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WT4070/90 Wearable Terminal User Guide [English] (P/N

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1. 2 Carefully press and briefly hold on the center of the Calibration screen target Repeat the procedure as the target moves and stops at different locations on the screen This enters the new calibration settings 2 16 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Carefully press and briefly hold stylus on the center of the target New settings have been measured Repeat as the target moves around Press the Enter key to accept the screen Press the Esc key to discard Press the Esc key to cancel Calibration Screen Confirm Calibration Screen Figure 2 13 Calibration Screen 3 Once all ofthe new calibration settings are input tap the screen or press the ENTER button to save the new calibration settings Press ESC to discard the new calibration settings Special Character Keypad J NOTE The Special Character Keypad is only available on non touch screen configurations with a display The wearable terminal contains an on screen Special Character keypad that allows users to enter alphanumeric and special characters The keypad looks and functions like a standard keyboard To display the Special Character keypad press the key on the keyboard B8 5 a ah My Device Media Remote Player Desktop Recycle Bin Microsoft T T21s1 1s slr slsfol T es z ala lwlelele feet tele tial nont BARA Li jenrerf Explorer EIES 1 xlolufeinimt eM enlenla iba gt ro ETD Figure 2 14 Speci
2. J NOTE Ensure the battery is fully inserted An audible click can be heard as the battery is fully inserted A partially inserted battery may result in unintentional data loss When a battery is installed in a wearable terminal for the first time the wearable terminal boots and powers on automatically Figure 1 7 Installing the Main Battery 1 8 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Charging the Battery AN CAUTION Ensure that you follow the guidelines for battery safety described in Battery Safety Guidelines on page 4 3 Charging the Main Battery and Memory Backup Battery Before using the wearable terminal for the first time charge the main battery until the amber Charge Status LED remains lit see Table 1 3 on page 1 8 for charge status indications The wearable terminal is equipped with a memory backup battery which automatically charges from the main battery whether or not the wearable terminal is operating or is in suspend mode The memory backup battery retains data in memory for at least 30 minutes when the wearable terminal s main battery is removed or fully discharged When the wearable terminal is used for the first time or after the memory backup battery has fully discharged the memory backup battery requires approximately 15 hours to fully charge Do not remove the main battery from the wearable terminal for 15 hours to ensure that the memory backup battery fully charges If the main battery is removed from the wearabl
3. Accessories 3 15 The headset cable adapter connects the headset to the wearable terminal Connect the headset connect end of the adapter to the headset connector Plug the other end of the adapter to the wearable terminal interface connector J NOTE Not all headset plugs are compatible with the headset cable adapter CAUTION When disconnecting the headset from the headset adapter pull the two connectors away from AN each Do not bend connectors to disconnect lt _ SL Figure 3 14 Disconnecting Headset from Headset Adapter Figure 3 15 Headset Connected to wearable Terminal on Hip 3 16 VT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Connector Shroud Assembly 1 Remove cable from wearable terminal if required 2 Align the cable connector with the connector shroud bottom housing Ensure that the disconnect button on the connector faces up Disconnect Button Bottom Housing Figure 3 16 Installing Bottom Housing 3 Place the cable connector into the shroud bottom housing as shown Figure 3 17 Installing Top Housing 4 Press the top housing into the bottom housing The housings will snap together 5 Plug the cable connector into the wearable terminal connector Disconnecting the Cable from the Wearable Terminal J NOTE Follow the instructions below when disconnecting the cable connector and shroud from the wearable terminal Once the shroud is installed on the connector do not disassemble the shroud
4. Change Date Description 01 Rev A 09 25 2006 Initial Release 02 Rev A 02 22 2007 Add new start up windows Fusion 2 5 information 128 MB Flash configuration 03 Rev A 05 06 2008 Add OEM version 05 30 000 information Add freezer pouch information 04 Rev 10 09 2008 Add touch screen configuration 05 Rev 12 15 09 Add Voice Only WT4090 configuration support iv WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Patents oe te ERE I NEBEN RE RENTEN NE E ALL EG ceases MGGG KERS IBG OLI at ace AGA NAL NOB A E ii Revision HIStOTY AA AA AA AA ee raue iii About This Guide fit FOO GTO MM een na een ANAN NAA ANA ix Documentation Set ix 5 19 101 AA AA X Software Versions X Chapter Deep nennen nn Re Oe E EE ERTE ere ene er eer xi Notational CONVENTIONS ccccccccccccecseseeeceeeeeeeeesaeaeeeseeeeeeeeeesaeueaenseeeeeeeeeeaeueaeecseseeeeeeeaneaseeeeeeeeenensaes xii Related Documents and Software uuuuenenessessnnnnnnnnnnaonnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnennn xii Service Information ccc eceeccccccccceceeeseseecececeecaeeaeaeueaceeeeeeeeeeeeaueeseceeeeeeeeesaeaeacneeeeeeeeeueagseaeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaes xiii Chapter 1 Getting Started Mi ROG a AA 1 1 Unpacking ine Wearable Terminal seien KIAGAA 1 3 Accessories aa AA NAAN ANA AG ANN 1 3 Getting Started see een 1 7 Installing and Removing the Main Battery 2 244444444444HHnnnnAn nn nnnnnn nenn nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnannnnnnnnn
5. Hip Mount Provides a means for wearing the wearable terminal on a belt for hands free applications Headset For audio playback recording during voice enabled applications Headset Adapters Connect an optional headset to the wearable terminal Replacement Batteries Standard Capacity Battery 2330 mAh minimum Extended Capacity Battery 4600 mAh minimum Standard Capacity Battery Freezer Pouch Allows the user to use the wearable terminal with standard capacity battery ina freezer environment on the hip or wrist for use in voice picking applications Extended Capacity Battery Freezer Pouch Allows the user to use the wearable terminal with extended capacity battery ina freezer environment on the hip or wrist for use in voice picking applications USB Adapter Connects the Single slot cradle to USB hubs mice keyboards and memory The adapter has a USB mini A connector on the cradle side and a USB A Female connector on the other side Connector Shroud Protects the connector of an accessory that connects to the wearable computer Screen Protectors Package of 3 screen protectors Arm Sleeve Extra layer sleeve to wear under wrist mount for extra comfort and hygiene RCH50 Rugged Cabled Headset Enables hands free voice directed mobility communication An audible mono headset with noise cancelling boom microphone helps survive harsh environments Software Enterprise Mobility Developer K
6. Note When the battery is initially inserted in the wearable terminal the amber LED flashes once if the battery power is low or the battery is not fully inserted Getting Started 1 9 Charging Spare Batteries Use the following accessories to charge spare batteries e Single Slot USB Cradle e Four Slot Spare Battery Charger To charge a spare battery 1 Ensure the accessory used to charge the spare battery is connected to the appropriate power source 2 Insert the spare battery into the accessory s spare battery charging slot with the charging contacts facing down over the charging pins and gently press down on the battery to ensure proper contact 3 The battery starts to charge automatically The amber charge LED on the accessory lights to show the charge status See Chapter 3 Accessories for accessory charge LED indicator definitions The standard capacity battery fully charges in less than four hours and the extended capacity battery fully charges in less than eight hours Removing the Main Battery To remove the main battery 1 Prior to removing the battery ensure that the wearable terminal is in suspend mode If the wearable terminal is not in suspend mode press the Power button to place the wearable terminal in suspend mode 2 Press the battery release button The battery partially ejects from the wearable terminal 3 Remove the battery from the wearable terminal Battery Release Figure 1 8 Removin
7. Wearable terminal amber Charge Status LED does not light when wearable terminal inserted Cause Cradle is not receiving power Maintenance amp Troubleshooting 4 11 Four Slot Ethernet Cradle Solution Ensure the power cable is connected securely to both the cradle and to AC power Wearable terminal is not correctly seated Remove and re insert the wearable terminal into the cradle ensuring it is correctly seated Wearable terminal battery is not charging Wearable terminal was removed from cradle or cradle was unplugged from AC power too soon Ensure cradle is receiving power Ensure the wearable terminal is seated correctly If the wearable terminal battery is fully depleted it can take up to four hours to fully recharge a standard capacity battery and it can take up to eight hours to fully recharge an extended capacity battery Battery is faulty Verify that other batteries charge properly If so replace the faulty battery The wearable terminal is not fully seated in the cradle Remove and re insert the wearable terminal into the cradle ensuring it is correctly seated Ambient temperature of the cradle is too warm or too cold Move the cradle to an area where the ambient temperature is between 0 C and 40 C 32 F and 104 F During data communication no data was transmitted or transmitted data was incomplete Wearable terminal removed from cradle during co
8. 8 Inspect the area for any grease or dirt repeat if required Cleaning Cradle Connectors To clean the connectors on a cradle 1 Remove the DC power cable from the cradle 4 6 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide 2 Dip the cotton portion of the cotton tipped applicator in isopropyl alcohol 3 Rub the cotton portion of the cotton tipped applicator along the pins of the connector Slowly move the applicator back and forth from one side of the connector to the other Do not let any cotton residue on the connector 4 All sides of the connector should also be rubbed with the cotton tipped applicator AN CAUTION Do not point nozzle at yourself and others ensure the nozzle or tube is away from your face 5 Spray compressed air in the connector area by pointing the tube nozzle about Y inch away from the surface 6 Ensure that there is no lint left by the cotton tipped applicator remove lint if found 7 If grease and other dirt can be found on other areas of the cradle use lint free cloth and alcohol to remove CAUTION Allow at least 10 to 30 minutes depending on ambient temperature and humidity for the alcohol to air dry AN before applying power to cradle If the temperature is low and humidity is high longer drying time is required Warm temperature and dry humidity requires less drying time Cleaning Frequency The cleaning frequency is up to the customer s discretion due to the varied environments in which the mobil
9. Wearable terminal is inactive Troubleshooting the Wearable Terminal Continued Solution The wearable terminal turns off after a period of inactivity If the wearable terminal is running on battery power this period can be set to 30 sec 1 2 3 4 5 or 6 minutes If the wearable terminal is running on external power this period can be set to 1 2 3 5 10 15 and 30 minutes Check the power settings by selecting Start gt Settings gt Control Panel gt Power icon gt Power Off tab Change the setting if you need a longer delay before the automatic shutoff feature activates Voice Only WT4090 was set to suspend Return Voice Only WT4090 suspend setting to factory default disabled Battery is depleted Replace or recharge the battery Battery is not inserted properly Insert the battery properly see Installing and Removing the Main Battery on page 1 7 The wearable terminal s battery is low and it powers down to protect memory content Replace or recharge the battery A message appears stating that the wearable terminal memory is full not applicable to voice only configuration Too many files stored on the wearable terminal Delete unused memos and records You can save these records on the host computer Too many applications installed on the wearable terminal If you have installed additional applications on the wearable terminal remove them to rec
10. AA AA 3 12 Freezer POUGN ka AA AA GA 3 12 WIG Bx 112 9 Sener ee aan 3 14 Connector Shroud nee tian te ee re nn ee ee 3 16 Assembly man GAGA AKA 3 16 Disconnecting the Cable from the Wearable Terminal u 1 1 1 77072 m0musananususunanuuanaaausananaasssannnannnnn 3 16 Chapter 4 Maintenance amp Troubleshooting gig a ON aaa peer re ee ee AA AG 4 1 Maintaining the Wearable Terminal u 1 111 7 77 0700007010701000 0n ASSESS AA 4 1 Wrist Mount Cleaning Instructions u een 4 2 Arm Sleeve Cleaning Instructions cccccceececeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaceeeeeecaaeeeeeaeeeeeeeeaaeeeeenaaaeesneeeeeeeeeeaeeeeee 4 2 Removing the Screen Protector euere a ru 4 2 Battery Safety Guidelines Zee east 4 3 Cleaning ae een 4 4 Materials Required ern elek 4 4 Cleaning ine Wearable Terminal ua sii bheaaaastedeanadeneannonianennuaee 4 4 HOUSING ee ee ee ae nee 4 4 DIDI nee 4 4 MS ONE ee ee AA AA 4 4 Cleaning the RS309 RS409 and RS507 uuueessssssssnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnsnnnnnnnnenennnnnnnennnenennnn 4 5 PA 4 5 Scanner Exit WV AA AA APAN 4 5 GONNECIOLS eee NG ee a ee ee 4 5 Cleaning Cradle Connekl rs u ten een u euren 4 5 Cleaning Ba 8 UL ee ee fee 4 6 SUSIE SOO UNG ze ea ea et ae ee ee en 4 6 Wearable Terminal een aene 4 6 Four Slot Ethernet Cradle nee 4 11 Four Slot Spare Battery Charger an el u 4 12 Single Slot USB Cradle ana een 4 13 Appendix A Specifications Technical Specifications una ae A 1 Wear
11. Disconnect the headset adapter prior to performing a cold boot Update to a newer operating system OEM version 05 30 0000 or higher Scanner trigger is held down during a cold boot Do not press trigger during a cold boot P1 or P2 key is held down during a cold boot Do not press the P1 or P2 key during a cold boot If all three LEDs are lit solid Voice Only WT4090 is in IPL mode Perform cold boot See Resetting the Wearable Terminal on page 2 17 WLAN connection is lost when the wearable terminal is connected to a host computer using ActiveSync Microsoft security feature prevents connection to two separate networks Disconnect from the WLAN network prior to connecting to a host computer using ActiveSync 4 10 VT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Table 4 1 Troubleshooting the Wearable Terminal Continued Problem Wearable terminal cannot find any Bluetooth devices nearby Cause Too far from other Bluetooth devices Solution Move closer to the other Bluetooth device s within a range of 10 meters The Bluetooth device s nearby are not turned on Turn on the Bluetooth device s you wish to find The Bluetooth device s are not in discoverable mode Set the Bluetooth device s to discoverable mode If needed refer to the device s user documentation for help Table 4 2 Troubleshooting the Four Slot Ethernet Cradle Problem
