identifies each symbology.) This action first clears all cur-
rent prefixes, then programs a Code I.D. prefix for all symbologies. This is a
temporary setting that will be removed when the unit is power cycled.

Add Code I.D. Prefix to


All Symbologies (Temporary)

Show Software Revision


Scan the bar code below to output the current software revision, unit serial num-
ber, and other product information.

Show Revision

Show Data Format


Scan the bar code below to show current data format settings.

DFMBK3?.
Data Format Settings

EZConfig-Scanning Introduction
EZConfig-Scanning provides a wide range of PC-based programming functions
that can be performed on a scanner connected to your PC's COM port. EZCon-
fig-Scanning allows you to download upgrades to the scanner's firmware,

8-1
change programmed parameters, and create and print programming bar codes.
Using EZConfig-Scanning, you can even save/open the programming parame-
ters for a scanner. This saved file can be e-mailed or, if required, you can cre-
ate a single bar code that contains all the customized programming parameters
and mail or fax that bar code to any location. Users in other locations can scan
the bar code to load in the customized programming.
To communicate with a scanner, EZConfig-Scanning requires that the PC have
at least one available serial communication port, or a serial port emulation using
a physical USB port. If you are using the serial port and RS232 cable, an exter-
nal power supply is required. When using a USB serial port emulation, only a
USB cable is required.

EZConfig-Scanning Operations
The EZConfig-Scanning software performs the following operations:
Scan Data
Scan Data allows you to scan bar codes and display the bar code data
in a window. Scan Data lets you send serial commands to the scanner
and receive scanner response that can be seen in the Scan Data win-
dow. The data displayed in the Scan Data window can either be saved
in a file or printed.
Configure
Configure displays the programming and configuration data of the
scanner. The scanner's programming and configuration data is
grouped into different categories. Each category is displayed as a tree
item under the "Configure" tree node in the application explorer. When
one of these tree nodes is clicked, the right-hand side is loaded with
the parameters' form belonging to that particular category. The "Con-
figure" tree option has all the programming and configuration parame-
ters specified for a scanner. You can set or modify these parameters
as required. You can later write the modified settings to the scanner,
or save them to a dcf file.

Installing EZConfig-Scanning from the Web


1. Access the Honeywell web site at www.honeywellaidc.com
2. Click on the Resources tab. Select Download.
3. Click on the dropdown for Select Product Number and select the
number of your product.
4. Under Tools and Utilities, click on the listing for EZConfig for
Scanning.

8-2
5. Follow the security directions as prompted on the screen and click on
Download.
6. When prompted, select Save, and save the file to your desktop.
7. Double click on the EZConfig-Scanning zip file.
8. Double click on the EZConfig-Scanning Setup.exe file. Select Extract
All.
9. Go to the EZConfig-Scanning folder that has been created on your
desktop and double click on the EZConfig-Scanning Setup.exe file.
10. Follow the screen prompts to install the EZConfig-Scanning program.
11. If you’ve selected the defaults during installation, you can click on the
shortcut on your desktop to start EZConfig for Scanning.
Once the software is installed, you may delete the zip file and the EZCon-
fig-Scanning folder from your desktop.

Resetting the Standard Product Defaults


This selection erases all your settings and resets the scanner to the
! original factory defaults.

If you aren’t sure what programming options are in your scanner, or you’ve
changed some options and want to restore the scanner to factory default set-
tings, first scan the Remove Custom Defaults bar code, then scan Activate
Defaults. This resets the scanner to the factory default settings.

Remove Custom Defaults

Activate Defaults

The Serial Programming Commands, beginning on page 9-1 lists the standard
product default settings for each of the commands (indicated by an asterisk (*)
on the programming pages).

8-3
8-4
9
Serial Programming Commands

The serial programming commands can be used in place of the programming


bar codes. Both the serial commands and the programming bar codes will pro-
gram the scanner. For complete descriptions and examples of each serial pro-
gramming command, refer to the corresponding programming bar code in this
manual.
The device must be set to an RS-232 interface (see page 2-2). The following
commands can be sent via a PC com port using terminal emulation software.

Conventions
The following conventions are used for menu and query command descriptions:
parameterA label representing the actual value you should send as part of a
command.
[option] An optional part of a command.
{Data} Alternatives in a command.
bold Names of menus, menu commands, buttons, dialog boxes, and
windows that appear on the screen.

Menu Command Syntax


Menu commands have the following syntax (spaces have been used for clarity
only):
Prefix Tag SubTag {Data} [, SubTag {Data}] [; Tag SubTag {Data}] […] Storage
Prefix Three ASCII characters: SYN M CR (ASCII 22,77,13).
Tag A 3 character case-insensitive field that identifies the desired menu
command group. For example, all RS-232 configuration settings
are identified with a Tag of 232.
SubTag A 3 character case-insensitive field that identifies the desired menu
command within the tag group. For example, the SubTag for the
RS-232 baud rate is BAD.
Data The new value for a menu setting, identified by the Tag and Sub-
Tag.
Storage A single character that specifies the storage table to which the
command is applied. An exclamation point (!) performs the com-
mand’s operation on the device’s volatile menu configuration table.
A period (.) performs the command’s operation on the device’s
non-volatile menu configuration table. Use the non-volatile table
only for semi-permanent changes you want saved through a power
cycle.

9-1
Query Commands
Several special characters can be used to query the device about its settings.
^ What is the default value for the setting(s).

? What is the device’s current value for the setting(s).


* What is the range of possible values for the setting(s). (The de-
vice’s response uses a dash (-) to indicate a continuous range of
values. A pipe (|) separates items in a list of non-continuous val-
ues.)
Tag Field Usage
When a query is used in place of a Tag field, the query applies to the entire set
of commands available for the particular storage table indicated by the Storage
field of the command. In this case, the SubTag and Data fields should not be
used because they are ignored by the device.
SubTag Field Usage
When a query is used in place of a SubTag field, the query applies only to the
subset of commands available that match the Tag field. In this case, the Data
field should not be used because it is ignored by the device.
Data Field Usage
When a query is used in place of the Data field, the query applies only to the
specific command identified by the Tag and SubTag fields.

Concatenation of Multiple Commands


Multiple commands can be issued within one Prefix/Storage sequence. Only
the Tag, SubTag, and Data fields must be repeated for each command in the
sequence. If additional commands are to be applied to the same Tag, then the
new command sequence is separated with a comma (,) and only the SubTag
and Data fields of the additional command are issued. If the additional com-
mand requires a different Tag field, the command is separated from previous
commands by a semicolon (;).

Responses
The device responds to serial commands with one of three responses:
ACK Indicates a good command which has been processed.
ENQ Indicates an invalid Tag or SubTag command.
NAK Indicates the command was good, but the Data field entry was out of
the allowable range for this Tag and SubTag combination, e.g., an entry
for a minimum message length of 100 when the field will only accept 2
characters.
When responding, the device echoes back the command sequence with the
status character inserted directly before each of the punctuation marks (the
period, exclamation point, comma, or semicolon) in the command.