12. Table 2 8 Key Combinations Action Key Combination Access the Start menu on the taskbar CTRL ESC Switch fields within an application TAB Close windows or cancel operations on some applications ESC or ALT F4 Access the Task Manager ALT TAB Switches to the next window or desktop ALT ESC Access a menu bar in an application ALT ALT Press a button or select a check box in an application TAB until the item is highlighted then SPACE Display a pop up context menu ALT ENTER Throughout this guide you will be instructed to select an item You must use a key combination to select that item For example To perform Select Start gt Programs gt Windows Explorer 1 Press CTRL and then ESC to open the Start menu 2 Press the up arrow until the Programs item is highlighted 3 Press the Blue key and the down arrow to open the Programs sub menu 4 Press the down arrow until Windows Explorer is highlighted 5 Press ENTER key to launch Windows Explorer Selecting Items When using the navigation keys to perform tasks in an application the active item is highlighted using either a color background and or a dashed box Profile Entry K Ei Profile ID Name Pubic ESSID Publc My Device Internet Explorer Dor Recycle Bin Media Player s El ue desktop Microsoft Remote WordPad Desktop Figure 2 9 Highlighted Items 2
13. Trioptic UPC E1 2D enabled by default 4 CB 4 State Customer Bar code Aztec MicroPDF417 PDF417 MaxiCode Additionally supported by 2D Australian Post British Post 4 state code and infomail Data Matrix Japanese Post KIX Netherlands Post Planet Code Postnet QR Code EAN UCC Composite TCIF Linked Code 39 TLC39 Supported Aiming Modes Class 2 Laser cross hair with bright center for sunlight visibility Pick List mode option Interface Cordless Bluetooth Class Il v 2 1 with Adaptive Frequency Hopping AFH Supported profiles Serial Port Profile SPP Human Interface Device Profile HID Service Discovery Application Profile SDAP Pairing by reading terminal BT address as bar code off the display or from a printed label Corded to WT4090 Serial Field Replaceable Parts Batteries corded adaptor trigger clamp triggerless clamp comfort pad straps and strap buckle User Interface LED Two parallel multi color rear left and rear right Beeper Rear center up to 80 dBA SPL 10 cm Restore Key User accessible for emergency boot up and Bluetooth reconnect after excessive disconnection period Scan Triggering Manual or automatic using Interactive Sensing Technology IST User Environment Operating Temperature 20 C to 55 C 4 F to 131 F Storage Temperature 40 to 70 C 40 to 158 F excluding battery
14. 302 aa LANA KG 3 5 four slot Ethernet USB 1 3 3 1 four slot spare battery charger 1 3 G getting started 0 0 eee eee eee 1 7 H hard reset 1 14 2 1 2 17 2 18 humidity 2 ee ee eee eee eee ee A 2 A 4 A 5 A 7 l icon battery status 22 2 nn nennen 2 12 icons alpha mode 22222 eee eee 2 12 MET edi a ees bad eee 2 12 Ae erates seta ee ee 2 12 T nelion area 2 12 AA AA oe 2 12 imager See data capture imaging IMAGING aaa aa Gai dd outed pada ee NG a 2 20 information service 0 0 000 xiii installing main battery a 1 7 K key descriptions two color alphanumeric 2 4 2 6 keyboard sisareen ee A 1 Keypads eet ae eed rk x 28 K y anne a ees 2 6 double tap ee een nen 2 4 TYPOS nee nme 2 4 VOICE NIY una ee ee ae 2 9 L laser safety 000000 eee A 4 A 5 A 8 laser scanning See data capture 00 eee eee 2 19 LED AA ae ta Seen een 2 2 LEDs scan and decode 00 eee ee eee 2 21 lithium ion battery 1 3 M main battery charging un ete chee ee eee ewe nA 1 7 1 8 temperature range A 8 INStallng oe PPO 1 7 maintenance eee eee eee 4 1 MEMO au hiv oe wee Sede eee ee x A 2 0 operating environment wearable terminal A 1 operating system 0 00 eee eee x A 2 operating temperature A 2 A 4 A 5 A 7 P p
15. Always wear eye protection Read warning label on compressed air and alcohol product before using If you have to use any other solution for medical reasons please contact Motorola for more information Materials Required e Alcohol wipes Soft lens cloth e Cotton tipped applicators e Isopropyl alcohol e Can of compressed air with a tube Cleaning the Wearable Terminal Housing Using the alcohol wipes wipe the housing including keys and in between keys Display The display can be wiped down with the alcohol wipes but care should be taken not to allow any pooling of liquid around the edges of the display Immediately dried the display with a soft non abrasive cloth to prevent streaking For WT4090 with touch panel only use a soft lens cloth to clean the touch panel overlay surface Connectors Clean all three connectors two interface connectors on the sides of the wearable terminal and the cradle connector on the back 1 Remove the main battery from mobile computer See Installing and Removing the Main Battery on page 1 7 2 Remove connector rubber plugs if required 3 Dip the cotton portion of the cotton tipped applicator in isopropyl alcohol Maintenance amp Troubleshooting 4 5 4 Rub the cotton portion of the cotton tipped applicator back and forth across each connector Do not leave any cotton residue on the connector 5 Repeat at least three times 6 Use the cotton tipped applicator dipped in alcohol
16. Buttons 1 2 a nwawnanawwaannnnananaanaaanananananansannanasanasananaans 2 14 Selecting Items in a List AA AA GA 2 15 SOME SIN Calibratioi naar 2 15 Special Character Keypad zensiert 2 16 Resetting the Wearable Terminal une a ee 2 17 Performing a Warm Boot zes esse er nenne 2 17 Performing a Cold Bott een en E 2 18 Data Gapl fe en en ee ee ee os eer ee eer 2 19 Laser Scanning BORRENTERASEHPEIELENRE TERERPEILEES EIER AAA SEREL SEEREEERL DR 2 19 Scanning Considerations esse ee HAN 2 19 Scanning Bar Codes AA AA 2 19 a AA AA 2 20 Scan LED INCEST AA ee ee 2 20 magng seele 2 20 SHAT MeO Sars aNG AE AA AA AN 2 20 Imager Seann ng Ka NGA NA ea 2 21 Waking the Wearable Terminal aaa AN ANA 2 22 Chapter 3 Accessories MUON AA AA 3 1 AA RA ee ee ee eee eee 3 1 scanners ae ge ee a un a eee ee 3 1 POS a cas KA tee AA AGA AA AA AA 3 1 Kg lana fe pe SA AA AE 3 2 Battery Charging Indicators nee ae nee 3 3 FOUr Slot Eihernet Eradle wen ee 3 4 Battery Charging zes ee een 3 5 LED Charge Indieatons ana 3 5 Speed LED ne ee ee AA AA 3 5 KA 3 5 Battery Charging Indieators za APANG GOD pA APAN GALA 3 5 Table of Contents vii Fo r Slot Spare Battery Charger aa NGANGA E AREE EE EER 3 6 Spare Battery Charging with the Four Slot Spare Battery Charger uuusrssssssennsnnnnnnnnnnnnnennnnnnn 3 6 Battery Charging Indicators ia een een ae nen ea Seeded 3 6 RS409 Scanner ee OE ne ee 3 8 RS309 SCANNET ven een ee AA a ER ie Ekan 3 10 EI
17. For example press and release the Orange key press and release the SHIFT key and then press the 5 key twice to produce the uppercase letter K BKSP Backspace function Space function when used with the Blue key CTRL Control Press and release the CTRL key to activate the keypad alternate CTRL functions The 2 icon appears on the Windows CE desktop taskbar Press the Blue key followed by the CTRL key to activate the keypad alternate ALT functions The fur icon appears on the Windows CE desktop taskbar SHIFT f Press and release the SHIFT key to activate the keypad alternate SHIFT functions The Ar icon appears on the Windows CE desktop taskbar ENTER Executes a selected item or function TAB Move the focus to the next field in a window P1 Programmable key When used with the Blue key toggles the keypad backlight on and off P2 Programmable key When used with the Blue key toggles the display backlight on and off P3 Programmable key The keypad is color coded to indicate the alternate function key blue values and the alternate ALPHA key orange values See Table 2 5 for the special character generation Table 2 5 Special Character Generation Map Special Character Two color Keypad Triple tap Keypad Blue Orange 0 Blue Orange 0 forward slash Blue Orange 2 Blue Orange 2 open square bracket Blue Orange 3 Blue Orange 3 close square bracket Blue Orange 4 Blue
18. Pick List Mode with Multiple Bar Codes 3 Release the scan button J NOTE Imager decoding usually occurs instantaneously The RS507 repeats the steps required to take a digital picture image of a poor or difficult bar code as long as the scan button remains pressed 2 22 W14070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Waking the Wearable Terminal The wake up conditions define what actions wake up the wearable terminal after it has gone into suspend mode The wearable terminal can go into suspend mode by either pressing the Power button or automatically by control panel time out settings These settings are configurable and the factory default settings are shown in Table 2 10 Table 2 10 Wakeup Default Settings Condition for Wakeup Power Button Automatic Time out AC power is applied No Yes Wearable terminal is inserted into a cradle No Yes Wearable terminal is removed from a cradle No Yes Wearable terminal is connected to a serial device No Yes Wearable terminal is connected to a USB device No Yes Wearable terminal is disconnected from a USB No Yes device A key is pressed No Yes An attached scanner is triggered No Yes Wireless LAN activity is detected No No A headset is connected to the wearable terminal No Yes Screen Touch only on touch screen configurations No No J NOTE f the battery is removed and replaced the only way to wake up the terminal is by pressing the Power button Ch
19. Terminal Carefully remove all protective material from around the wearable terminal and save the shipping container for later storage and shipping Verify that you received all equipment listed below e Wearable terminal e Lithium ion battery e Regulatory Guide e Quick Start Guide Inspect the equipment for damage If you are missing any equipment or if you find any damaged equipment contact the Motorola Enterprise Mobility Support Center immediately See page xiii for contact information Accessories Table 1 2 lists the major accessories available for the wearable terminal Table 1 2 Wearable Terminal Accessories Accessory Description Single Slot USB Cradle Charges the wearable terminal main battery and a spare battery It also synchronizes the wearable terminal with a host computer through a USB connection Four Slot Ethernet Cradle Charges up to four wearable terminals with main battery installed and provides communication through an Ethernet connection Four Slot Spare Battery Charges up to four spare batteries Charger W14070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Table 1 2 Wearable Terminal Accessories Continued Accessory Description RS409 Scanner Provides scanning capability RS309 Scanner Provides scanning capability RS507 Scanner Provides wired or wireless imaging capability Wrist Mount Provides a means for wearing the wearable terminal on the arm for hands free applications
20. WT4090 press and simultaneously hold the P1 and P2 keys and the Power button The wearable terminal initializes Using the Wearable Terminal 2 19 Data Capture Wearable terminals used with an optional wearable laser scanner allow collection of data by scanning one dimensional bar codes Laser Scanning Wearable terminals with an optional wearable laser scanner have the following features e Reading of a variety of bar code symbologies including the most popular linear postal and 1 D code types e Advanced intuitive laser aiming for easy point and shoot operation Scanning Considerations Typically scanning is a simple matter of aim scan decode and a few quick trial efforts master it However two important considerations can be used to optimize any scanning performance e Range Any scanning device decodes well over a particular working range minimum and maximum distances from the bar code This range varies according to bar code density and scanning device optics Scanning within range brings quick and constant decodes scanning too close or too far away prevents decodes Move the scanner closer and further away to find the right working range for the bar codes being scanned However the situation is complicated by the availability of various integrated scanning modules The best way to specify the appropriate working range per bar code density is through a chart called a decode zone for each scan module A decode zone simply pl
21. by prying it apart 1 Turn the wearable terminal over to expose the top housing of the shroud 2 Push the tip of a ball point pen through the hole in the connector shroud top housing The connector disengages from the wearable terminal Accessories 3 17 Connector Eject Hole Figure 3 18 Disconnecting Connector with Shroud 3 18 VT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Introduction This chapter includes instructions on cleaning and storing the wearable terminal and provides troubleshooting solutions for potential problems during wearable terminal operation Maintaining the Wearable Terminal For trouble free service observe the following tips when using the wearable terminal Do not scratch the touch screen of the wearable computer When activating with the wearable computer touch screen use finger tips Never use a pen or pencil or other sharp object on the surface of the screen Motorola requires using a screen protector p n KT 114032 01R or KT 114032 02R A screen protector is applied to the wearable computer touch screen Motorola requires using this to minimize wear and tear Screen protectors enhance the usability and durability of touch screen displays Benefits include Protection from scratches and gouges e Durable touch surface with tactile feel e Abrasion and chemical resistance e Keeping the device s screen looking new Quick and easy installation Protect the wearable terminal with a touch scr
22. mit einer Ausgangsleistung von 12 V Gleichstrom und mindestens 3 3 A Die Stromversorgung ist nach EN60950 fiir die Verwendung in SELV Stromkreisen zertifiziert Bei Verwendung eines anderen Netzteils werden alle f r das Ger t gew hrten Genehmigungen au er Kraft gesetzt und der Betrieb kann gef hrlich sein Four Slot Ethernet Cradle Power Supply Use only a Symbol approved power supply output rated 12 VDC and minimum 9 A The power supply is certified to EN60950 with SELV outputs Use of alternative power supply will invalidate any approval given to this device and may be dangerous Benutzen Sie nur eine von Symbol Technologies genehmigte Stromversorgung mit einer Ausgangsleistung von 12 V Gleichstrom und mindestens 9 A Die Stromversorgung ist nach EN60950 fiir die Verwendung in SELV Stromkreisen zertifiziert Bei Verwendung eines anderen Netzteils werden alle f r das Ger t gew hrten Genehmigungen au er Kraft gesetzt und der Betrieb kann gef hrlich sein B 2 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide A API An interface by means of which one software component communicates with or controls another Usually used to refer to services provided by one software component to another usually via software interrupts or function calls Application Programming Interface See API ANSI Terminal A display terminal that follows commands in the ANSI standard terminal language For example it uses escape sequences to control the
23. normal Roll 35 degrees from vertical Pitch 65 degrees from normal User Environment Operating Temperature 4 F to 122 F 20 C to 50 C Storage Temperature 25 F to 160 F 40 C to 70 C Humidity 5 to 95 non condensing Drop Specification 4 ft 1 8m drop to concrete Environmental Sealing IP54 sealing Ambient Light Immunity Indoor 450 foot candles 4 844 lux Outdoor 8 000 foot candles 86 111 lux Regulatory Electrical Safety Certified to CSA C22 2 No 60950 1 EN60950 1 IEC 60950 1 EMI RFI FCC Part 15 Class B ICES 003 Class B European Union EMC and R amp TTE Directives Australian AS NZS 4268 Laser Safety CDRH Class II IEC 60825 1 Class 2 Laser Decode Capability Code 39 Code 128 Code 93 Codabar Code 11 Discrete 2 of 5 Interleaved 2 of 5 EAN 8 EAN 13 MSI UPCA UPCE UPC EAN supplementals Coupon Code Trioptic 39 Webcode Chinese 2 of 5 RSS A 6 W1T4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide RS507 Scanner Table A 4 RS507 Technical Specifications Item Description Physical and Environmental Characteristics Dimensions Triggerless standard battery 2 9 x 5 3 x 7 4 cm 1 16 x 2 1 x 2 92 in Triggerless extended battery 3 6 x 5 3 x 7 4 cm 1 42 x 2 1 x 2 92 in Triggered standard battery 2 9 x 5 3 x 7 4 cm 1 16 x 2 1 x 2 92 in Triggered corded cord length not included 3 3 x 5 3 x 7 4 cm 1 3 x 2 1 x 2 92 in Weight stan