9-2
Examples of Query Commands
In the following examples, a bracketed notation [ ] depicts a non-displayable
response.
Example: Example #1:What is the range of possible values for Codabar
Coding Enable?
Enter: cbrena*.
Response: CBRENA0-1[ACK]
This response indicates that Codabar Coding Enable (CBRENA) has a range of
values from 0 to 1 (off and on).
Example: Example #2: What is the default value for Codabar Coding Enable?
Enter: cbrena^.
Response: CBRENA1[ACK]
This response indicates that the default setting for Codabar Coding Enable
(CBRENA) is 1, or on.
Example: Example #3: What is the device’s current setting for Codabar
Coding Enable?
Enter: cbrena?.
Response: CBRENA1[ACK]
This response indicates that the device’s Codabar Coding Enable (CBRENA) is
set to 1, or on.
Example: Example #4: What are the device’s settings for all Codabar
selections?
Enter: cbr?.
Response: CBRENA1[ACK],
SSX0[ACK],
CK20[ACK],
CCT1[ACK],
MIN2[ACK],
MAX60[ACK],
DFT[ACK].
This response indicates that the device’s Codabar Coding Enable (CBRENA) is
set to 1, or on;
the Start/Stop Character (SSX) is set to 0, or Don’t Transmit;
the Check Character (CK2) is set to 0, or Not Required;
concatenation (CCT) is set to 1, or Enabled;
the Minimum Message Length (MIN) is set to 2 characters;
the Maximum Message Length (MAX) is set to 60 characters;
and the Default setting (DFT) has no value.

9-3
Trigger Commands
You can activate and deactivate the scanner with serial trigger commands.
First, the scanner must be put in Manual/Serial Trigger Mode either by scanning
the Manual/Serial Trigger Mode bar code (page 3-5), or by sending the Manual/
Serial Menu Command (page 9-12). Once the scanner is in serial trigger mode,
the trigger is activated and deactivated by sending the following commands:
Activate:SYN T CR
Deactivate:SYN U CR
The scanner scans until a bar code has been read, until the deactivate com-
mand is sent, or until the serial time-out has been reached (see Read Time-
Out on page 3-5 for a description, and the serial command on page 9-12).

Resetting the Standard Product Defaults


If you aren’t sure what programming options are in your scanner, or you’ve
changed some options and want the factory settings restored, scan the Stan-
dard Product Default Settings bar code below.

Standard Product Default Settings

The chart on the following pages lists the factory default settings for each of the
menu commands (indicated by an asterisk (*) on the programming pages).

9-4
Menu Commands

Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry

Product Default Settings


Setting Custom Set Custom Defaults MNUCDF 1-5
Defaults Save CustomDefaults DEFALT 1-5
Resetting the Custom Activate Custom DEFALT 1-6
Defaults Defaults
Programming the Interface
Plug and Play Codes Keyboard Wedge: IBM PAP_AT 2-1
PC AT and
Compatibles with CR
suffix
RS232 Serial Port PAP232 2-2
Plug and Play Codes: IBM Port 5B Interface PAPP5B 2-2
RS485 IBM Port 9B HHBCR-1 PAP9B1 2-2
Interface
IBM Port 17 Interface PAPP17 2-2
IBM Port 9B HHBCR-2 PAP9B2 2-2
Interface
Plug and Play Codes: USB IBM SurePos PAPSPH 2-4
IBM SurePos Handheld
USB IBM SurePos PAPSPT 2-4
Tabletop
Plug and Play Codes: USB Keyboard (PC) PAP124 2-5
USB USB Keyboard (Mac) PAP125 2-5
USB HID POS PAP131 2-5
USB Serial USB Serial Emulation PAP130 2-5
Commands CTS/RTS Emulation USBCTS1 2-6
On
*CTS/RTS Emulation USBCTS0 2-6
Off
ACK/NAK Mode On USBACK1 2-6
*ACK/NAK Mode Off USBACK0 2-6

9-5
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Plug and Play Codes: Honeywell Bioptic Aux PAPBIO 2-6
Port
Datalogic Magellan PAPMAG 2-7
Bioptic Aux Port
Wincor Mode A PAPWMA 2-7
Program Keyboard *U.S.A. KBDCTY0 2-8
Country Albania KBDCTY35 2-8
Arabic KBDCTY91 2-8
Azeri (Cyrillic) KBDCTY81 2-8
Azeri (Latin) KBDCTY80 2-8
Belarus KBDCTY82 2-8
Belgium KBDCTY1 2-8
Bosnia KBDCTY33 2-8
Brazil KBDCTY16 2-8
Brazil (MS) KBDCTY59 2-8
Bulgaria (Cyrillic) KBDCTY52 2-8
Bulgaria (Latin) KBDCTY53 2-8
Canada (French KBDCTY54 2-9
legacy)
Canada (French) KBDCTY18 2-9
Canada (Multilingual) KBDCTY55 2-9
China KBDCTY92 2-9
Croatia KBDCTY32 2-9
Czech KBDCTY15 2-9

9-6
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Program Keyboard Czech (Programmers) KBDCTY40 2-9
Country (continued) Czech (QWERTY) KBDCTY39 2-9
Czech (QWERTZ) KBDCTY38 2-9
Denmark KBDCTY8 2-9
Dutch (Netherlands) KBDCTY11 2-9
Estonia KBDCTY41 2-9
Faroese KBDCTY83 2-9
Finland KBDCTY2 2-10
France KBDCTY3 2-10
Gaelic KBDCTY84 2-10
Germany KBDCTY4 2-10
Greek KBDCTY17 2-10
Greek (220 Latin) KBDCTY64 2-10
Greek (220) KBDCTY61 2-10
Greek (319 Latin) KBDCTY65 2-10
Greek (319) KBDCTY62 2-10
Greek (Latin) KBDCTY63 2-10
Greek (MS) KBDCTY66 2-10
Greek (Polytonic) KBDCTY60 2-10
Hebrew KBDCTY12 2-10
Hungarian (101 key) KBDCTY50 2-10
Hungary KBDCTY19 2-11
Iceland KBDCTY75 2-11
Ireland KBDCTY73 2-11
Italian (142) KBDCTY56 2-11
Italy KBDCTY5 2-11
Japan ASCII KBDCTY28 2-11
Kazakh KBDCTY78 2-11
Korea KBDCTY93 2-11
Kyrgyz (Cyrillic) KBDCTY79 2-11
Latin America KBDCTY14 2-11

9-7
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Program Keyboard Latvia KBDCTY42 2-11
Country (continued) Latvia (QWERTY) KBDCTY43 2-11
Lithuania KBDCTY44 2-11
Lithuania (IBM) KBDCTY45 2-11
Macedonia KBDCTY34 2-12
Malta KBDCTY74 2-12
Mongolian (Cyrillic) KBDCTY86 2-12
Norway KBDCTY9 2-12
Poland KBDCTY20 2-12
Polish (214) KBDCTY57 2-12
Polish (Programmers) KBDCTY58 2-12
Portugal KBDCTY13 2-12
Romania KBDCTY25 2-12
Russia KBDCTY26 2-12
Russian (MS) KBDCTY67 2-12
Russian (Typewriter) KBDCTY68 2-12
SCS KBDCTY21 2-12
Serbia (Cyrillic) KBDCTY37 2-13
Serbia (Latin) KBDCTY36 2-13
Slovakia KBDCTY22 2-13
Slovakia (QWERTY) KBDCTY49 2-13
Slovakia (QWERTZ) KBDCTY48 2-13
Slovenia KBDCTY31 2-13
Spain KBDCTY10 2-13
Spanish variation KBDCTY51 2-13
Sweden KBDCTY23 2-13
Switzerland (French) KBDCTY29 2-13
Switzerland (German) KBDCTY6 2-13
Tatar KBDCTY85 2-13
Thailand KBDCTY94 2-13

9-8
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Program Keyboard Turkey F KBDCTY27 2-14
Country (continued) Turkey Q KBDCTY24 2-14
Ukrainian KBDCTY76 2-14
United Kingdom KBDCTY7 2-14
United Stated (Dvorak KBDCTY89 2-14
right)
United States (Dvorak KBDCTY88 2-14
left)
United States (Dvorak) KBDCTY87 2-14
United States KBDCTY30 2-14
(International)
Uzbek (Cyrillic) KBDCTY77 2-14
Vietnam KBDCTY95 2-14
ALT Mode *Off KBDSTY0 2-15
4 Characters KBDALT0 2-15
Keyboard Style *Regular KBDALT7 2-15
Caps Lock KBDSTY1 2-15
Shift Lock KBDSTY2 2-15
Automatic Caps Lock KBDSTY6 2-16
Autocaps via KBDSTY7 2-16
NumLock
Emulate External KBDSTY5 2-16
Keyboard