24. or deform puncture or shred Severe impact from dropping any battery operated device on a hard surface could cause the battery to overheat Do not short circuit a battery or allow metallic or conductive objects to contact the battery terminals Do not modify or remanufacture attempt to insert foreign objects into the battery immerse or expose to water or other liquids or expose to fire explosion or other hazard Do not leave or store the equipment in or near areas that might get very hot such as in a parked vehicle or near a radiator or other heat source Do not place battery into a microwave oven or dryer Battery usage by children should be supervised Please follow local regulations to promptly dispose of used re chargeable batteries Do not dispose of batteries in fire 4 4 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide e Seek medical advice immediately if a battery has been swallowed e Inthe event of a battery leak do not allow the liquid to come in contact with the skin or eyes If contact has been made wash the affected area with large amounts of water and seek medical advice e If you suspect damage to your equipment or battery contact Motorola Enterprise Mobility support to arrange for inspection Cleaning WARNING Avoid exposing this product to contact with hot oil or other flammable liquids If such exposure A occurs unplug the device and clean the product immediately in accordance with these guidelines N CAUTION
25. scroll up and down using the arrow keys and select Enter to select an item or press the numeric key associated with the item If the Start Up window is closed launch the Start Up window by selecting OTL on the desktop WT4070c50 Demo e symbol App Launcher wa a 1 Rapid Deployment Client Sz 1 Rapid Deployment Client 1 RD Client 2 Airbeam Client 3 Wavelink TelnetCE 4 Internet Explorer Sr 2 Airbeam Client Bram 2 Airbeam Client A5 Utilities i i 96 Demo Apps 3 Wavelink TelnetCE 3 Wavelink TelnetCE 87 Exit 4 Internet Explorer 4 Internet Explorer w14070c50 Demo gt or 9 ot Example SOF 82x28 OEM VERSION 02 17 0001 OEM VERSION 03 17 0001 OEM VERSION 04 20 0004 or 05 30 0001 Figure 2 7 Start up Window Table 2 6 Start Up Item Descriptions Item rer Description RD Client or Rapid 1 Launches the Rapid Deployment application Refer to the WT4070 90 Deployment Client Wearable Terminal Integrator Guide for more information AirBEAM Client 2 Launches the AirBEAM Client application Refer to the WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal Integrator Guide for more information Wavelink TelnetCE 3 Launches the Wavelink Client application Internet Explorer 4 Launches the Microsoft Pocket Internet Explorer application Using the Wearable Terminal 2 11 Table 2 6 Start Up Item Descriptions Continued Item laut Description Utilities folder 5 Opens a sub
26. used for real time audio and video traffic where lost packets are simply ignored because there is no time to retransmit If UDP is used and a reliable delivery is required packet sequence checking and error notification must be written into the applications Glossary 9 U Visible Laser Diode VLD A solid state device which produces visible laser light W Warm Boot A warm boot restarts the wearable terminal by closing all running programs All data that is not saved to flash memory is lost Wearable Terminal In this text wearable terminal refers to the Symbol WT4090 that can be set up to communicate with a network using wireless radio technology Glossary 10 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Numerics 1 D bar codes 00000 2 19 28 key keypad eee eee 2 6 2 D bar codes nennen nenn 2 20 A ACCESSOT ES 1 nennen nen 1 3 EMDK aanak een 1 4 four slot charge only cradle 3 1 four slot cradles battery charging 0 eee 3 5 four slot Ethernet cradle 3 4 LED indicators 3 5 four slot Ethernet USB cradle 1 3 3 1 four slot spare battery charger 1 3 serial USB cradle 1 3 3 1 single slot serial USB cradle 3 2 LED indicators 3 3 3 6 spare battery charger 3 6 power connection 222er een 3 6 B backup bat
27. wearable terminal is running on external power This icon is displayed when the memory backup battery level is low Charge the battery This icon indicates that the battery is fully charged 100 charged The battery status icons provide the battery status in 10 increments from 10 to 100 This displays when the terminal is connected to a host computer with ActiveSync Wireless connection status icon Indicates WLAN signal strength Bluetooth radio is on Bluetooth radio is off Bluetooth radio is connected to another Bluetooth device Indicates that the SHIFT key is selected Indicates that the Blue key is selected Indicates that the CTRL key is selected Indicates that the ALT key is selected Indicates that the Orange key is selected Indicates that the Gray key is selected 0 0 8 8 0 9 e a 0 Fr alle Indicates that the Motorola Remote Control software is connected to the wearable terminal Using the Keypad to Navigate Applications J NOTE Not available on the Voice Only configuration Using the Wearable Terminal 2 13 On wearable computers without touch enabled screens navigation and control of an application is performed using the keypad Key Combinations The wearable terminal uses special key combinations to easily navigate applications Table 2 8 lists the key combinations required to perform various application navigation and control functions
28. window that contains utilities such as Control Panel File Explorer BT HID Connect BT Printer Connect and test applications For more information on the Control Panel and File Explorer refer to the Symbol Application Guide for Symbol Devices p n 72E 68901 xx Demo Apps 6 Opens a sub window that contains sample demonstration applications Exit 7 Closes the Start Up window Windows CE 5 0 Desktop The following paragraphs describe the Windows CE 5 0 desktop Depending upon the customer s configuration of the wearable terminal the desktop may not be available Status Icons The Taskbar at the bottom of the window displays the active programs current time battery status and communication status r i EP My Device Media otl Player w amp tl ah Recycle Bin Microsoft Remote WordPad Desktop omy 7 a Status Icons Internet My Explorer Documents Desktop Button Start Button Figure 2 8 Taskbar 2 12 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Status icons are shown in the taskbar to indicate present status of the wearable terminal Table 2 7 Status Icons Status Icon 10 30 AM Description Indicates the current time The clock can be toggled on and off Select Start gt Settings gt Control Panel gt Task and Start Menu This icon indicates that the main battery is charging or that the wearable terminal is operating on external power Indicates that the battery is fully charged and the
29. within the conventions of a certain symbology usually including start stop characters quiet zones data characters and check characters Symbology The structural rules and conventions for representing data within a particular bar code type e g UPC EAN Code 39 PDF417 etc Glossary 8 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide T TCP IP Transmission Control Protocol Internet Protocol A communications protocol used to internetwork dissimilar systems This standard is the protocol of the Internet and has become the global standard for communications TCP provides transport functions which ensures that the total amount of bytes sent is received correctly at the other end UDP is an alternate transport that does not guarantee delivery It is widely used for real time voice and video transmissions where erroneous packets are not retransmitted IP provides the routing mechanism TCP IP is a routable protocol which means that all messages contain not only the address of the destination station but the address of a destination network This allows TCP IP messages to be sent to multiple networks within an organization or around the world hence its use in the worldwide Internet Every client and server ina TCP IP network requires an IP address which is either permanently assigned or dynamically assigned at startup Telnet A terminal emulation protocol commonly used on the Internet and TCP IP based networks It allows a user at a terminal or compute
30. 0 0 a 1 3 3 1 single Slot nase ne 3 2 LED indicators 3 3 3 6 Index 2 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide spare battery charger 3 6 power connection a 3 6 current time 0 0000 2 12 D data capture 000 cee eee x 2 19 adjusting the distance 2 20 imager operational modes decode mode aa 2 20 image capture mode 2 21 pick list mode 2 222222 2 21 Imaging uses 2 20 INGICALON AA 2 20 laser scanning 00 eee eee 2 19 one dimensional bar codes 2 19 Scan angle a vet eee dee Ka eed bA Vaden 2 19 SCAN ANGE una en 2 19 SCANNING a aaa ae 2 19 2 21 two dimensional bar codes 2 20 date time turn en ern eek LAG 2 12 DCP for WT4090C50 0 ee eee xii Device Configuration Package 1 4 Device Configuration Package for WT4090c50 xii dimensions 000 eee A 1 A 3 A 4 A 6 dISPlay 2s sec ns aa are x A 1 drop specification A 2 A 4 A 5 A 7 E electrical safety A 3 A 4 A 5 A 8 EMDK for eVC4 2 xii Enterprise Mobility Developer Kit See EMDK 0 0 00 cee 1 4 Enterprise Mobility Developer Kit foreVC4 xii F four slot charge only a 3 1 four slot cradles battery charging a 3 5 four slot Ethernet cradle 0 0 a 3 4 LED indicators paa kag
31. 05 15 207 15 209 15 203 EN 300 32 EN301 893 RSS 100 RSS 210 ARIB STD 66 amp 33 ARIB STD T70 amp 71 RS309 Scanner Table A 2 RS309 Technical Specifications Item Description Physical and Environmental Characteristics Dimensions standard version 2 7 inch L x 2 4 inch W x 1 5 inch H without cables attached 6 8 cm L x 6 1 cm Hx 3 8 cm Weight standard version without 3 525 oz 98 gm cables attached Current 140 mA typical 180 mA max Standby Current 60 uA max Voltage 3 1 to 3 6 VDC Vcc Noise Level 200 mV p p max Performance Characteristics Light Source 650 nm LASER 1 06 mW Scan Rate 35 5 scans sec bidirectional A 4 W1T4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Table A 2 RS309 Technical Specifications Continued Item Nominal Working Distance Description Density 5mil 7 5mil 13mil 20mil 55 mil Code Type 39 39 UPC 39 39 Far inches 7 9 75 20 25 29 25 545 Guaranteed Far inches 95 15 25 2725 425 84 75 Typical Yaw t 50 degrees from normal Roll t 20 degrees from vertical Pitch t 65 degrees from normal User Environment Operating Temperature 22 F to 122 F 30 C to 50 C Storage Temperature 40 F to 140 40 C to 60 C Humidity 5 to 95 non condensing Drop Specification 4 ft 1 8m drop to concrete Environmental Sealing IP54 sealing Ambient Light Immunity Indoor 450 foot cand
32. 14 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Navigating Menus Most applications have drop down menus to perform specific functions Use the key combination ALT ALT to open a menu Once the menu is open use the up and down navigation keys to move up and down the menu and use the left and right navigation keys to move to the next menu item or open a sub menu When moving through a menu items are highlighted Once an item is highlighted press the ENTER key to select that item AGE Edit View Go Favorites 2 New Folder Delete Rename Properties Send To File Fol File Fol Figure 2 10 Navigating Menus Navigating Tabs Some applications contain multiple pages with tabs indicating each page Use the TAB key to highlight the tab A dashed box appears around the tab name Use the left and right navigation keys to move to the next or previous tab On Battery power Turn off device if M not used for On External power Turn off device if not used for BIENEN Power settings l Gor Figure 2 11 Navigating Tabs Navigating Fields To navigate from one field to another press the TAB key Repeated pressing of the TAB key cycles the highlighted cursor through the fields in the window Selecting Checkboxes and Radio Buttons To select or deselect checkboxes and radio buttons press the TAB key until the field is highlighted Press ALT BKSP SPACE to select or deselect the checkb
33. 21 J NOTE To enable Pick List Mode download the Control Panel applet from the Support Central web site at http www motorola com enterprisemobility support Pick List can also be set in an application using a API command e Pick List Mode This mode allows you to selectively decode a bar code when more than one bar code is in the RS507 s field of view To accomplish this move the aiming crosshair center dot over the required bar code to decode only that bar code This feature is ideal for pick lists containing multiple bar codes and manufacturing or transport labels containing more than one bar code type either 1D or 2D Image Capture Mode Use this mode to capture an image within the RS507 s field of view This is useful for capturing signatures or images of items like damaged boxes Imager Scanning 1 Ensure that a scan enabled application is loaded on the wearable terminal 2 Press and hold the scan button The red laser aiming pattern turns on to assist in aiming Ensure the cross hair is on top of the bar code The Decode LED lights red to indicate that scanning is in process then lights green and a beep sounds by default to indicate the bar code was decoded successfully Note that when the RS507 is in Pick List Mode the imager does not decode the bar code until the crosshair center dot touches the bar code A os m al Figure 2 18 Imager Aiming Pattern x ut IM IMI I Figure 2 19
34. 40 to 60 C 40 to 140 F including battery Humidity 5 to 85 non condensing Drop Specification 1 8 m 6 ft multiple drops to concrete across operating temperature range A 8 VT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Table A 4 RS507 Technical Specifications Continued Item Description Environmental Sealing IP54 Electrostatic Discharge 15kV air discharge 8kV direct discharge ESD Power Cordless Standard battery Li lon 970 mAh 3 7 V with up to 35 000 scans continuous or up to 10 hours with 900 scans per hour on a single charge using fresh batteries Extended battery Li lon 1940 mAh 3 7 V with up to 70 000 scans continuous or up to 20 hours with 900 scans per hour on a single charge using fresh batteries Corded Corded adaptor to WT4090 Regulatory Electrical Safety Certified to UL60950 1 CSA C22 2 No 60950 1 EN60950 1 IEC 60950 1 EMI RFI FCC Part 15 Class B ICES 003 Class B European Union EMC and R amp TTE Directives Australian AS NZS 60950 1 Laser Safety CDRH Class Il IEC 60825 1 Class 2 RoHS Compliance with RoHS standards Accessories Table A 5 Accessory Specifications Single Slot USB Cradle Four Slot Ethernet Cradle Four Slot Spare Battery Charger Operating 32 F to 122 F 32 F to 104 F Temperature 0 C to 50 C 0 C to 40 C Storage 40 F to 158 F Temperature 40 C to 70 C B
35. AlUSHICON cet aan a eres ee eee aS 2 12 status icons Windows CE 5 0 0 00 c eee 2 11 storage temperature A 2 A 4 A 5 A 7 SUSPENO zu nennen 1 9 2 1 T taskbar muss ea 2 11 technical specifications wearable terminal A 1 temperature batterycharging 2 222202 eee eee ee eee A 8 terminal CHANGING a maa en ee a 2 12 terminal charging eee eee ee eee 2 12 troubleshooting 0 0 eee eee eee 4 6 four slot spare battery charger 4 12 single slot serial USB cradle 4 13 wearable terminal 2 222222 4 6 U unpacking cece nn 1 3 W warm boot a 2 1 2 17 wearable terminal POWELON oo eee nenn 2 1 SLAMING ives seer ae NMN agham wed 1 14 weight eee eee A 1 A 3 A 4 A 6 wireless status icon 2222222 2 12 WLAN 802 11a b g ossasuna anaana x WLAN Status 4 mawa Kata rad tan 2 12 WPAN Bluetooth cee x Index 4 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Q MOTOROLA Motorola Inc One Motorola Plaza Holtsville New York 11742 USA 1 800 927 9626 http www motorola com enterprisemobility MOTOROLA and the Stylized M Logo and Symbol and the Symbol logo are registered in the U S Patent and Trademark Office All other product or service names are the property of their registered owners Motorola Inc 2009 72E 87633 05 Revision A December 2009