9-9
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Keyboard Modifiers Windows Mode KBDCAS2 2-17
Control + X Mode On
*Control + X Off KBDCAS0 2-17
DOS Mode Control + KBDCAS1 2-17
X Mode On
Windows Mode Prefix/ KBDCAS3 2-17
Suffix Off
*Numeric Keypad Off KBDNPS0 2-17
Numeric Keypad On KBDNPS1 2-17
*Auto Direct Conn. Off KBDADC0 2-18
Auto Direct Conn. On KBDADC1 2-18
Serial Port Connection RS-232 PAP232 2-2
Baud Rate 300 BPS 232BAD0 2-19
600 BPS 232BAD1 2-19
1200 BPS 232BAD2 2-19
2400 BPS 232BAD3 2-19
4800 BPS 232BAD4 2-19
9600 BPS 232BAD5 2-19
19200 BPS 232BAD6 2-19
*38400 BPS 232BAD7 2-20
57600 BPS 232BAD8 2-20
115200 BPS 232BAD9 2-20

9 - 10
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Word Length: Data 7 Data, 1 Stop, Parity 232WRD3 2-21
Bits, Stop Bits, and Even
Parity 7 Data, 1 Stop, Parity 232WRD0 2-21
None
7 Data, 1 Stop, Parity 232WRD6 2-21
Odd
7 Data, 2 Stop, Parity 232WRD4 2-21
Even
7 Data, 2 Stop, Parity 232WRD1 2-21
None
7 Data, 2 Stop, Parity 232WRD7 2-21
Odd
8 Data, 1 Stop, Parity 232WRD5 2-21
Even
*8 Data, 1 Stop, Parity 232WRD2 2-21
None
8 Data, 1 Stop, Parity 232WRD8 2-21
Odd
RS-232 Handshaking *RTS/CTS Off 232CTS0 2-22
RTS/CTS On 232CTS1 2-22
*XON/XOFF Off 232XON0 2-22
XON/XOFF On 232XON1 2-22
*ACK/NAK Off 232ACK0 2-23
ACK/NAK On 232ACK1 2-23
Output Selections
Beeper - Good Read Off BEPBEP0 3-1
*On BEPBEP1 3-1
Beeper Volume - Good Off BEPLVL0 3-1
Read Low BEPLVL1 3-1
Medium BEPLVL2 3-1
*High BEPLVL3 3-1

9 - 11
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Beeper Pitch - Good Low (1600 Hz) BEPFQ11600 3-2
Read (Frequency) *Medium (2750 Hz) BEPFQ12750 3-2
High (4200 Hz) BEPFQ14200 3-2
Beeper Duration - *Normal Beep BEPBIP0 3-2
Good Read Short Beep BEPBIP1 3-2
Beeper Pitch - Error *Razz (100 Hz) BEPFQ2100 3-3
*Medium (2000 Hz) BEPFQ22000 3-3
High (4200 Hz) BEPFQ24200 3-3
LED - Good Read Off BEPLED0 3-3
*On BEPLED1 3-3
Number of Beeps - *1 BEPRPT1 3-4
Good Read Range 1 - 9 BEPRPT# 3-4
Good Read Delay *No Delay DLYGRD0 3-4
Short Delay (500 ms) DLYGRD500 3-4
Medium Delay (1000 DLYGRD1000 3-4
ms)
Long Delay (1500 ms) DLYGRD1500 3-4
User-Specified Good Range 0 - 30,000 ms DLYGRD##### 3-4
Read Delay
Trigger Mode *Manual/Serial Trigger TRGMOD0 3-5
Read Time-Out (0 - TRGSTO#### 3-5
300,000 ms) *30,000
Automatic Trigger TRGMOD1 3-5
Presentation Mode TRGMOD3 3-6
Continuous ILLAON1 3-6
Illumination On
*Continuous ILLAON0 3-6
Illumination Off
Hands Free Time-Out TRGPTO#### 3-7
(0-300,000 seconds) ##
*5000

9 - 12
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Reread Delay Short (500 ms) DLYRRD500 3-7
*Medium (750 ms) DLYRRD750 3-7
Long (1000 ms) DLYRRD1000 3-7
Extra Long (2000 ms) DLYRRD3000 3-7
User-Specified Reread Range 0 - 30,000 ms DLYRRD##### 3-8
Delay
Centering Centering On DECWIN1 3-9
*Centering Off DECWIN0 3-9
Left of Centering DECLFT### 3-9
Window *40
Right of Centering DECRGT### 3-9
Window *60
Output Sequence Enter Sequence SEQBLK 3-11
Editor Default Sequence SEQDFT 3-11
Require Output Required SEQ_EN2 3-13
Sequence On/Not Required SEQ_EN1 3-13
*Off SEQ_EN0 3-13
Multiple Symbols On SHOTGN1 3-15
*Off SHOTGN0 3-15
No Read On SHWNRD1 3-14
*Off SHWNRD0 3-14
Video Reverse On VIDREV1 3-14
*Off VIDREV0 3-14
Prefix/Suffix Selections
Add CR Suffix to All Symbologies VSUFCR 4-3
Prefix Add Prefix PREBK2## 4-3
Clear One Prefix PRECL2 4-3
Clear All Prefixes PRECA2 4-3
Suffix Add Suffix SUFBK2## 4-4
Clear One Suffix SUFCL2 4-4
Clear All Suffixes SUFCA2 4-4

9 - 13
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Transmit Alternative Transmit Alternate KBDEXT0 4-4
Extended ASCII Extended ASCII
Characters *Transmit Normal KBDEXT1 4-4
Extended ASCII
Function Code *Enable RMVFNC0 4-6
Transmit Disable RMVFNC1 4-6
Intercharacter Delay DLYCHR## 4-7
User Specified Delay Length DLYCRX## 4-7
Intercharacter Delay Character to Trigger DLY_XX### 4-7
Delay
Interfunction Delay DLYFNC## 4-8
Intermessage Delay DLYMSG## 4-8
Data Formatter Selections
Data Format Editor *Default Data Format DFMDF3 5-14
(None)
Enter Data Format DFMBK3## 5-14
Clear One Data DFMCL3 5-14
Format
Clear All Data Formats DFMCA3 5-14
Data Formatter Off DFM_EN0 5-15
*On, but Not Required DFM_EN1 5-15
On, Required DFM_EN2 5-15
Symbologies
All Symbologies All Symbologies Off ALLENA0 6-2
All Symbologies On ALLENA1 6-2
Codabar Default All Codabar CBRDFT 6-3
Settings
Codabar Off CBRENA0 6-3
*On CBRENA1 6-3
Codabar Start/Stop *Don’t Transmit CBRSSX0 6-4
Char. Transmit CBRSSX1 6-4