36. Carefully press and briefly hold stylus on the center of the target New settings have been measured Repeat as the target moves around Press the Enter key to accept the screen Press the Esc key to discard Press the Esc key to cancel Calibration Screen Confirm Calibration Screen Figure 1 20 Calibration Screen 2 Once all ofthe new calibration settings are input tap the screen or press the ENTER button to save the new calibration settings Press ESC to discard the new calibration settings Voice Only WT4090 Boot Up When the Voice Only WT4090 is powered on for the first time the three LEDs on the front housing blink as follows 1 16 W1T4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide 1 Application Controlled LED and Battery Status LED on 2 All LEDs Off 3 Application Controlled LED on Battery Status LED on WLAN Status LED on 4 WLAN Status LED off Battery Status LED off Application Controlled LED off The WLAN Status LED blinks indicating that the wireless connection is not connected or is solid indicating that the wireless connection is connected Introduction This chapter explains the physical buttons and controls on the wearable terminal and provides basic instructions for using the wearable terminal including powering on and resetting the wearable terminal using a headset entering information and scanning This chapter also details the operation of the Windows CE 5 0 operating system including the des
37. Cradle Maintenance amp Troubleshooting 4 13 Table 4 4 Troubleshooting the Single Slot USB Cradle Symptom Charge Status LEDs do not light when wearable terminal or spare Possible Cause Cradle is not receiving power Solution Ensure the power cable is connected securely to both the cradle and to AC power Wearable terminal is not seated firmly in the Remove and re insert the wearable terminal into the cradle ensuring it is firmly seated battery is inserted cradle Spare battery is not Remove and re insert the spare battery into the charging slot seated firmly in the ensuring it is firmly seated cradle Wearable Wearable terminal was Ensure cradle is receiving power Ensure wearable terminal is terminal battery is not charging removed from cradle or cradle was unplugged from AC power too soon seated correctly Confirm main battery is charging If a wearable terminal battery is fully depleted it can take up to four hours to fully recharge a standard capacity battery and up to eight hours for an extended capacity battery if the wearable terminal is off and longer if the wearable terminal is operating View battery status by selecting Start gt Settings gt Control Panel gt Power icon Battery is faulty Verify that other batteries charge properly If so replace the faulty battery The wearable terminal is not fully seated in the cradle Remove and re insert the wear
38. MHz Channel 14 2484 MHz Japan only Actual operating frequencies depend on regulatory rules and certification agency Security WPA2 WEP 40 or 128 bit TKIP TLS TTLS MS CHAP TTLS MS CHAP v2 TTLS CHAP TTLS MD5 TTLS PAP PEAP TLS PEAP MS CHAP v2 AES LEAP CCX v3 Voice Communication Runs voice recognition engines and text to speech engines for voice picking applications Output Power 100 mW U S and International Data Rate 802 11a up to 54Mb per second 802 11b up to 11Mb per second 802 11g up to 54Mb per second Frequency Range 802 11a 5 GHz country dependent 802 11b 2 4 GHz country dependent 802 11g 2 4 GHz country dependent Specifications A 3 Table A 1 Technical Specifications Continued Item Description Antenna Internal WPAN Wireless Data Communications Bluetooth Bluetooth Version 1 2 Peripherals and Accessories Cradles Single Slot USB Four Slot Ethernet Printers Supports extensive line of Symbol approved printers cables and accessories Charger Four Slot Battery Charger Other Accessories Headset adapter freezer pouch hip mount and wrist mount Regulatory Electrical Safety Certified to UL60950 1 CSA C22 2 No 60950 1 EN60950 IEC 60950 1 plus all national deviations EMC FCC Part 15 Subpart B ICES 003 Class B EN 60601 1 2 EN 61000 3 2 EN 61000 3 3 CISPR 22 Class B CISPR 24 RF FCC Parts 15 247 15 407 15 2
39. Orange 4 Backslash Blue Orange 5 Blue Orange 5 apostrophe Blue Orange 6 Blue Orange 6 comma 2 8 W14070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Table 2 5 Special Character Generation Map Continued Special Character Two color Keypad Triple tap Keypad Blue Orange 7 or Blue Orange 7 period Orange TAB Blue Orange 8 Blue Orange 8 semi colon Blue Orange 9 Blue Orange 9 equal sign Blue Orange Tab Blue Orange Tab dash Shift 1 Shift 1 exclamation point Shift 2 Shift 2 at sign Shift 3 Shift 3 Pound sign Shift 4 Shift 4 dollar sign Shift 5 Shift 5 percent sign A Shift 6 Shift 6 carat amp Shift 7 Shift 7 ampersand Shift 8 Shift 8 asterisk Shift 9 Shift 9 open parenthesis Shift 0 Shift 0 close parenthesis Blue Orange 1 Blue Orange 1 single quote u Shift Blue Orange 1 Shift Blue Orange 1 double quote Shift Blue Orange 0 Shift Blue Orange 0 question mark Shift Blue Orange 2 Shift Blue Orange 2 open curly bracket Using the Wearable Terminal 2 9 Table 2 5 Special Character Generation Map Continued Special Character Two color Keypad Triple tap Keypad Shift Blue Orange 3 Shift Blue Or
40. Press CTRL and then ESC to open the Start menu 2 Using the navigation keys select Settings 3 Press the Blue key and the down arrow to open the Control Panel sub menu 4 Press ENTER key to launch Control Panel 5 Using the navigation keys select the System Information icon 6 Press ENTER key to launch System Information applet About This Guide XI System Info 0k x System HW Version Display Misc Configinfo UUID Part 1 OF36B301 UUID Part 2 38498821 05 Version 05 00 1400 OEM Name SYMBOL WT4090c50 OEM Version 06 35 0000 Plat ID 40X0cSOVxxPlat 028 id 2 B contral Panel gt O B Fusion Software To determine the Fusion software version 1 Press ALT w The Wireless menu appears 2 Using the navigation keys select Wireless Status 3 Press ENTER The Wireless Status window displays 4 Press 5 The Versions screen appears Wireless Status 5 Versions LoginService 2 57 1 PACstoreService 2 57 0 2 PHOTON10 3 0 0266 PublicAPI 2 57 0 7 WCConfigEd 2 57 08 WCDiag 2 57 0 4 WCLaunch 2 57 0 7 WCSAPI 2 57 0 2 WCSRV 2 57 0 14 WCStatus 2 57 0 5 2 wiretess Status gt O B a Chapter Descriptions Topics covered in this guide are as follows e Chapter 1 Getting Started provides information on getting the wearable terminal up and running for the first time e Chapter 2 Using the Wearable Terminal explains how to use the wearable terminal Th
41. T4090 Wearable Terminal Front View Interface Connector Rubber Plug Battery Battery Release Cleat Interface Connector shown without Rubber Plug Cradle Connector Figure 1 3 Wearable Terminal Back View Table 1 1 Parts of the Wearable Terminal Item Description Display Displays the application and data stored on the device WT4090 only Power Button Places the wearable terminal in to the suspend mode or resumes normal operation Performs a warm boot when held down for five seconds See Resetting the Wearable Terminal on page 2 17 for information about performing a warm boot Charge Status LED Indicates the charging status of the battery Getting Started 1 3 Table 1 1 Parts of the Wearable Terminal Continued Item Description WLAN Status LED Indicates the status of the wireless connection Voice Only WT4090 only Battery Status LED Indicates when the battery charge level falls below 30 Voice Only WT4090 only Application Controlled LED Application programmable Voice Only WT4090 only Speaker Provides audio playback Keypads Enable user input Battery Provides power to the wearable terminal Interface Connector Provides electrical connection to an accessory such as a scanner Cradle Connector Provides electrical connection to a cradle Battery Release Releases the battery for removal Cleat Provides mounting for the wrist mount and cradles Unpacking the Wearable
42. W14070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide 72E 87633 05 Rev A December 2009 W14070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide 2006 9 Motorola Inc All rights reserved No part of this publication may be reproduced or used in any form or by any electrical or mechanical means without permission in writing from Motorola This includes electronic or mechanical means such as photocopying recording or information storage and retrieval systems The material in this manual is subject to change without notice The software is provided strictly on an as is basis All software including firmware furnished to the user is on a licensed basis Motorola grants to the user a non transferable and non exclusive license to use each software or firmware program delivered hereunder licensed program Except as noted below such license may not be assigned sublicensed or otherwise transferred by the user without prior written consent of Motorola No right to copy a licensed program in whole or in part is granted except as permitted under copyright law The user shall not modify merge or incorporate any form or portion of a licensed program with other program material create a derivative work from a licensed program or use a licensed program in a network without written permission from Motorola The user agrees to maintain Motorola s copyright notice on the licensed programs delivered hereunder and to inclu
43. When the battery is initially inserted in the wearable terminal the amber LED flashes once if the battery power is low or the battery is not fully inserted Application Using the Wearable Terminal 2 3 Controlled LED Battery Status LED WLAN Status LED Charging Status LED Figure 2 3 Voice Only WT4090 LED Indicators The Voice Only WT4090 has three status LEDs Table 2 2 lists the default LED indications LED functionality can be changed by an application Table 2 2 Voice Only WT4090 LED Indications LED State Indication WLAN Status LED Green Off Battery completely discharged or device error Contact system administrator Blinking Voice Only WT4090 is not connected to a wireless network Solid Voice Only WT4090 is connected to a wireless network Battery Status LED Light Off Battery charge level is greater than 30 Green Blinking Battery charge level is less than 30 Application Controlled LED Yellow Application dependent 2 4 WT407 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Keypads The wearable terminal has the following keypads e Two color alphanumeric keypad e Triple tap cell phone like alphanumeric keypad e Voice Only keypad Two color Alphanumeric Keypad The two color alphanumeric keypad contains application keys scroll keys and function keys The keypad is color coded to indicate the alternate function keys blue orange and gray Note that keypad functions can be chan
44. able 3 2 Spare Battery LED Charging Indicators LED Indication Off No spare battery in slot spare battery not placed correctly cradle is not powered Fast Blinking Amber Charging error e Temperature is too low or too high Charging has gone on too long without completing typically eight hours Accessories 3 7 Table 3 2 Spare Battery LED Charging Indicators Continued LED Indication Slow Blinking Amber Spare battery is charging Solid Amber Charging complete 3 8 W14070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide RS409 Scanner To connect the RS409 scanner to the wearable terminal V NOTE There are two RS409 configurations available The short cable configuration connects the RS409 to the wearable terminal mounted on the arm The extended cable configuration connects the RS409 to the WT4090 mounted on the hip 1 Remove the rubber plug from the wearable terminal interface connector 2 Connect the RS409 interface cable to the wearable terminal interface connector If the wearable terminal is mounted on the arm connect the cable to the interface connector closest to the wrist Scanner Cable Connector Interface Connector Figure 3 4 Connecting RS409 to Wearable Terminal 3 If using the extended cable configuration route the scanner cable up to the shoulder and down to the hand that the scanner mounts on Attach two cable clips to clothing and secure cable to cable clip Figure 3 5 Cable Clip In
45. able Terminal see een AA AN A 1 RS309 Sieben een De ene Ana BA PO DA A 3 RS409 SCANNED er ee rca ask en ee nenne A 4 RS507 Seaner an een A 6 PC CSS SONS ae NG eek A 8 Appendix B Regulatory Information Introduction u RER OH Re Ein B 1 vill W1T407 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Accessory Power Supply Regulatory Compliance uuususessssssssnnnnnnennnnenennnnnnnennnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnenn nenn B 1 Glossary Index Introduction This guide provides information about using the WT4070 90 family of mobile terminals and accessories The WT4090 has two versions one with a display and a voice only version without a display Throughout this guide Voice Only WT4090 refers to the version without the display and WT4070 90 refers to the version with a display af NOTE Screens and windows pictured in this guide are samples and can differ from actual screens Documentation Set The documentation set for the WT4070 90 is divided into guides that provide information for specific user needs e Microsoft Application Guide describes how to use Microsoft developed applications e Enterprise Mobility Application Guide describes how to use Motorola Enterprise Mobility developed applications e WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide describes how to use the WT4070 90 wearable terminal e WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal Integrator Guide describes how to set up the WT4070 90 wearable terminal and the accessories e EMDK Help File provid
46. able terminal into the cradle ensuring it is firmly seated Ambient temperature of the cradle is too warm or too cold Move the cradle to an area where the ambient temperature is between 0 C and 40 C 32 F and 104 F Spare battery is not charging Battery inserted incorrectly Verify that the battery is oriented properly and firmly seated in the battery well correctly with the contacts facing down See Figure 3 3 on page 3 6 for proper battery orientation Battery is faulty Verify that other batteries charge properly If so replace the faulty battery Ambient temperature of the cradle is too warm or too cold Move the cradle to an area where the ambient temperature is between 0 C and 40 C 32 F and 104 F 4 14 T4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Table 4 4 Troubleshooting the Single Slot USB Cradle Continued Symptom Possible Cause Solution During data Wearable terminal Replace wearable terminal in cradle and retransmit communications removed from cradle no data was during transmitted or communications transmitted data was incomplete Incorrect cable See the System Administrator configuration Communications Perform setup as described in the WT4090 Integrator Guide software is not installed or configured Ensure that Microsoft ActiveSync 4 1 or greater is installed on the properly host computer Cannot Wrong USB cable Ensure that the cable h
47. ailable at http www motorola com enterprisemobility contactsupport When contacting Enterprise Mobility support please have the following information available e Serial number of the unit Model number or product name Software type and version number Motorola responds to calls by email telephone or fax within the time limits set forth in support agreements If your problem cannot be solved by Motorola Enterprise Mobility Support you may need to return your equipment for servicing and will be given specific directions Motorola is not responsible for any damages incurred during shipment if the approved shipping container is not used Shipping the units improperly can possibly void the warranty If you purchased your Enterprise Mobility business product from a Motorola business partner contact that business partner for support xiv WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Chapter 1 Getting Started Introduction This chapter lists the parts and accessories for the wearable terminal and explains how to install and charge the batteries and start the wearable terminal for the first time Power Button Charge Status LED Application Keypad Data Entry Keypad Action Keypad Figure 1 1 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal Front View 1 2 W14070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Application Controlled LED Battery Status LED WLAN Status LED Charge Status LED Speaker Action Keypad Figure 1 2 Voice Only W
48. al Character Keypad Alphanumeric Layer Use the arrow keys on the keyboard to move the yellow box to highlight a key on the Special Character keypad The arrow keys wrap to the next row or column as you navigate with the keys To select a character press the Enter key on the wearable terminal If the Enter or arrow keys need to be used by the application instead of the Special Character keypad press Esc followed by the arrow or Enter key This sends the key to the application instead of the Special Character keypad Press the ABC key on the Special Character keypad to switch between the alphanumeric layer and the character layer Using the Wearable Terminal 2 17 kb o 2 ah My Device Media Remote Player Desktop O Zu Recycle Bin Microsoft WT4070 Ga felel s fal MII internet EN IN ESS WE Gd aS IS Pelli AB Figure 2 15 Special Character Keyboard Character Layer Navigate the keypad in the same manner as described above To return to the alphanumeric layer press the CH key on the keypad Pressing CAP or SH switches the keypad to the upper case alphanumeric keypad L 3 ia ah My Device Media Remote Player Desktop Lal Ka 7 Recycle Bin Microsoft WT4070 EBEILCIEIEIEIEIEIEIKG of 1 las ta CAMA ti viol ifolelital sy Internet cer BEN ES KA A ED PP A A EET Explorer Tana lenlenlarf ins et gt ro ETD Figure 2 16 Special Character Keyboard in upper case Alphanumeri
49. ange 3 close curly bracket Shift Blue Orange 4 Shift Blue Orange 4 pipe Shift Blue Orange 5 Shift Blue Orange 5 tilde lt Shift Blue Orange 6 Shift Blue Orange 6 less than sign gt Shift Blue Orange 7 Shift Blue Orange 7 greater than sign Shift Blue Orange 8 Shift Blue Orange 8 colon Shift Blue Orange 9 Shift Blue Orange 9 plus sign Shift Blue Orange Tab Shift Blue Orange Tab underscore Voice Only Keypad The voice only keypad contains three programmable function keys Figure 2 6 Voice Only Keypad 2 10 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Display J NOTE To view the software versions on the Voice Only WT4090 the Voice Only WT4090 must be connected to a host computer running remote desktop software See the WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal Integrator Guide for more information The wearable terminal is factory installed with the Windows CE 5 0 operating system When the wearable terminal starts it automatically launches the Start Up application J NOTE A customer specific application can be configured to automatically start up and the Windows CE 5 0 desktop and Start Up application might not be visible or accessible Start Up Window lt J NOTE Start Up menu does not automatically launch on the Voice Only WT4090 The Start Up window allows the user to launch specific applications by using the keypad Either
50. apter 3 Accessories Introduction The wearable terminal accessories provide a variety of product support capabilities Accessories include cradles cables and scanners Cradles e Single Slot USB cradle charges the wearable terminal main battery and a spare battery It also synchronizes the wearable terminal with a host computer through either a serial or a USB connection e Four Slot Ethernet cradle charges up to four wearable terminal batteries and synchronizes the wearable terminals with a host computer through an Ethernet connection e Four Slot Spare Battery Charger charges up to four wearable terminal spare batteries Scanners e RS309 scanner e RS409 scanner e RS507 imager Accessories e Freezer pouch e Hip Mount e Wired Headset e Connector shroud 3 2 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Single Slot USB Cradle AN CAUTION Ensure that you follow the guidelines for battery safety described in Battery Safety Guidelines on page 4 3 This section describes how to use a Single Slot USB cradle Figure 3 1 with the wearable terminal For USB communication setup procedures refer to the WT4090 Integrator Guide Scanner Placed in Well Spare Battery Spare Battery Charging LED Figure3 1 Single Slot USB Cradle CAUTION Use only a Symbol approved power supply output rated 12 VDC and minimum 3 3 A Use of an AN alternative power supply will void the product warranty and may cause product damage See Append
51. arts of the wearable terminal 1 1 1 2 1 5 1 6 DOW OD aia toe crash een Re ee nae oe een 2 2 power button 220er nennen nennen 2 1 power LED sype ceeds baad sal een 2 2 power supply regulatory compliance B 1 R radios 0 04 40 een wee De dees ea X regulatory compliance power supply B 1 related documents eee eeeees xii related software ene xii removing main battery 2 2 222 22er 1 9 reset hard eee 1 14 2 1 2 17 2 18 SOft ac aie wenn eee deeds pad REAR ae 2 1 2 17 FOSCUUING 2 russ huts a AR 2 17 S SCAM SIalUS irren a a aA a A 2 20 scan status See also data capture scanning barcodes u panenna erkannten 2 19 IMAGING iss rer 2 20 LED indicators 2222ns sense 2 20 See data capture a 2 19 screen Symbol splash screen 1 15 serial USB cradle 1 3 3 1 service information 22 2 cece eee Xili single slot serial USB cradle 3 2 LED indicators 2 2 22222 nennen 3 3 3 6 SO FESEL a BA a ar near sar 2 1 2 17 spare batteries Charging sive sr eee eed ad Seeder ans 1 9 spare battery CHANGING gasgas ansteigen 1 9 spare battery charger eee eens 3 6 power connection 222er 3 6 special characters 0220e0 ee eeees 2 7 specifications A 1 starting the wearable terminal 1 7 1 14 SITAlUS och ia a had ee ee 2 12 SL
52. as a USB A connector on one end and a ActiveSync with used USB mini B connector on the other end Host Computer Host computer not Ensure that ActiveSync on the host computer is set to allow USB configured properly connections The wearable terminal Remove and re insert the wearable terminal into the cradle is not fully seated in ensuring it is firmly seated the cradle Technical Specifications The following tables summarize the wearable terminal s intended operating environment and general technical hardware specifications Wearable Terminal The following table summarizes the wearable terminal s intended operating environment Table A 1 Technical Specifications Physical and Environmental Cha racteristics Dimensions With standard battery 5 7 inches L x 3 7 inches W x 1 0 inch H 14 2 cm L x 9 3 cm W x 2 6 cm H With extended battery 5 7 inches L x 4 2 inches W x 1 0 inch H 14 2 cm W x 10 7 cm H x 2 6 cm D Weight With standard battery 11 3 oz 320 g With extended battery 12 2 oz 345 g Keyboard WT4070 90 Two color Alphanumeric Keypad or Triple tap Alphanumeric Keypad Voice Only WT4090 Three programmable function keys Display WT4090 Color 2 8 inch QVGA non touch or touch screens Voice Only WT4090 None Main Battery Removable rechargeable 3 7 VDC Lithium lon battery Standard capacity 2330 mAh minimum Extended capacity 4600 mAh minimum Backup Batt
53. ated Documents and Software The following documents provide more information about the WT4090 wearable terminals WT4090 Quick Start Guide p n 72 8671 7 xx Voice Only WT4090 Quick Start Guide p n 72 130435 xx WT4090 Windows CE 5 0 Regulatory Guide p n 72 86718 xx WT4090 Wearable Terminal Integrator Guide p n 72E 87638 xx RS309 Scanner Quick Reference Guide p n 72 86011 xx RS409 Scanner Quick Reference Guide p n 72 86010 xx RS507 Hands free Imager Quick Reference Guide p n 72 115987 xx RS507 Hands free Imager Product Reference Guide p n 72E 120802 xx Wireless Fusion Enterprise Mobility Suite User Guide for Version 2 XX p n 72E 1071 70 xx Enterprise Mobility Application Guide for Motorola Devices p n 72E 68901 xx Microsoft Applications for Windows Mobile and CE 5 0 User Guide p n 72E 78456 xx Enterprise Mobility Developer Kits available at http www motorola com enterprisemobility support Device Configuration Package DCP for WT4090c50 and Platform SDK PSDK9090c50 for WT4090 with Windows CE 5 0 available at http www motorola com enterprisemobility support About This Guide xiii e ActiveSync software available at http www microsoft com For the latest version of this guide and all guides go to http www motorola com enterprisemobility manuals Service Information If you have a problem with your equipment contact Motorola Enterprise Mobility support for your region Contact information is av
54. attery 32 F to 104 F Charging 0 C to 40 C ambient temperature Temperature Humidity 5 to 95 non condensing Size L x W x H 6 6 in x 5 1 in x 3 9 in 16 8 cm x 13 0 cm x 9 9 cm 6 7 in x 18 9 in x 4 5 in 17 0 cm x 48 1 cm x 11 4 cm 8 5 in x 5 7 in x 1 9 in 21 5 cm x 14 5 cm x 4 9 cm Weight 12 1 oz 344 gm 45 9 oz 1300 gm 15 3 oz 435 gm Power Supply 12 VDC 3 3 A 12 VDC 9A 12 VDC 3 3 A Specifications A 9 Table A 5 Accessory Specifications Single Slot USB Cradle Four Slot Ethernet Cradle Fur Slot Spare Battery Charger Drop 30 inches 76 2 cm to vinyl covered concrete Electrostatic 15 kV air discharge 8 kV contact discharge Discharge ESD Typical Power 20 W 60 W 25 W A 10 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Introduction This appendix contains the accessory power supply regulatory compliance statements Accessory Power Supply Regulatory Compliance Table B 1 Accessory Power Supplies Regulatory Compliance Statements Single Slot USB Cradle Power Supply Four Slot Battery Charger Power Supply Use only a Symbol approved power supply output rated 12 VDC and minimum 3 3 A The power supply is certified to EN60950 with SELV outputs Use of alternative power supply will invalidate any approval given to this device and may be dangerous Benutzen Sie nur eine von Symbol Technologies genehmigte Stromversorgung
55. c Mode Press the key to close the Special Character keypad Resetting the Wearable Terminal There are two types of resets warm boot and cold boot A warm boot restarts the wearable terminal by closing all running programs A cold boot also restarts the wearable terminal but erases all stored records and entries in RAM Data saved in flash memory or a memory card is not lost In addition it returns formats preferences and other settings to the factory default settings Perform a warm boot first This restarts the wearable terminal and saves all stored records and entries If the wearable terminal still does not respond perform a cold boot Performing a Warm Boot Hold down the Power button for approximately five seconds As soon as the wearable terminal starts to perform a warm boot release the Power button 2 18 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Performing a Cold Boot A cold boot restarts the wearable terminal and erases all user stored records and entries that are not saved in flash memory Application and Platform folders Never perform a cold boot unless a warm boot does not solve the problem g NOTE Any data previously synchronized with a computer can be restored during the next ActiveSync operation To perform a cold boot on a WT4070 90 press and simultaneously hold the 1 9 and Power button Do not hold down any other keys or buttons The wearable terminal initializes To perform a cold boot on a Voice Only
56. cursor clear the screen and set colors Communications programs support the ANSI terminal mode and often default to this terminal emulation for dial up connections to online services ASCII American Standard Code for Information Interchange A 7 bit plus parity code representing 128 letters numerals punctuation marks and control characters It is a standard data transmission code in the U S B Bar The dark element in a printed bar code symbol Bar Code A pattern of variable width bars and spaces which represents numeric or alphanumeric data in machine readable form The general format of a bar code symbol consists of a leading margin start character data or message character check character if any stop character and trailing margin Within this framework each recognizable symbology uses its own unique format See Symbology Bit Binary digit One bit is the basic unit of binary information Generally eight consecutive bits compose one byte of data The pattern of 0 and 1 values within the byte determines its meaning Bits per Second bps Bits transmitted or received Bit Binary digit One bit is the basic unit of binary information Generally eight consecutive bits compose one byte of data The pattern of 0 and 1 values within the byte determines its meaning bps See Bits Per Second Glossary 2 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Byte On an addressable boundary eight adjacent binary digits 0 and 1 combined in a pat
57. d See Table 2 4 on page 2 6 for key and button descriptions and Table 2 5 on page 2 7 for the keypad s special functions Q MOTOROLA ABC DEF ED PQXS WXYZ GD CO G9 ao OOS Figure 2 5 Triple tap Alphanumeric Keypad Table 2 4 Triple tap Alphanumeric Keypad Descriptions Key Description Orange Press and release the Orange key to activate alphabetic characters shown on the keypad in orange The icon appears on the Windows CE desktop taskbar Blue Press and release the Blue key to activate the keypad alternate functions shown on the keypad in blue The icon appears on the Windows CE desktop taskbar Scroll Keys Moves up or down from one item to another or increases decreases specified values Moves left or right from one item to another when used with the Blue key For each left or right scroll the Blue key must be pressed first ESC Exits the current operation Using the Wearable Terminal 2 7 Table 2 4 Triple tap Alphanumeric Keypad Descriptions Continued Key Description Alphanumeric In default state produces the numeric value on the key In Alpha state produces the lower case alphabetic characters shown in orange text For example press and release the Orange key and then press the 5 key twice to produce the lowercase letter k When the SHIFT key is pressed in Alpha state the upper case alphabetic characters on the key are produced
58. dard version Triggerless standard battery 121 4 g 4 3 oz without cables attached Triggerless extended battery 146 4 g 5 2 oz Triggered standard battery 134 8 g 4 8 oz Triggered corded 140 8 g 5 0 oz Performance Characteristics Optical Resolution WVGA 752 H x 480 V pixels gray scale Skew 60 from normal Roll 360 Pitch 60 from normal Aiming Element 655 nm 10 nm Visible Laser Diode Illumination Element 637 nm 5 nm Red LEDs Field of View Horizontal 39 6 Vertical 25 7 Nominal Working Density 5 mil 7 5 mil 20 mil 13 mil Distance 1D Code Type 39 39 39 UPC Near 2 1 5 Far 7 4 10 5 24 6 15 4 Density 6 67 mil 10 mil 15 mil 2D Code Type PDF417 PDF417 PDF417 Near 3 3 Far 7 0 10 14 6 Ambient Light Immunity From total darkness Indoor 450 ft candles 4 845 lux Outdoor 9 000 ft candles 96 900 lux Motion Tolerance 63 5 cm 25 inches per second typical Specifications A 7 Table A 4 RS507 Technical Specifications Continued Item Supported Symbologies Description 1D enabled by default Codabar Code 39 Code 128 EAN 13 EAN 8 Interleaved 2 of 5 UPC A and UPC E Additionally supported by 1D Code 11 Code 32 Pharmaceutical PARAF Code 93 MSI Reduced Space Symbology RSS 14 RSS Limited RSS Expanded Straight 2 of 5 IATA two bar start stop Straight 2 of 5 Industrial three bar start stop
59. de the same on any authorized copies it makes in whole or in part The user agrees not to decompile disassemble decode or reverse engineer any licensed program delivered to the user or any portion thereof Motorola reserves the right to make changes to any software or product to improve reliability function or design Motorola does not assume any product liability arising out of or in connection with the application or use of any product circuit or application described herein No license is granted either expressly or by implication estoppel or otherwise under any Motorola Inc intellectual property rights An implied license only exists for equipment circuits and subsystems contained in Motorola products MOTOROLA and the Stylized M Logo are registered in the US Patent amp Trademark Office Symbol is a registered trademark of Symbol Technologies Inc Bluetooth is a registered trademark of Bluetooth SIG Microsoft Windows and ActiveSync are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation All other product or service names are the property of their respective owners Motorola Inc One Symbol Plaza Holtsville New York 11742 1300 http Awww motorola com enterprisemobility Patents This product is covered by one or more of the patents listed on the website www motorola com enterprisemobility patents Revision History Changes to the original manual are listed below