9 - 14
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Codabar Check Char. *No Check Char. CBRCK20 6-4
Validate, But Don’t CBRCK21 6-4
Transmit
Validate, and Transmit CBRCK22 6-4
Codabar *Off CBRCCT0 6-5
Concatenation On CBRCCT1 6-5
Require CBRCCT2 6-5
Codabar Message Minimum (2 - 60) *4 CBRMIN## 6-6
Length Maximum (2 - 60) *60 CBRMAX## 6-6
Code 39 Default All Code 39 C39DFT 6-7
Settings
Code 39 Off C39ENA0 6-7
*On C39ENA1 6-7
Code 39 Start/Stop *Don’t Transmit C39SSX0 6-7
Char. Transmit C39SSX1 6-7
Code 39 Check Char. *No Check Char. C39CK20 6-8
Validate, But Don’t C39CK21 6-8
Transmit
Validate, C39CK22 6-8
and Transmit
Code 39 Message Minimum (0 - 48) *0 C39MIN## 6-8
Length Maximum (0 - 48) *48 C39MAX## 6-8
Code 39 Append *Off C39APP0 6-9
On C39APP1 6-9
Code 32 *Off C39B320 6-9
Pharmaceutical On C39B321 6-9
(PARAF)
Code 39 Full ASCII *Off C39ASC0 6-10
On C39ASC1 6-10
Interleaved 2 of 5 Default All Interleaved I25DFT 6-11
2 of 5 Settings

9 - 15
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Interleaved 2 of 5 Off I25ENA0 6-11
*On I25ENA1 6-11
Interleaved 2 of 5 *No Check Char. I25CK20 6-12
Check Digit Validate, But Don’t I25CK21 6-12
Transmit
Validate, and Transmit I25CK22 6-12
Interleaved 2 of 5 Minimum (2 - 80) *4 I25MIN## 6-12
Message Length Maximum (2 - 80) *80 I25MAX## 6-12
Code 93 Default All Code 93 C93DFT 6-13
Settings
Code 93 Off C93ENA0 6-13
*On C93ENA1 6-13
Code 93 Message Minimum (0 - 80) *0 C93MIN## 6-13
Length Maximum (0 - 80) *80 C93MAX## 6-13
Straight 2 of 5 Default All Straight 2 of R25DFT 6-15
Industrial 5
Settings
Straight 2 of 5 Off R25ENA0 6-15
Industrial *On R25ENA1 6-15
Straight 2 of 5 Minimum (1 - 48) *4 R25MIN## 6-15
Industrial Message Maximum (1 - 48) *48 R25MAX## 6-15
Length
Straight 2 of 5 IATA Default All Straight 2 of A25DFT 6-16
5 IATA
Settings
Straight 2 of 5 IATA *Off A25ENA0 6-16
On A25ENA1 6-16
Straight 2 of 5 IATA Minimum (1 - 48) *4 A25MIN## 6-16
Message Length Maximum (1 - 48) *48 A25MAX## 6-16
Matrix 2 of 5 Default All Matrix 2 of X25DFT 6-17
5
Settings

9 - 16
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Matrix 2 of 5 *Off X25ENA0 6-17
On X25ENA1 6-17
Matrix 2 of 5 Message Minimum (1 - 80) *4 X25MIN## 6-17
Length Maximum (1 - 80) *80 X25MAX## 6-17
Code 11 Default All Code 11 C11DFT 6-18
Settings
Code 11 *Off C11ENA0 6-18
On C11ENA1 6-18
Code 11 Check Digits 1 Check Digit C11CK20 6-18
Required *2 Check Digits C11CK21 6-18
Code 11 Message Minimum (1 - 80) *4 C11MIN## 6-19
Length Maximum (1 - 80) *80 C11MAX## 6-19
Code 128 Default All Code 128 128DFT 6-19
Settings
Code 128 Off 128ENA0 6-20
*On 128ENA1 6-19
ISBT Concatenation On ISBENA1 6-20
*Off ISBENA0 6-20
Code 128 Message Minimum (0 - 80) *0 128MIN## 6-20
Length Maximum (0 - 80) *80 128MAX## 6-20
Code 128 Code Page Code 128 Code Page 128DCP 6-21
Code 128 Function *Off 128FNX0 6-21
Code Transmit On 128FNX1 6-21
Telepen Default All Telepen TELDFT 6-22
Settings
Telepen *Off TELENA0 6-22
On TELENA1 6-22
Telepen Output *AIM Telepen Output TELOLD0 6-22
Original Telepen TELOLD1 6-22
Output
Telepen Message Minimum (1 - 60) *1 TELMIN## 6-23
Length Maximum (1 - 60) *60 TELMAX## 6-23

9 - 17
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
UPC A Default All UPADFT 6-24
UPC A Settings
UPC A Off UPAENA0 6-24
*On UPAENA1 6-24
UPC A Check Digit Off UPACKX0 6-24
*On UPACKX1 6-24
UPC A Number Off UPANSX0 6-25
System *On UPANSX1 6-25
UPC A 2 Digit *Off UPAAD20 6-25
Addenda On UPAAD21 6-25
UPC A 5 Digit *Off UPAAD50 6-25
Addenda On UPAAD51 6-25
UPC A Addenda *Not Required UPAARQ0 6-26
Required Required UPAARQ1 6-26
UPC A Addenda Off UPAADS0 6-26
Separator *On UPAADS1 6-26
UPC-A/EAN-13 with *Off CPNENA0 6-27
Extended Coupon On CPNENA1 6-27
Code
UPC E Default All UPC E UPEDFT 6-28
Settings
UPC E0 Off UPEEN00 6-28
*On UPEEN01 6-28
UPC E1 *Off UPEEN10 6-28
On UPEEN11 6-28
UPC E Expand *Off UPEEXP0 6-29
On UPEEXP1 6-29
UPC E Check Digit Off UPECKX0 6-30
*On UPECKX1 6-30
UPC E Number Off UPENSX0 6-31
System *On UPENSX1 6-31

9 - 18
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
UPC E 2 Digit *Off UPEAD20 6-31
Addenda On UPEAD21 6-31
UPC E 5 Digit *Off UPEAD50 6-31
Addenda On UPEAD51 6-31
UPC E Addenda *Not Required UPEARQ0 6-29
Required Required UPEARQ1 6-29
UPC E Addenda Off UPEADS0 6-30
Separator *On UPEADS1 6-30
EAN/JAN 13 Default All EAN/ E13DFT 6-32
JAN 13 Settings
EAN/JAN 13 Off E13ENA0 6-32
*On E13ENA1 6-32
EAN/JAN 13 Check Off E13CKX0 6-32
Digit *On E13CKX1 6-32
EAN/JAN 13 2 Digit *Off E13AD20 6-33
Addenda On E13AD21 6-33
EAN/JAN 13 5 Digit *Off E13AD50 6-33
Addenda On E13AD51 6-33
EAN/JAN 13 Addenda *Not Required E13ARQ0 6-33
Required Required E13ARQ1 6-33
EAN/JAN 13 Addenda Off E13ADS0 6-34
Separator *On E13ADS1 6-34
ISBN Translate *Off E13ISB0 6-34
On E13ISB1 6-34
EAN/JAN 8 Default All EAN/ EA8DFT 6-35
JAN 8 Settings
EAN/JAN 8 Off EA8ENA0 6-35
*On EA8ENA1 6-35
EAN/JAN 8 Check Off EA8CKX0 6-35
Digit *On EA8CKX1 6-35

9 - 19
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
EAN/JAN 8 2 Digit *Off EA8AD20 6-36
Addenda On EA8AD21 6-36
EAN/JAN 8 5 Digit *Off EA8AD50 6-36
Addenda On EA8AD51 6-36
EAN/JAN 8 Addenda *Not Required EA8ARQ0 6-29
Required Required EA8ARQ1 6-29
EAN/JAN 8 Addenda Off EA8ADS0 6-37
Separator *On EA8ADS1 6-37
MSI Default All MSI MSIDFT 6-37
Settings
MSI *Off MSIENA0 6-37
On MSIENA1 6-37
MSI Check Character *Validate Type 10, but MSICHK0 6-38
Don’t Transmit
Validate Type 10 and MSICHK1 6-38
Transmit
MSI Message Length Minimum (4 - 48) *4 MSIMIN## 6-38
Maximum (4 - 48) *48 MSIMAX## 6-38
Plessey Code Default All Plessey PLSDFT 6-39
Settings
Plessey Code *Off PLSENA0 6-39
On PLSENA1 6-39
Plessey Message Minimum (4 - 48) *4 PLSMIN## 6-39
Length Maximum (4 - 48) *48 PLSMAX## 6-39
GS1 DataBar Default All RSSDFT 6-40
Omnidirectional GS1 DataBar
Omnidirectional
Settings
GS1 DataBar Off RSSENA0 6-40
Omnidirectional *On RSSENA1 6-40
GS1 DataBar Limited Default All GS1 RSLDFT 6-40
DataBar
Limited Settings

9 - 20
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
GS1 DataBar Limited Off RSLENA0 6-40
*On RSLENA1 6-40
GS1 DataBar Default All GS1 RSEDFT 6-41
Expanded DataBar
Expanded Settings
GS1 DataBar Off RSEENA0 6-41
Expanded *On RSEENA1 6-41
GS1 DataBar Minimum (4 - 74) *4 RSEMIN## 6-41
Expanded Msg. Maximum (4 - 74) *74 RSEMAX## 6-41
Length
China Post Code Default All China Post CPCDFT 6-42
Code Settings
China Post Code *Off CPCENA0 6-42
On CPCENA1 6-42
China Post Code Msg. Minimum (2 - 80) *4 CPCMIN## 6-42
Length Maximum (2 - 80) *80 CPCMAX## 6-42
Korea Post Code Default All Korea Post CPCDFT 6-43
Code Settings
Korea Post Code *Off CPCENA0 6-43
On CPCENA1 6-43
Korea Post Code Msg. Minimum (2 - 80) *4 CPCMIN## 6-43
Length Maximum (2 - 80) *80 CPCMAX## 6-43
Codablock F Default All Codablock CBFDFT 6-44
F Settings
Codablock F *Off CBFENA0 6-44
On CBFENA1 6-44
Codablock F Msg. Minimum (1 - 2048) *1 CBFMIN#### 6-44
Length Maximum (1 - 2048) CBFMAX#### 6-44
*2048
Code 49 Default All Code 49 C49DFT 6-45
Settings
Code 49 * Off C49ENA0 6-45
On C49ENA1 6-45

9 - 21
Serial
Setting Command
Selection Page
* Indicates default # Indicates a
numeric entry
Code 49 Minimum (1 - 81) *1 C49MIN## 6-45
Maximum (1 - 81) *81 C49MAX## 6-45
GS1 Emulation EANEMU2 6-46
GS1 Emulation GS1-128 Emulation EANEMU1 6-46
*GS1 Emulation Off EANEMU0 6-46
Label Code *Off LBLENA0 6-47
On LBLENA1 6-47

9 - 22
10
Product Specifications

Hyperion 1300g Product Specifications


Parameter Specification
Mechanical
Height 5.9 inches (15 cm)
Length 4.4 inches (11.2 cm)
Width 3.1 inches (7.9 cm)
Weight 5.6 ounces (160 g)
Electrical
LED source 630 nm visible red LED
Input Voltage 4.5-5.5VDC at imager
Operating Power 200mA @ 5V
Standby Power 125mA @5V
Environmental
Operating Temperature 32° F to +122° F (0° C to +50° C)
Storage Temperature -40° F to +140° F (-40° C to +60° C)
Humidity 0 to 95% non-condensing
Operational after 50 drops from 5 feet
Drop
(1.5 m) to concrete
Environmental Sealing IP41
Light Levels 70,000 lux
ESD 15 kV to any external surface
Scan Performance
Scan Pattern Single Line
Motion Tolerance 20 inches (51 cm) per second
Scan Rate Up to 270 scans per second
Print Contrast 20%
Pitch, Skew ±65
Reads standard 1D and GS1 DataBar
Decode Capabilities
symbologies
Use only a Listed Limited Power Source (LPS) or
Optional External Power Supply
Class 2 type power supply with output rated 5 to
Requirements
5.2Vdc, 1A

10 - 1
Standard Connector Pinouts
Keyboard Wedge
10 Pin RJ41 Modular Plug - connects to the scanner handle

1 Cable shield
2 Cable select
3 Supply ground
4 Terminal data
5 Terminal clock
6 Keyboard clock
7 Supply power input +5V power
8 Keyboard data
9
10
Serial Output
10 Pin RJ41 Modular Plug - connects to the scanner handle

1 Cable shield
2 Cable select
3 Supply ground
4 Transmit data
5 Receive data - serial data to scanner
6 CTS
7 +5V power
8 RTS
9
10

USB
10 Pin Modular Plug - connects to the scanner handle

1 Cable shield
2 Cable select
3 Supply ground
4
5
6
7 +5V power
8
9 Data +
10 Data -

10 - 2
11
Maintenance

Repairs
Repairs and/or upgrades are not to be performed on this product. These ser-
vices are to be performed only by an authorized service center. See Customer
Support on page 12-1 for further information.

Maintenance
Your device provides reliable and efficient operation with a minimum of care.
Although specific maintenance is not required, the following periodic checks
ensure dependable scanner operation:

Cleaning the Device


Reading performance may degrade if the scanner’s window is not clean. If the
window is visibly dirty, or if the scanner isn’t operating well, clean the window
with a soft cloth or lens tissue dampened with water (or a mild soapy water solu-
tion). If a soapy water solution is used, rinse with a clean lens tissue dampened
with water only.
The scanner’s housing may also be cleaned the same way.

! Caution:
Do not submerge the scanner in water. Do not use
abrasive wipes or tissues on the scanner’s window –
abrasive wipes may scratch the window.

Never use solvents (e.g., acetone, benzene, ether, or


phenol-based agents) on the housing or window –
solvents may damage the finish or the window.

Inspecting Cords and Connectors


Inspect the scanner’s interface cable and connector for wear or other signs of
damage. A badly worn cable or damaged connector may interfere with scanner
operation. Contact your Honeywell distributor for information about cable
replacement. Cable replacement instructions are on page 11-2.

11 - 1
Replacing the Interface Cable
The standard interface cable is attached to the scanner with an 10-pin modular
connector. When properly seated, the connector is held in the scanner’s handle
by a flexible retention tab. The interface cable is designed to be field replace-
able.
• Order replacement cables from Honeywell or from an authorized distributor.
• When ordering a replacement cable, specify the cable part number of the
original interface cable.

Replacing the Interface Cable:


1. Turn the power to the host system
OFF.

2. Disconnect the scanner’s cable from


the terminal or computer.
3. Locate the small hole on the side of
the scanner’s handle. This is the
cable release.
4. Straighten one end of a paper clip.
5. Insert the end of the paper clip into the
small hole and press in. This
depresses the retention tab, releasing
the connector. Pull the connector out
while maintaining pressure on the
paper clip, then remove the paper clip.
6. Replace with the new cable. Cable
Insert the connector into the opening Release
and press firmly. The connector is
keyed to go in only one way, and will click into place.

Troubleshooting
The scanner automatically performs self-tests whenever you turn it on. If your
scanner is not functioning properly, review the following Troubleshooting Guide
to try to isolate the problem.
Is the power on? Is the aiming beam line on?
If the aiming beam line isn’t illuminated, check that:
• The cable is connected properly.
• The host system power is on (if external power isn’t used).
• The trigger works.