60. ductor s particular chemical composition Liquid Crystal Display LCD A display that uses liquid crystal sealed between two glass plates The crystals are excited by precise electrical charges causing them to reflect light outside according to their bias They use little electricity and react relatively quickly They require external light to reflect their information to the user Light Emitting Diode See LED MDN Mobile Directory Number The directory listing telephone number that is dialed generally using POTS to reach a mobile unit The MDN is usually associated with a MIN in a cellular telephone in the US and Canada the MDN and MIN are the same value for voice cellular users International roaming considerations often result in the MDN being different from the MIN MIL 1 mil 1 thousandth of an inch MIN Mobile Identification Number The unique account number associated with a cellular device It is broadcast by the cellular device when accessing the cellular system N Nominal The exact or ideal intended value for a specified parameter Tolerances are specified as positive and negative deviations from this value Glossary 6 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide O Open Data Link Interface ODI Novell s driver specification for an interface between network hardware and higher level protocols It supports multiple protocols on a single NIC Network Interface Controller It is capable of understanding and translati
61. e devices are used They may be cleaned as frequently as required However when used in dirty environments it may be advisable to periodically clean the ring scanners exit windows to ensure optimum scanning performance Troubleshooting Wearable Terminal Table 4 1 Troubleshooting the Wearable Terminal Problem Cause Solution Wearable terminal Lithium ion battery Charge or replace the lithium ion battery in the wearable terminal does not turn on not charged Lithium ion battery Ensure battery is installed properly See nstalling and Removing not installed the Main Battery on page 1 7 properly System crash Perform a warm boot If the wearable terminal still does not turn on perform a cold boot See Resetting the Wearable Terminal on page 2 17 Maintenance amp Troubleshooting 4 7 Table 4 1 Troubleshooting the Wearable Terminal Continued Problem Cause Solution Rechargeable Battery failed Replace battery If the wearable terminal still does not operate try a lithium ion battery did warm boot then a cold boot See Resetting the Wearable Terminal not charge on page 2 17 Wearable terminal Insert wearable terminal in cradle and begin charging The standard removed from capacity battery fully charges in less than four hours and the cradle while battery extended capacity battery fully charges in less than eight hours was charging Ambient Move the cradle to an area where the ambient temperature is te
62. e 3 1 for charging status indications The standard capacity battery fully charges in less than four hours and the extended capacity battery fully charges in less than eight hours Table 3 41 Spare Battery LED Charging Indicators Spare Battery LED on cradle Indication Off No spare battery in well spare battery not placed correctly cradle is not powered Fast Blinking Amber Charging error e Temperature is too low or too high Charging has gone on too long without completing typically eight hours Slow Blinking Amber Spare battery is charging Solid Amber Charging complete 3 4 W14070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Four Slot Ethernet Cradle A CAUTION Ensure that you follow the guidelines for battery safety described in Battery Safety Guidelines on page 4 3 This section describes how to use a Four Slot Ethernet cradle Figure 3 2 with the wearable terminal For Ethernet communication setup procedures refer to the WT4090 Integrator Guide Scanner Well Figure 3 2 Four Slot Ethernet Cradle The Four Slot Ethernet cradle e Connects up to four wearable terminals to an Ethernet network e Provide 5 4 VDC power for operating the wearable terminal and charging the battery e Simultaneously charges up to four wearable terminals with batteries installed You cannot ActiveSync using the Four Slot Ethernet cradle To ActiveSync with a host computer use the Single Slot USB cradle CAUTION Use o
63. e hip mount Figure 1 13 Insert Wearable Terminal into Hip Mount Close the front flap followed by the back flap Figure 1 14 Close Hip Mount Flaps Slide a belt through the belt loop on the back of the hip mount The wearable terminal can be mounted right side up or up side down depending upon user preference or application Getting Started 1 13 Figure 1 15 Hip Mount on Belt Connect accessories as required Routing an Extended Cable Scanner When using an RS309 or RS409 scanner with the wearable terminal mounted on the hip the extended cable version is required Motorola offers for sale cable clips which attach to clothing and hold the scanner cable so that the cable does not interfere with the user The cable clips are similar to badge clips and can be purchased at any office supply store as well Figure 1 16 Routing RS409 Scanner Cable from Hip to Hand 1 14 W1T4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Figure 1 17 Routing RS309 Scanner Cable from Hip to Hand Connecting a Scanner The RS309 and RS409 scanners and the RS507 imager can be used with the wearable terminal See RS309 Scanner on page 3 10 and RS409 Scanner on page 3 8 for procedures for connecting the scanner to the wearable terminal Refer to the RS507 Product Reference Guide for procedures for connecting the imager to the wearable terminal Starting the Wearable Terminal Press the Power button to turn on the wearable terminal If the wearabl
64. e operating temperature in a meat or ice cream freezer the freezer pouch insulates the wearable terminal to keep the heat generated by the wearable terminal within the pouch The pouch is not heated There are no batteries to worry about or electronics within the pouch The freezer pouch can be either hip mounted or wrist mounted For hip mounting there is a belt loop on its back for attached a belt sold separately For wrist mounting customers can buy either a set of standard length or longer length wrist straps and use them with the pouch The longer length wrist straps are recommended for wrist mounting over coats The freezer pouch has openings on each side for wearable scanners and headset adapters While the freezer pouch is designed to allow workers to use the wearable terminal in meat and ice cream freezers there are some very important limitations to follow Do not use in environments that are below 30 C 22 F Do not allow the wearable terminal with or without the freezer pouch to remain in the suspend mode in environments below 20 C 4 F for more than 10 minutes This prevents the wearable terminal from cooling down to the ambient freezer temperature The pouch maintains the wearable terminal at a sufficient temperature while it is in use but lengthy periods of inactivity bring the wearable terminal below its operating temperature Do not store wearable terminals in the meat or ice cream freezer As explained ab
65. e status of the battery charging in the wearable terminal See Table 1 3 on page 1 8 for charging status indications The standard capacity battery fully charges in less than four hours and the extended capacity battery fully charges in less than eight hours 3 6 W1T4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Four Slot Spare Battery Charger AN CAUTION Ensure that you follow the guidelines for battery safety described in Battery Safety Guidelines on page 4 3 This section describes how to use the Four Slot Spare Battery Charger to charge up to four wearable terminal spare batteries Spare Battery Charging Well 4 Spare Battery Spare Battery Charging LEDs 4 Figure 3 3 Four Slot Spare Battery Charger CAUTION Use only a Symbol approved power supply output rated 12 VDC and minimum 3 3 A Use of an alternative AN power supply will void the product warranty and may cause product damage See Appendix B Regulatory Information for the power supply regulatory compliance statement Spare Battery Charging with the Four Slot Spare Battery Charger Insert the battery into a spare battery charging slot and gently press down on the battery to ensure proper contact Battery Charging Indicators An amber LED is provided on each battery charging well See Table 3 2 for charging status indications The standard capacity battery usually charges in less than four hours and the extended capacity battery fully charges in less than eight hours T
66. e terminal does not power on perform a cold boot See Resetting the Wearable Terminal on page 2 17 lt J NOTE When a battery is fully inserted in a wearable terminal for the first time upon the wearable terminal s first power up the device cold boots and powers on automatically WT4070 90 Boot Up When the WT4070 90 is powered on for the first time the splash screen Figure 1 18 appears for a short period of time followed by the Start Up window on non touch configurations and the calibration screen on touch enabled configurations Getting Started 1 15 WT4000 series Figure 1 18 Splash Screen a WT4070c50 Demo a BE NG FE 1 RD Client Som symbol BO vp Launcher ae 2 Airbeam Client jp 3 Wavelink TelnetCE 1 Rapid Deployment Client 1 Rapid Deployment Client kaa nn Explorer 2 Airbeam Client stm 2 Airbeam Client 5 Utilities 6 Demo Apps 3 Wavelink TelnetCE 3 Wavelink TelnetCE 7 Exit 4 Internet Explorer 4 Internet Explorer 29 w74070c50 Demo gt Gor 2 ot Example Lor OEM VERSION 02 17 0001 OEM VERSION 03 17 0001 OEM VERSION 04 20 0004 or 05 30 0001 Figure 1 19 Start Up Window Use the Calibration screen to align the touch screen 1 Carefully press and briefly hold on the center of the Calibration screen target Repeat the procedure as the target moves and stops at different locations on the screen This enters the new calibration settings
67. e terminal or the main battery is fully discharged the memory backup battery completely discharges in several hours When the wearable terminal reaches a very low battery state the combination of main battery and backup battery retains data in memory for at least 24 hours J NOTE Do not remove the main battery within the first 15 hours of use If the main battery is removed before the backup battery is fully charged data may be lost Charge the wearable terminal with an installed main battery using either the Single Slot USB cradle or the Four Slot Ethernet cradle To charge the main battery 1 Ensure the cradle used to charge the main battery is connected to the appropriate power source 2 Insert the wearable terminal into a cradle 3 The wearable terminal starts to charge automatically The amber Charge Status LED lights to indicate the charge status See Table 1 3 for charging indications The standard capacity battery fully charges in less than four hours and the extended battery fully charges in less than eight hours Table 1 3 Wearable Terminal LED Charge Indicators LED Indication Off Wearable terminal is not in cradle Wearable terminal not placed correctly Charger is not powered Fast Blinking Amber Charging error e Temperature is too low or too high e Charging has gone on too long without completing typically eight hours Slow Blinking Amber Wearable terminal is charging Solid Amber Charging complete
68. een from temperature extremes Do not store or use the wearable terminal with a touch screen in any location that is extremely dusty damp or wet Use a soft lens cloth to clean the wearable terminal display touch panel Periodically replace the rechargeable Li ion battery to ensure maximum battery life and product performance Battery life depends on individual usage patterns The screen of the wearable terminal contains glass Take care not to drop the wearable terminal or subject it to strong impact 4 2 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide e Regularly replace all Velcro straps on the wrist mount and wearable scanners to ensure adequate adhesion of the Velcro Wrist Mount Cleaning Instructions It may be necessary to wash the wrist mount straps and replaceable pad when they become soiled Remove the straps and pad from the wrist mount Hand wash in cold water with a mild detergent such as Woolite Do not use bleach Air dry Do not use a dryer Replaceable Pad Figure 4 1 Wrist Mount Soft Goods Arm Sleeve Cleaning Instructions It may be necessary to wash the arm sleeve when it become soiled Hand wash in cold water with a mild detergent Such as Woolite Do not use bleach Air dry Do not use a dryer Removing the Screen Protector lt J NOTE Not using a screen protector on a wearable terminal with a touch screen can affect warranty coverage To purchase replacement protectors contact your local account mana
69. ension which is distinguished by a particular reading device or printed with a particular device or method RF Radio Frequency ROM Read Only Memory Data stored in ROM cannot be changed or removed Router A device that connects networks and supports the required protocols for packet filtering Routers are typically used to extend the range of cabling and to organize the topology of a network into subnets See Subnet Glossary 7 RS 232 An Electronic Industries Association EIA standard that defines the connector connector pins and signals used to transfer data serially from one device to another S Scan Area Area intended to contain a symbol Scanner An electronic device used to scan bar code symbols and produce a digitized pattern that corresponds to the bars and spaces of the symbol Its three main components are 1 Light source laser or photoelectric cell illuminates a bar code 2 Photodetector registers the difference in reflected light more light reflected from spaces 3 Signal conditioning circuit transforms optical detector output into a digitized bar pattern SDK Software Development Kit Secure Sockets Layer SSL SSL is a commonly used protocol for managing the security of a message transmission on the Internet SSL uses a program layer located between the Internet s Hypertext Transfer Protocol HTTP and Transport Control Protocol TCP layers SSL is included as part of both the Microsoft and Netscape b
70. er attached to an IP network Every client and server station must have a unique IP address A 32 bit address used by a computer on a IP network Client workstations have either a permanent address or one that is dynamically assigned to them each session IP addresses are written as four sets of numbers separated by periods for example 204 171 64 2 IPX SPX Internet Package Exchange Sequential Packet Exchange A communications protocol for Novell IPX is Novell s Layer 3 protocol similar to XNS and IP and used in NetWare networks SPX is Novell s version of the Xerox SPP protocol Glossary 5 IS 95 Interim Standard 95 The EIA TIA standard that governs the operation of CDMA cellular service Versions include IS 95A and IS 95B See CDMA K Key A key is the specific code used by the algorithm to encrypt or decrypt the data Also see Encryption and Decrypting L laser scanner A type of bar code reader that uses a beam of laser light LASER Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation The laser is an intense light source Light from a laser is all the same frequency unlike the output of an incandescent bulb Laser light is typically coherent and has a high energy density LCD See Liquid Crystal Display LED Indicator A semiconductor diode LED Light Emitting Diode used as an indicator often in digital displays The semiconductor uses applied voltage to produce light of a certain frequency determined by the semicon
71. ery Two NiMH batteries rechargeable 15 mAh 2 4 VDC not user accessible Performance Characteristics CPU XScale PXA270 processor at 520 MHz Table A 1 Item Operating System A 2 W1T4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Technical Specifications Continued Description Microsoft Windows CE 5 0 Professional Memory WT4070 90 64 MB Flash 128 MB RAM or 128 MB Flash 128 MB RAM Voice Only WT4090 128 MB Flash 128 MB RAM Application Development PSDK DCP and SMDK available through Symbol Developer Zone web site Data Capture Options RS309 scanner RS409 scanner RS507 Hands free imager User Environment Operating Temperature 4 F to 122 F 20 C to 50 C Storage Temperature 40 F to 158 F 40 C to 70 C Battery Charging Temperature 32 F to 104 F O C to 40 C ambient temperature range Humidity 5 to 95 non condensing Drop Specification Multiple 4 ft 1 2 m drops to concrete across operating temperature range Tumble 500 half meter tumbles at room temperature 1 000 drops Environmental Sealing IP54 Category 2 ESD 15k VDC air discharge 8k VDC direct discharge 8k VDC indirect discharge WLAN Wireless Data Communic ations WLAN radio WT4070 Symbol 802 11b g WT4090 Symbol 802 11a b g Operating Channels Channel 8 169 5040 5845 MHz 4920 4980 MHz Japan only Channel 1 13 2412 2472