11 - 2
Is the scanner having trouble reading your symbols?
If the scanner isn’t reading symbols well, check that the symbols:
• Aren’t smeared, rough, scratched, or exhibiting voids.
• Aren’t coated with frost or water droplets on the surface.
• Are enabled in the scanner or in the decoder to which the scanner connects.
Is the bar code displayed but not entered?
The bar code is displayed on the host device correctly, but you still have to press
a key to enter it (the Enter/Return key or the Tab key, for example).
You need to program a suffix. Programming a suffix enables the scanner to out-
put the bar code data plus the key you need (such as “CR”) to enter the data
into your application. Refer to Prefix/Suffix Overview on page 4-1 for further
information.
Does the scanner read the bar code incorrectly?
If the scanner reads a bar code, but the data is not displayed correctly on the
host screen:
• The scanner may not be programmed for the appropriate terminal interface.
For example, you scan “12345” and the host displays “@es%.”

Reprogram the scanner with the correct Plug and Play or Terminal selection
bar code. See Chapter 1 and Chapter 2.
• The scanner may not be programmed to output your bar code data properly.
For example, you scan “12345” and the host displays “A12345B.”

Reprogram the scanner with the proper symbology selections. See


Symbologies beginning on page 6-1.
The scanner won’t read your bar code at all.
1. Scan the sample bar codes in the back of this manual. If the scanner reads
the sample bar codes, check that your bar code is readable.
Verify that your bar code symbology is enabled (see Symbologies beginning
on page 6-1).
2. If the scanner still can’t read the sample bar codes, scan All Symbologies on
page 6-2.
If you aren’t sure what programming options have been set in the scanner, or if
you want the factory default settings restored, scan Resetting the Custom
Defaults on page 1-6.

11 - 3
11 - 4
12
Customer Support

Technical Assistance
If you need assistance installing or troubleshooting your device, please contact
us by using one of the methods below:
Knowledge Base: www.hsmknowledgebase.com
Our Knowledge Base provides thousands of immediate solutions. If the
Knowledge Base cannot help, our Technical Support Portal (see below)
provides an easy way to report your problem or ask your question.
Technical Support Portal: www.hsmsupportportal.com
The Technical Support Portal not only allows you to report your problem, but it
also provides immediate solutions to your technical issues by searching our
Knowledge Base. With the Portal, you can submit and track your questions
online and send and receive attachments.
Web form: www.hsmcontactsupport.com
You can contact our technical support team directly by filling out our online
support form. Enter your contact details and the description of the question/
problem.
Telephone: www.honeywellaidc.com/locations
For our latest contact information, please check our website at the link above.

Limited Warranty
Honeywell International Inc. ("HII") warrants its products and optional accesso-
ries to be free from defects in materials and workmanship and to conform to
HII’s published specifications applicable to the products purchased at the time
of shipment. This warranty does not cover any HII product which is (i) improp-
erly installed or used; (ii) damaged by accident or negligence, including failure
to follow the proper maintenance, service, and cleaning schedule; or (iii) dam-
aged as a result of (A) modification or alteration by the purchaser or other party,
(B) excessive voltage or current supplied to or drawn from the interface connec-
tions, (C) static electricity or electro-static discharge, (D) operation under condi-
tions beyond the specified operating parameters, or (E) repair or service of the
product by anyone other than HII or its authorized representatives.
This warranty shall extend from the time of shipment for the duration published
by HII for the product at the time of purchase ("Warranty Period"). Any defective
product must be returned (at purchaser’s expense) during the Warranty Period
to HII factory or authorized service center for inspection. No product will be
accepted by HII without a Return Materials Authorization, which may be
obtained by contacting HII. In the event that the product is returned to HII or its
authorized service center within the Warranty Period and HII determines to its
satisfaction that the product is defective due to defects in materials or workman-

12 - 1
ship, HII, at its sole option, will either repair or replace the product without
charge, except for return shipping to HII.
EXCEPT AS MAY BE OTHERWISE PROVIDED BY APPLICABLE LAW, THE
FOREGOING WARRANTY IS IN LIEU OF ALL OTHER COVENANTS OR
WARRANTIES, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, ORAL OR WRITTEN,
INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MER-
CHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, OR NON-
INFRINGEMENT.
HII’S RESPONSIBILITY AND PURCHASER’S EXCLUSIVE REMEDY UNDER
THIS WARRANTY IS LIMITED TO THE REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF THE
DEFECTIVE PRODUCT WITH NEW OR REFURBISHED PARTS. IN NO
EVENT SHALL HII BE LIABLE FOR INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSE-
QUENTIAL DAMAGES, AND, IN NO EVENT, SHALL ANY LIABILITY OF HII
ARISING IN CONNECTION WITH ANY PRODUCT SOLD HEREUNDER
(WHETHER SUCH LIABILITY ARISES FROM A CLAIM BASED ON CON-
TRACT, WARRANTY, TORT, OR OTHERWISE) EXCEED THE ACTUAL
AMOUNT PAID TO HII FOR THE PRODUCT. THESE LIMITATIONS ON LIA-
BILITY SHALL REMAIN IN FULL FORCE AND EFFECT EVEN WHEN HII MAY
HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH INJURIES, LOSSES,
OR DAMAGES. SOME STATES, PROVINCES, OR COUNTRIES DO NOT
ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATIONS OF INCIDENTAL OR CONSE-
QUENTIAL DAMAGES, SO THE ABOVE LIMITATION OR EXCLUSION MAY
NOT APPLY TO YOU.
All provisions of this Limited Warranty are separate and severable, which
means that if any provision is held invalid and unenforceable, such determina-
tion shall not affect the validity of enforceability of the other provisions hereof.
Use of any peripherals not provided by the manufacturer may result in damage
not covered by this warranty. This includes but is not limited to: cables, power
supplies, cradles, and docking stations. HII extends these warranties only to the
first end-users of the products. These warranties are non-transferable.
The duration of the limited warranty for the Hyperion 1300g is five (5) years.

12 - 2
A
Appendix A

Symbology Charts
Note: “ m” represents the AIM modifier character. Refer to International
Technical Specification, Symbology Identifiers, for AIM modifier character
details.

Prefix/Suffix entries for specific symbologies override the universal (All


Symbologies, 99) entry.

Refer toData Editing beginning on page 4-1 and Data Formatting beginning on
page 5-1 for information about using Code ID and AIM ID.

Linear Symbologies
AIM Honeywell

Possible
Symbology ID modifiers ID Hex
(m)
All Symbologies 99
Codabar ]Fm 0-1 a 61
Code 11 ]H3 h 68
Code 128 ]Cm 0, 1, 2, 4 j 6A
Code 32 Pharmaceutical ]X0 < 3C
(PARAF)
Code 39 (supports Full ASCII ]Am 0, 1, 3, 4, 5, 7 b 62
mode)
TCIF Linked Code 39 ]L2 T 54
(TLC39)
Code 93 and 93i ]Gm 0-9, A-Z, i 69
a-m
EAN ]Em 0, 1, 3, 4 d 64
EAN-13 (including Bookland ]E0 d 64
EAN)
EAN-13 with Add-On ]E3 d 64
EAN-13 with Extended ]E3 d 64
Coupon Code
EAN-8 ]E4 D 44

A-1
AIM Honeywell

Possible
Symbology ID modifiers ID Hex
(m)
EAN-8 with Add-On ]E3 D 44
GS1
GS1 DataBar ]em 0 y 79
GS1 DataBar Limited ]em { 7B
GS1 DataBar Expanded ]em } 7D
GS1-128 ]C1 I 49
2 of 5
China Post (Hong Kong 2 of ]X0 Q 51
5)
Interleaved 2 of 5 ]Im 0, 1, 3 e 65
Matrix 2 of 5 ]X0 m 6D
NEC 2 of 5 ]X0 Y 59
Straight 2 of 5 IATA ]Rm 0, 1, 3 f 66
Straight 2 of 5 Industrial ]S0 f 66
MSI ]Mm 0, 1 g 67
Telepen ]Bm t 74
UPC 0, 1, 2, 3, 8,
9, A, B, C
UPC-A ]E0 c 63
UPC-A with Add-On ]E3 c 63
UPC-A with Extended ]E3 c 63
Coupon Code
UPC-E ]E0 E 45
UPC-E with Add-On ]E3 E 45
UPC-E1 ]X0 E 45