72. es API information for writing applications W14090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Configurations This guide covers the following configurations Configuration Radios Display Memory Data Capture Operating System Keypads WT4070 WLAN 802 11b g 2 8 QVGA 128 MB RAM Optional Windows Two color or WPAN Bluetooth Color 64 MB Flash accessory CE 5 0 Triple tap non touch Professional Alphanumeric Keypad WT4090 WLAN 802 11a b g 2 8 QVGA 128 MB RAM Optional Windows Two color or WPAN Bluetooth Color 64 MB Flash or accessory CE 5 0 Triple tap non touch 128 MB RAM Professional Alphanumeric 128 MB Flash Keypad 2 8 QVGA 128 MB RAM Optional Windows Two color Color 128 MB Flash accessory CE 5 0 Alphanumeric touch Professional Keypad Voice Only WLAN 802 11a b g None 128 MB RAM Optional Windows Three WT4090 WPAN Bluetooth 128 MB Flash accessory CE 5 0 programmable Professional keys Software Versions lt J NOTE To view the software versions on the Voice Only WT4090 the Voice Only WT4090 must be connected to a host computer running remote desktop software Refer to the WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal Integrator Guide for more information This guide covers various software configurations and references are made to operating system or software versions for e OEM version e Fusion version OEM Software To determine the OEM software version 1
73. etic characters in the gray area When the SHIFT key is pressed in the Alpha state the upper case alphabetic characters on the key are produced For example press and release the Orange key press and release the SHIFT key and then press the 4 key once to produce the letter G BKSP Backspace function Space function when used with the Blue key CTRL Control Press and release the CTRL key to activate the keypad alternate CTRL functions The icon appears on the Windows CE desktop taskbar Press the Blue key followed by the CTRL key to activate the keypad alternate ALT functions The Hr icon appears on the Windows CE desktop taskbar SHIFT Press and release the SHIFT key to activate the keypad alternate SHIFT functions The Ar icon appears on the Windows CE desktop taskbar ENTER Executes a selected item or function TAB Move the focus to the next field in a window P1 Programmable key When used with the Blue key toggles the keypad backlight on and off P2 Programmable key When used with the Blue key toggles the display backlight on and off 2 6 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Triple Tap Alphanumeric Keypad The triple tap alphanumeric keypad contains application keys scroll keys and function keys The keypad is color coded to indicate the alternate function keys blue and orange Note that keypad functions can be changed by an application so the wearable terminal s keypad may not function exactly as describe
74. g the Main Battery 1 10 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Installing the Wrist Mount The wrist mount provides the mounting of the wearable terminal on the forearm for hands free applications Refer to the Wrist Mount Installation Guide for information on the wrist mount Mounting Bracket Release Lever Figure 1 9 Wrist Mount To install the wrist mount 1 Determine which arm the wrist mount will be used on 2 Install the short strap on the end closest to the wrist 3 Install the long strap on the other end 4 Slide the hand into the wrist mount 5 Tighten the straps 6 Align the cleat on the back of the wearable terminal with the mounting bracket on the wrist mount Mounting Bracket Figure 1 10 Aligning the Cleat 7 Slide the wearable terminal onto the wrist mount until it clicks into place 8 If necessary loosen and re tighten the straps Getting Started 1 11 Figure 1 11 Wearable Terminal and Wrist Mount To remove the wearable terminal from the wrist mount press down on the release lever and slide the wearable terminal out Release Lever Figure 1 12 Wearable Terminal Removal 1 12 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Install a Hip Mount The hip mount allows the user to mount the wearable terminal on the hip for use in voice picking applications An RS309 or RS409 scanner with an extended cable is required when using the hip mount Slide the wearable terminal into th
75. ged by an application so the wearable terminal s keypad may not function exactly as described See Table 2 3 on page 2 4 for key and button descriptions and Table 2 5 on page 2 7 for the keypad s special functions Q MOTOROLA Figure 2 4 Two color Alphanumeric Keypad Table 2 3 Two color Alphanumeric Keypad Descriptions Key Description Orange Press and release the Orange key to activate alphabetic characters shown on the keypad in orange The icon appears on the Windows CE desktop taskbar Gray Press and release the Gray key to activate alphabetic characters shown on the keypad in gray The O icon appears on the Windows CE desktop taskbar Using the Wearable Terminal 2 5 Table 2 3 Two color Alphanumeric Keypad Descriptions Continued Key Description Blue Press and release the Blue key to activate the keypad alternate functions shown on the keypad in blue The icon appears on the Windows CE desktop taskbar Scroll Keys Moves up or down from one item to another or increases decreases specified values Moves left or right from one item to another when used with the Blue key For each left or right scroll the Blue key must be pressed first ESC Exits the current operation Alphanumeric In default state produces the numeric value on the key In Left Alpha state produces the lower case alphabetic characters in the orange area In Right Alpha state produces the lower case alphab
76. ger or Motorola Inc These include screen protector installation instructions Part number KT 114032 01Ror KT 114032 02R Screen Protector 3 pk A screen protector is applied to the wearable terminal with touch screen Motorola recommends using this to minimize wear and tear Screen protectors enhance the usability and durability of touch screen displays To remove the screen protector lift the corner using a thin plastic card such as a credit card then carefully lift it off the display Maintenance amp Troubleshooting 4 3 Lift Screen Protector Corner Figure 4 2 Removing the Screen Protector IN CAUTION Do not use a sharp object to remove the protector Doing so can damage the touch screen Battery Safety Guidelines The area in which the units are charged should be clear of debris and combustible materials or chemicals Particular care should be taken where the device is charged in anon commercial environment Improper battery use may result in a fire explosion or other hazard To charge the mobile device battery the battery and charger temperatures must be between 0 C and 40 C 32 F and 104 F Do not use incompatible batteries and chargers Use of an incompatible battery or charger may present a risk of fire explosion leakage or other hazard If you have any questions about the compatibility of a battery or a charger contact Motorola Enterprise Mobility support Do not disassemble or open crush bend
77. ion Guide for information on mounting the RS309 6 Route the trigger cable around the side of the RS309 next to the index finger 7 Slide the trigger mount on the index finger with the button positioned next to the thumb and adjust the velcro strap Figure 3 10 RS309 on Back of Hand After connecting the scanner warm boot the wearable terminal See Resetting the Wearable Terminal on page 2 17 for information on performing a warm boot 3 12 VT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide RS507 Imager Refer to the RS507 Hands free Imager Quick Reference Guide p n 72 115987 xx and the RS507 Hands free Imager Product Reference Guide p n 72E 120802 xx for detailed information Freezer Pouch J NOTE Wearable computers with standard capacity batteries must use the Standard Capacity Battery Freezer Pouch while wearable computers with extended capacity batteries must use the Extended Capacity Battery Freezer Pouch See Accessories on page 1 3 for more information CAUTION Do not use the wearable terminal with touch screen in the freezer pouch or in environments that are below 20 C 4 F The freezer pouch allows the user to use the wearable terminal in a freezer environment on the hip or wrist for use in voice picking applications An RS309 or RS409 scanner with an extended cable is required when mounting the freezer pouch on the hip mount if scanning is also part of the application In order to keep the wearable terminal at a saf
78. is includes instructions for powering on and resetting the wearable terminal entering and capturing data e Chapter 3 Accessories describes the accessories available for the wearable terminal and how to use the accessories with the wearable terminal Chapter 4 Maintenance amp Troubleshooting includes instructions on cleaning and storing the wearable terminal and provides troubleshooting solutions for potential problems during wearable terminal operation e Appendix A Specifications includes a table listing the technical specifications for the wearable terminal Appendix B Regulatory Information contains the accessory power supply regulatory compliance statements xii WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Notational Conventions The following conventions are used in this document Wearable terminal refers to the WT4070 90 series of wearable terminals Italics are used to highlight the following e Chapters and sections in this guide e Related documents Bold text is used to highlight the following e Dialog box window and screen names e Drop down list and list box names e Check box and radio button names e Icons on a screen e Key names on a keypad Button names on a screen Bullets indicate e Action items e Lists of alternatives e Lists of required steps that are not necessarily sequential Sequential lists e g those that describe step by step procedures appear as numbered lists Rel
79. its available at http www motorola com enterprisemobility support Device Configuration Package DCPforWT40x0c50 and Platform SDK PSDK40x0c50 for WT40x0 available at 0 http www motorola com enterprisemobility support Getting Started 1 5 Scan LED Rotating Scan Assembly Exit Window Ring Mount Finger Strap Trigger Assembly Scan Trigger Figure 1 4 RS409 Scanner Scan LED Trigger Connector Exit Window Protective Cap Scan Button Trigger Cable Interface Cable Figure 1 5 RS309 Scanner 1 6 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Figure 1 6 RS507 Scanner Getting Started 1 7 Getting Started In order to start using the wearable terminal for the first time e Install the main battery e Charge the main battery and backup battery Install the wearable terminal onto the wrist mount e Install an optional scanner e Start the wearable terminal J NOTE The main battery can be charged before or after installation into the wearable terminal Use the Single Slot USB cradle or Four Slot Spare Battery Charger to charge the main battery before installation or the Single Slot USB cradle or Four Slot Ethernet cradle to charge the main battery after installation Installing and Removing the Main Battery Installing the Main Battery Before using the wearable terminal install a lithium ion Li ion battery by placing the battery into the wearable terminal as shown in Figure 1 7
80. ix B Regulatory Information for the power supply regulatory compliance statement The Single Slot USB Cradle e Provides 5 4 VDC power for operating the wearable terminal e Provides USB port for data communication between the wearable terminal and a host computer or other serial devices e g a printer J NOTE The normal function of the product may be disturbed by Strong Electro Magnetic Interference for example static electricity If so simply remove and re insert the terminal to resume normal operation In case the function does not resume please use the product in another location Accessories 3 3 e Synchronizes information between the wearable terminal and a host computer With customized or third party software it can also be used to synchronize the wearable terminal with corporate databases e Charges the wearable terminal s battery and a spare battery Provides a location for storing a scanner when a wearable terminal is docked in the cradle Battery Charging Indicators The Single Slot USB cradle can charge the wearable terminal s main battery and a spare battery simultaneously The wearable terminal s amber Charge Status LED indicates the status of the battery charging in the wearable terminal See Table 1 3 on page 1 8 for charging status indications The amber Spare Battery Charging LED on the cradle see Figure 3 1 on page 3 2 indicates the status of the spare battery charging in the cradle See Tabl
81. ktop applications and settings Depending upon the programs installed on the wearable terminal some of these items may not be available Power Button Press the Power button to turn the wearable terminal screen on and off Suspend mode The wearable terminal is on when the screen is on and the wearable terminal is in suspend mode when the screen is off For more information see Power Button Figure 2 1 Power Button The Power button is also used to reset the wearable terminal by performing a warm or cold boot Warm Boot Soft Reset Resets the wearable terminal e Cold Boot Hard Reset Resets the wearable terminal removes all added applications and restores all factory default settings 2 2 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide LED Indicators The Charge Status LED indicates the wearable terminal charging status when the WT4090 is in acradle Table 2 1 describes the Charge Status LED indications Charge Status LED Figure 2 2 Wearable Terminal LED Indicators Table 2 1 Charge Status LED Indications LED State Indication Charge Status LED Off Wearable terminal is not in cradle Wearable terminal not placed correctly Charger is not powered Slow Blinking Amber Main battery in wearable terminal is charging Fast Blinking Amber Charging error e Temperature is too low or too high Charging has gone on too long without completing typically eight hours Solid Amber Charging complete Note
82. les 4 844 lux Outdoor 8 000 foot candles 86 111 lux Regulatory Electrical Safety Certified to CSA C22 2 No 60950 1 EN60950 1 IEC 60950 1 EMI RFI FCC Part 15 Class B ICES 003 Class B European Union EMC and R amp TTE Directives Australian AS NZS 4268 Laser Safety CDRH Class II IEC 60825 1 Class 2 Laser Decode Capability Code 39 Code 128 Code 93 Codabar Code 11 Discrete 2 of 5 Interleaved 2 of 5 EAN 8 EAN 13 MSI UPCA UPCE UPC EAN supplementals Coupon Code Trioptic 39 Webcode Chinese 2 of 5 RSS RS409 Scanner Table A 3 RS409 Technical Specifications Item Description Physical and Environmental Characteristics Dimensions 1 9 in Lx 1 4 in W x 1 9 in H 4 8 cm L x 3 6 cm H x 4 8 cm H Weight standard version 2 0 oz 56 7 gm without cables attached Specifications A 5 Table A 3 RS409 Technical Specifications Continued Item Description Current 92 mA typical 121 mA max Standby Current 12uA typical 60 A max Voltage 3 1 to 3 6 VDC Vcc Noise Level 100 mV p p max Performance Characterist ics Light Source 650 nm LASER 1 55 mW Scan Rate 104 12 scans sec bidirectional Nominal Working Density 5mil 7 5mil 10 mil 13 mil 20 mil 40 mil 55 mil Distance Code Type 39 39 39 UPC 39 39 39 Far inches 4 75 8 75 13 25 17 25 21 5 22 25 27 Guaranteed Far inches 8 75 14 25 24 25 35 75 50 5 Typical Yaw 50 degrees from