Add Honeywell Code ID 5C80


Add AIM Code ID 5C81
Add Backslash 5C5C

A-2
Postal Symbologies
AIM Honeywell

Possible
Symbology ID modifiers ID Hex
(m)
All Symbologies 99
Australian Post ]X0 A 41
British Post ]X0 B 42
Canadian Post ]X0 C 43
China Post ]X0 Q 51
InfoMail ]X0 , 2c
Intelligent Mail Bar Code ]X0 M 4D
Japanese Post ]X0 J 4A
KIX (Netherlands) Post ]X0 K 4B
Korea Post ]X0 ? 3F
Planet Code ]X0 L 4C
Postal-4i ]X0 N 4E
Postnet ]X0 P 50

ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252)


In keyboard applications, ASCII Control Characters can be represented in 3 dif-
ferent ways, as shown below. The CTRL+X function is OS and application
dependent. The following table lists some commonly used Microsoft functional-
ity. This table applies to U.S. style keyboards. Certain characters may differ
depending on your Country Code/PC regional settings..

Non-printable Keyboard Control + ASCII (CTRL+X) mode


ASCII control
characters ON (KBDCAS1) OFF (KBDCAS0)
Control
Control
CTRL+ X Character
DEC HEX Char CTRL+'X' Character Output
function Output On
Off (KBDNPE0)
(KBDNPE1)
0 00 NUL CTRL+ @ Reserved Txt: [NUL]
1 01 SOH CTRL+ A Select all NP Enter Txt: [SOH]

A-3
2 02 STX CTRL+ B Bold Caps Lock Txt: [STX]
3 03 ETX CTRL+ C Copy ALT Make Txt: [EXT]
4 04 EOT CTRL+ D Bookmark ALT Break Txt: [EOT]
5 05 ENQ CTRL+ E Center CTRL Make Txt: [ENQ]
6 06 ACK CTRL+ F Find CTRL Break Txt: [ACK]
7 07 BEL CTRL+ G Enter / Ret Txt: [BEL]
8 08 BS CTRL+ H History (Apple Make) Txt: [BS]
9 09 HT CTRL+ I Italic Tab Txt: [HT]
10 0A LF CTRL+ J Justify (Apple Break) Txt: [LF]
11 0B VT CTRL+ K hyperlink Tab Txt: [VT]
list,
12 0C FF CTRL+ L Delete Txt: [FF]
left align
13 0D CR CTRL+ M Enter / Ret Txt: [CR]
14 0E SO CTRL+ N New Insert Txt: [SO]
15 0F SI CTRL+ O Open ESC Txt: [SI]
16 10 DLE CTRL+ P Print F11 Txt: [DLE]
17 11 DC1 CTRL+ Q Quit Home Txt: [DC1]
18 12 DC2 CTRL+ R PrtScn Txt: [DC2]
19 13 DC3 CTRL+ S Save Backspace Txt: [DC3]
20 14 DC4 CTRL+ T Back Tab Txt: [DC4]
21 15 NAK CTRL+ U F12 Txt: [NAK]
22 16 SYN CTRL+ V Paste F1 Txt: [SYN]
23 17 ETB CTRL+ W F2 Txt: [ETB]
24 18 CAN CTRL+ X F3 Txt: [CAN]
25 19 EM CTRL+ Y F4 Txt: [EM]
26 1A SUB CTRL+ Z F5 Txt: [SUB]
27 1B ESC CTRL+ [ F6 Txt: [ESC]
28 1C FS CTRL+ \ F7 Txt: [FS]
29 1D GS CTRL+ ] F8 Txt: [GS]
30 1E RS CTRL+ ^ F9 Txt: [RS]
31 1F US CTRL+ - F10 Txt: [US]
127 7F ⌂ NP Enter n/a

A-4
Lower ASCII Reference Table
Note: Windows Code page 1252 and lower ASCII use the same characters.

Printable Characters
DEC HEX Character DEC HEX Character DEC HEX Character
32 20 <SPACE> 64 40 @ 96 60 `
33 21 ! 65 41 A 97 61 a
34 22 " 66 42 B 98 62 b
35 23 # 67 43 C 99 63 c
36 24 $ 68 44 D 100 64 d
37 25 % 69 45 E 101 65 e
38 26 & 70 46 F 102 66 f
39 27 ' 71 47 G 103 67 g
40 28 ( 72 48 H 104 68 h
41 29 ) 73 49 I 105 69 i
42 2A * 74 4A J 106 6A j
43 2B + 75 4B K 107 6B k
44 2C , 76 4C L 108 6C l
45 2D - 77 4D M 109 6D m
46 2E . 78 4E N 110 6E n
47 2F / 79 4F O 111 6F o
48 30 0 80 50 P 112 70 p
49 31 1 81 51 Q 113 71 q
50 32 2 82 52 R 114 72 r
51 33 3 83 53 S 115 73 s
52 34 4 84 54 T 116 74 t
53 35 5 85 55 U 117 75 u
54 36 6 86 56 V 118 76 v
55 37 7 87 57 W 119 77 w
56 38 8 88 58 X 120 78 x
57 39 9 89 59 Y 121 79 y
58 3A : 90 5A Z 122 7A z
59 3B ; 91 5B [ 123 7B {
60 3C < 92 5C \ 124 7C |
61 3D = 93 5D ] 125 7D }
62 3E > 94 5E ^ 126 7E ~
63 3F ? 95 5F _ 127 7F ⌂

A-5
Extended ASCII Characters
PS2 Scan
DEC HEX CP 1252 ASCII Alternate Extended
Code
128 80 Ç up arrow ↑ 0x48
129 81 ü down arrow ↓ 0x50
130 82 ‚ é right arrow → 0x4B
131 83 ƒ â left arrow ← 0x4D
132 84 „ ä Insert 0x52
133 85 … à Delete 0x53
134 86 † å Home 0x47
135 87 ‡ ç End 0x4F
136 88 ˆ ê Page Up 0x49
137 89 ‰ ë Page Down 0x51
138 8A Š è Right ALT 0x38
139 8B ‹ ï Right CTRL 0x1D
140 8C Œ î Reserved n/a
141 8D ì Reserved n/a
142 8E Ž Ä Numeric Keypad Enter 0x1C
143 8F Å Numeric Keypad / 0x35
144 90 É F1 0x3B
145 91 ‘ æ F2 0x3C
146 92 ’ Æ F3 0x3D
147 93 “ ô F4 0x3E
148 94 ” ö F5 0x3F
149 95 • ò F6 0x40
150 96 – û F7 0x41
151 97 — ù F8 0x42
152 98 ˜ ÿ F9 0x43
153 99 ™ Ö F10 0x44
154 9A š Ü F11 0x57
155 9B › ¢ F12 0x58
156 9C œ £ Numeric Keypad + 0x4E
157 9D ¥ Numeric Keypad - 0x4A
158 9E ž ₧ Numeric Keypad * 0x37
159 9F Ÿ ƒ Caps Lock 0x3A
160 A0 á Num Lock 0x45
161 A1 ¡ í Left Alt 0x38
162 A2 ¢ ó Left Ctrl 0x1D
163 A3 £ ú Left Shift 0x2A
164 A4 ¤ ñ Right Shift 0x36

A-6
Extended ASCII Characters (Continued)
PS2 Scan
DEC HEX CP 1252 ASCII Alternate Extended
Code
165 A5 ¥ Ñ Print Screen n/a
166 A6 ¦ ª Tab 0x0F
167 A7 § º Shift Tab 0x8F
168 A8 ¨ ¿ Enter 0x1C
169 A9 © ⌐ Esc 0x01
170 AA ª ¬ Alt Make 0x36
171 AB « ½ Alt Break 0xB6
172 AC ¬ ¼ Control Make 0x1D
173 AD ¡ Control Break 0x9D
174 AE ® « Alt Sequence with 1 Character 0x36
175 AF ¯ » Ctrl Sequence with 1 Character 0x1D
176 B0 ° ░
177 B1 ± ▒
178 B2 ² ▓
179 B3 ³ │
180 B4 ´ ┤
181 B5 µ ╡
182 B6 ¶ ╢
183 B7 · ╖
184 B8 ¸ ╕
185 B9 ¹ ╣
186 BA º ║
187 BB » ╗
188 BC ¼ ╝
189 BD ½ ╜
190 BE ¾ ╛
191 BF ¿ ┐
192 C0 À └
193 C1 Á ┴
194 C2 Â ┬
195 C3 Ã ├
196 C4 Ä ─
197 C5 Å í
198 C6 Æ ╞
199 C7 Ç ╟
200 C8 È ╚
201 C9 É ╔
202 CA Ê ╩
203 CB Ë ╦

A-7
Extended ASCII Characters (Continued)
PS2 Scan
DEC HEX CP 1252 ASCII Alternate Extended
Code
204 CC Ì ╠
205 CD Í ═
206 CE Î ╬
207 CF Ï ╧
208 D0 Ð ╨
209 D1 Ñ ╤
210 D2 Ò ╥
211 D3 Ó ╙
212 D4 Ô ╘
213 D5 Õ ╒
214 D6 Ö ╓
215 D7 × ╫
216 D8 Ø ╪
217 D9 Ù ┘
218 DA Ú ┌
219 DB Û █
220 DC Ü ▄
221 DD Ý ▌
222 DE Þ ▐
223 DF ß ▀
224 E0 à α
225 E1 á ß
226 E2 â Γ
227 E3 ã π
228 E4 ä Σ
229 E5 å σ
230 E6 æ µ
231 E7 ç τ
232 E8 è Φ
233 E9 é Θ
234 EA ê Ω
235 EB ë δ
236 EC ì ∞
237 ED í φ
238 EE î ε
239 EF ï ∩
240 F0 ð ≡
241 F1 ñ ±
242 F2 ò ≥

A-8
Extended ASCII Characters (Continued)
PS2 Scan
DEC HEX CP 1252 ASCII Alternate Extended
Code
243 F3 ó ≤
244 F4 ô ⌠
245 F5 õ ⌡
246 F6 ö ÷
247 F7 ÷ ≈
248 F8 ø °
249 F9 ù ·
250 FA ú ·
251 FB û √
252 FC ü ⁿ
253 FD ý ²
254 FE þ ■
255 FF ÿ

ISO 2022/ISO 646 Character Replacements


Code pages define the mapping of character codes to characters. If the data
received does not display with the proper characters, it may be because the bar
code being scanned was created using a code page that is different from the
one the host program is expecting. If this is the case, select the code page with
which the bar codes were created. The data characters should then appear
properly.

Code Page Selection Standard Keyboard Honeywell


Method/Country Country Code Page
Option

United States
(standard ASCII) ISO/IEC 646-IRV n/a 1
Automatic National
Character
Replacement ISO/IEC 2022 n/a 2 (default)
Binary Code page n/a n/a 3
Default “Automatic National Character replacement” will select the below
Honeywell Code Page options for Code128, Code 39 and Code 93.

A-9
United States ISO/IEC 646-06 0 1
Canada ISO /IEC 646-121 54 95
Canada ISO /IEC 646-122 18 96
Japan ISO/IEC 646-14 28 98
China ISO/IEC 646-57 92 99
Great Britain (UK) ISO /IEC 646-04 7 87
France ISO /IEC 646-69 3 83
Germany ISO/IEC646-21 4 84
Switzerland ISO /IEC 646-CH 6 86
Sweden / Finland
(extended Annex C) ISO/IEC 646-11 2 82
Ireland ISO /IEC 646-207 73 97
Danmark ISO/IEC 646-08 8 88
Norway ISO/IEC 646-60 9 94
Italy ISO/IEC 646-15 5 85
Portugal ISO/IEC 646-16 13 92
Spain ISO/IEC 646-17 10 90
Spain ISO/IEC 646-85 51 91

A - 10
Dec 35 36 64 91 92 93 94 96 123 124 125 126
Hex 23 24 40 5B 5C 5D 5E 60 7B 7C 7D 7E

US 0 1 # $ @ [ \ ] ^ ` { | } ~
CA 54 95 # $ à â ç ê î ô é ù è û
CA 18 96 # $ à â ç ê É ô é ù è û
JP 28 98 # $ @ [ ¥ ] ^ ` { | } ⎯
CN 92 99 # ¥ @ [ \ ] ^ ` { | } ⎯
GB 7 87 £ $ @ [ \ ] ^ ` { | } ˜
FR 3 83 £ $ à ° ç § ^ µ é ù è ¨
DE 4 84 # $ § Ä Ö Ü ^ ` ä ö ü ß
CH 6 86 ù $ à é ç ê î ô ä ö ü û
SE/FI 2 82 # ¤ É Ä Ö Å Ü é ä ö å ü
DK 8 88 # $ @ Æ Ø Å ^ ` æ ø å ˜
NO 9 94 # $ @ Æ Ø Å ^ ` æ ø å ¨
IE 73 97 £ $ Ó É Í Ú Á ó é í ú á
IT 5 85 £ $ § ° ç é ^ ù à ò è ì
PT 13 92 # $ § Ã Ç Õ ^ ` ã ç õ °
ES 10 90 # $ § ¡ Ñ ¿ ^ ` ° ñ ç ˜
ES 51 91 # $ · ¡ Ñ Ç ¿ ` ´ ñ ç ¨
Country Keyboard

Honeywell
CodePage

ISO / IEC 646 National Character Replacements


COUNTRY

A - 11
Unicode Key Maps

6E 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 7A 7B 7C 7D 7E

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0F 4B 50 55 5A 5F 64 69
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1A 1B 1C 1D 4C 51 56 5B 60 65
6A
1E 1F 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 2B 5C 61 66
2C 2E 2F 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 39 53 5D 62 67
4F 54 59 6C
3A 3B 3C 3D 3E 3F 38 40 63 68

104 Key U.S. Style Keyboard

6E 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 7A 7B 7C 7D 7E

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0F 4B 50 55 5A 5F 64 69
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1A 1B 1C 2B 4C 51 56 5B 60 65
6A
1E 1F 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 2A 5C 61 66
2C 2D 2E 2F 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 39 53 5D 62 67
4F 54 59 6C
3A 3B 3C 3D 3E 3F 38 40 63 68

105 Key European Style Keyboard

A - 12
Sample Symbols
UPC A

0 123456 7890 Interleaved 2 of 5

1234567890
Code 128

Code 128

EAN 13

9 780330 290951
EAN 8

654 3210 5
UPC-E

0 456123 8
Sample Symbols
Code 39

Codabar
BC321

Code 93 A13579B

123456-9$
Straight 2 of 5 Industrial

123456
Matrix 2 of 5

6543210
GS1 DataBar

(01)00123456789012
Programming Chart

9
Programming Chart

Save

Discard

Note: If you make an error while scanning the letters or digits (before scanning
Save), scan Discard, scan the correct letters or digits, and Save again.
Honeywell Scanning & Mobility
9680 Old Bailes Road
Fort Mill, SC 29707

www.honeywellaidc.com

HP1300-UG Rev C
9/13

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