83. mmunication Replace wearable terminal in cradle and retransmit Incorrect cable configuration See the system administrator or refer to the WT4090 Integrator Guide Ethernet connection error Link LED is not lit see Link LED on page 3 5 See the system administrator Probable Ethernet connection error Wearable terminal s main batteries not charging Ambient temperature of the cradle is too warm or too cold Move the cradle to an area where the ambient temperature is between 0 C and 40 C 32 F and 104 F 4 12 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Four Slot Spare Battery Charger Table 4 3 Troubleshooting The Four Slot Spare Battery Charger Symptom Possible Cause Solution Batteries not Battery was removed Re insert the battery in the charger or re connect the charger s charging from the charger or power supply charger was unplugged from AC power too soon Battery is faulty Verify that other batteries charge properly If so replace the faulty battery Battery contacts not Verify that the battery is oriented properly and firmly seated in the connected to charger battery well correctly with the contacts facing down See Figure 3 3 on page 3 6 for proper battery orientation Ambient temperature of Move the charger to an area where the ambient temperature is the charger is too warm between 0 C and 40 C 32 F and 104 F or too cold Single Slot USB
84. mperature of the between O C and 40 C 32 F and 104 F cradle is too warm or too cold Cannot see Wearable terminal Press the Power button characters on display not applicable to voice only configuration not powered on Screen protective is scratched or hazy Replace screen protector Display is hard to read not applicable to voice only configuration Screen protective is scratched or hazy Replace screen protector During data communication no data was transmitted or transmitted data was incomplete Wearable terminal removed from cradle or unplugged from host computer during communication Replace the wearable terminal in the cradle or reattach the Synchronization cable and re transmit Incorrect cable configuration See the System Administrator Communication software was incorrectly installed or configured Perform setup Refer to the WT4090 Integrator Guide for details Ensure that Microsoft ActiveSync 4 5 or greater is installed on the host computer No sound is audible Volume setting is low or turned off Adjust volume Change volume settings by selecting Start gt Settings gt Control Panel gt Volume amp Sounds icon gt Volume tab Move the slider to change the volume level or use volume control on voice application WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Table 4 1 Problem Wearable terminal turns itself off Cause
85. ng any network information or request sent by any other ODI compatible protocol into something a NetWare client can understand and process Open System Authentication Open System authentication is a null authentication algorithm p PAN Personal area network Using Bluetooth wireless technology PANs enable devices to communicate wirelessly Generally a wireless PAN consists of a dynamic group of less than 255 devices that communicate within about a 33 foot range Only devices within this limited area typically participate in the network Parameter A variable that can have different values assigned to it PING Packet Internet Groper An Internet utility used to determine whether a particular IP address is online It is used to test and debug a network by sending out a packet and waiting for a response Print Contrast Signal PCS Measurement of the contrast brightness difference between the bars and spaces of a symbol A minimum PCS value is needed for a bar code symbol to be scannable PCS RL RD RL where RL is the reflectance factor of the background and RD the reflectance factor of the dark bars Q QWERTY A standard keyboard commonly used on North American and some European PC keyboards QWERTY refers to the arrangement of keys on the left side of the third row of keys R RAM Random Access Memory Data in RAM can be accessed in random order and quickly written and read Resolution The narrowest element dim
86. nly a Symbol approved power supply output rated 12 VDC and minimum 9 A Use of an alternative AN power supply will void the product warranty and may cause product damage See Appendix B Regulatory Information for the power supply regulatory compliance statement Accessories 3 5 Battery Charging The four slot Ethernet cradle can charge up to four wearable terminals simultaneously To charge the wearable terminal 1 Slide the wearable terminal into the wearable terminal slot 2 The wearable terminal amber Charge Status LED indicates the wearable terminal battery charging status The standard capacity battery usually charges in less than four hours and the extended capacity battery fully charges in less than eight hours See Table 3 1 for charging status indications 3 When charging is complete remove the wearable terminal from the cradle LED Charge Indications The Four Slot Ethernet cradle uses the wearable terminal amber Power LED to indicate the battery charging status See Table 3 1 on page 3 3 for charging status indications Speed LED The green Speed LED lights to indicate that the transfer rate is 100 Mbps When it is not lit it indicates that the transfer rate is 10 Mbps Link LED The yellow Link LED blinks to indicate activity or stays lit to indicate that a link is established When it is not lit it indicates that there is no link Battery Charging Indicators The wearable terminal s amber charge LED indicates th
87. nnn anne 1 7 Installing the Main Battery 2 e0 22 ensure 1 7 Charging the Battery Charging the Main Battery and Memory Backup Battery 2224sus24nnennnsnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnennn nenn 1 8 Charging Spare Batteries ee er 1 9 Removing the Main Battery 22 seen seen 1 9 Installing the Wrist Mount ses ehe 1 10 Install a Hip MOUNT een een ee ee ea 1 12 Routing an Extended Gable Scanner a una NADAAN LNG Rauncednas hecmenseaeemenistend 1 13 Connecting a Scanner nee ee AA AA 1 14 starting Ihe Wearable Terminal ua ne 1 14 WT4070 90 Boot Up nennen 1 14 Voice Only WT4090 Boot Up vi W14070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Chapter 2 Using the Wearable Terminal DMPO TON AA AA AA eurer 2 1 POWEr OUI zus sees etc ats ee Sa Pe eee se AA ce oe a ide Aa 2 1 LED NU A AA eet AA 2 2 Keypads ee AA AA AA AA ee cere 2 4 Two color Alphanumeric Keypad sc cca cha esas acs Dre 2 4 Triple Tap Alphanumeric Keypad u nu uuue es aan 2 6 V ic amp s Only Keypad nen ee AA 2 9 Dep LY yes AA 2 10 Start Up WINDOW ans AGARANG 2 10 Windows CE 5 0 Desktop uses AA Aa 2 11 Stats CONS se euere 2 11 Using the Keypad to Navigate Applications musssssssnsnnnnnnnnnnnnnnannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnannnen 2 12 Key ComBiNallans anne ee 2 13 SEI GING Items ee ee ee Denen 2 13 Navigating Menus esse ee oit Eana adiaka aaaea ai natandaan aade KAERA EEEE Ena 2 14 Nangangako 22er 2 14 Navigating Fields AAAH 2 14 Selecting Checkboxes and Radio
88. onfiguration Package The Symbol Device Configuration Package provides the Product Reference Guide PRG flash partitions Terminal Configuration Manager TCM and the associated TCM scripts With this package hex images that represent flash partitions can be created and downloaded to the wearable terminal Discrete 2 of 5 A binary bar code symbology representing each character by a group of five bars two of which are wide The location of wide bars in the group determines which character is encoded spaces are insignificant Only numeric characters 0 to 9 and START STOP characters may be encoded E EAN European Article Number This European International version of the UPC provides its own coding format and symbology standards Element dimensions are specified metrically EAN is used primarily in retail ENQ RS 232 ENQ software handshaking is also supported for the data sent to the host ESD Electro Static Discharge F Flash Disk An additional megabyte of non volatile memory for storing application and configuration files Flash Memory Flash memory is nonvolatile semi permanent storage that can be electronically erased in the circuit and reprogrammed Wearable terminals use Flash memory to store the operating system ROM DOS the terminal emulators and the Citrix ICA Client for DOS File Transfer Protocol FTP A TCP IP application protocol governing file transfer via network or telephone lines See TCP IP FTP See File T
89. ots working range as a function of minimum element widths of bar code symbols e Angle Scanning angle is important for promoting quick decodes When laser beams reflect directly back into the scanner from the bar code this specular reflection can blind the scanner To avoid this scan the bar code so that the beam does not bounce directly back But don t scan at too sharp an angle the scanner needs to collect scattered reflections from the scan to make a successful decode Practice quickly shows what tolerances to work within J NOTE Contact the Symbol Support Center if chronic scanning difficulties develop Decoding of properly printed bar codes should be quick and effortless Scanning Bar Codes 1 Ensure that a scan enabled application is loaded on the wearable terminal 2 Aim the scan exit window at the bar code 3 Press the trigger e Ensure the red scan beam covers the entire bar code The red scan LED lights to indicate that the laser is on The green scan LED lights An audible beep might sound if the application determines to indicate the bar code was decoded successfully 2 20 WT4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide I Right Figure 2 17 Laser Scanner Aiming Pattern 4 Release the trigger Scanning Tips Optimal scanning distance varies with bar code density and scanner optics e Hold the scanner farther away for larger symbols Move the scanner closer for symbols with bars that are close togethe
90. ove this would allow the wearable terminals to chill to the ambient freezer temperature which is below their operating temperature Furthermore if batteries were left in wearable terminals stored in the freezer the batteries themselves could freeze which could damage them At the least they would not function while frozen Batteries cannot be charged below 0 C 32 F Motorola cradles and battery chargers have an automatic shut off to insure this If using wearable scanners with the wearable terminal in the meat or ice cream freezer for a shift remember that the RS309 freezer configuration is the correct scanner to choose due to its lower operating temperature range and its desiccant pack to remove condensation Slide the wearable terminal into the freezer pouch Accessories 3 13 Figure 3 11 Insert Wearable Terminal into Freezer Pouch Close the front flap followed by the back flap Figure 3 12 Close Freezer Pouch Flaps Slide a belt through the belt loop on the back of the freezer pouch The wearable terminal can be mounted right side up or up side down depending upon user preference or application 3 14 W1T4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide Wired Headset You can use a mono headset with a microphone for audio communication with an audio enabled application The Headset Cable Adapter is required to connect a headset with the wearable terminal Figure 3 13 Typical Headset Connected to Headset Adapter
91. over memory Select Start gt Settings gt Control Panel gt Remove Programs icon Select the unused program and select Remove Table 4 1 Problem The wearable terminal does not accept scan input Cause Scanning application is not loaded Maintenance amp Troubleshooting 4 9 Troubleshooting the Wearable Terminal Continued Solution Verify that the unit is loaded with a scanning application See the System Administrator Unreadable bar code Ensure the symbol is not defaced Distance between exit window and bar code is incorrect Ensure wearable terminal is within proper scanning range Wearable terminal is not programmed for the bar code Ensure the wearable terminal is programmed to accept the type of bar code being scanned Wearable terminal is not programmed to generate a beep If a beep on a good decode is expected and a beep is not heard check that the application is set to generate a beep on good decode Battery is low If the scanner stops emitting a laser beam when the trigger is pressed check the battery level When the battery is low the scanner shuts off before the wearable terminal low battery condition notification Note If the scanner is still not reading symbols contact the distributor or Motorola Wearable terminal goes into IPL mode after cold boot Headset adapter without a headset is connected to the wearable terminal during a cold boot
92. ox or radio button Using the Wearable Terminal 2 15 Power settings Power settings Highlighted Checkbox O Max Performance Radio Buttons O Max Power Save Auto Power On External power a Turn off device if not used for never 23 Power settings gt 83 Power settings 2 Figure 2 12 Selecting a Checkbox or Radio Button Selecting Items in a List Use a combination of key sequences to select items in a folder or list To select continuous items in a folder or list 1 Open the folder or list 2 Use the scroll keys to move to the first item to select 3 Press SHIFT scroll key either up or down to select the next item 4 Repeat the SHIFT scroll key combination to select remaining items 5 Perform the desired function To select multiple items in a folder or list 1 Open the folder or list 2 Use the scroll keys to move to the first item 3 Press CTRL scroll key to move within the list The item name is outlined 4 Repeat step 3 to move to the desired item 5 Press SPACE to highlight the item 6 Repeat steps 3 through 5 until all items are selected 7 Perform the desired function Screen Calibration J NOTE Not available on the Voice Only and non touch configurations To calibrate the touch screen so the cursor on the touch screen aligns with screen taps 1 Press Start gt Settings gt Control Panel gt Stylus icon gt Calibration tab gt Recalibrate button
93. r J NOTE Scanning procedures depend on the application and wearable terminal configuration An application may use different scanning procedures from the one listed above Scan LED Indicator The LED on the scanner provides a visual indication of the scan status Table 2 9 Scan LED Indicators LED Status Indication Off Not scanning Solid Red Laser enabled scanning in process Solid Green Successful decode Imaging The wearable terminal with an optional RS507 imager has the following features e Omnidirectional 360 reading of a variety of bar code symbologies including the most popular linear postal PDF417 and 2D matrix code types e The ability to capture and download images to a host for a variety of imaging applications e Advanced intuitive laser aiming for easy point and shoot operation The imager uses digital camera technology to take a digital picture of a bar code stores the resulting image in its memory and executes state of the art software decoding algorithms to extract the data from the image Operational Modes The wearable terminal with optional RS507 imager supports three modes of operation listed below Activate each mode pressing the Scan button e Decode Mode In this mode the RS507 attempts to locate and decode enabled bar codes within its field of view The imager remains in this mode as long as you hold the scan button or until it decodes a bar code Using the Wearable Terminal 2
94. r to log onto a remote device and run a program Terminal See Wearable Terminal Terminal Emulation A terminal emulation emulates a character based mainframe session on a remote non mainframe terminal including all display features commands and function keys The WT4090 Series supports Terminal Emulations in 3270 5250 and VT220 TFTP Trivial File Transfer Protocol A version of the TCP IP FTP File Transfer Protocol protocol that has no directory or password capability It is the protocol used for upgrading firmware downloading software and remote booting of diskless devices Tolerance Allowable deviation from the nominal bar or space width Transmission Control Protocol Internet Protocol See TCP IP Transport Layer Security TLS TLS is a protocol that ensures privacy between communicating applications and their users on the Internet When a server and client communicate TLS ensures that no third party may eavesdrop or tamper with any message TLS is the successor to the Secure Sockets Layer SSL Trivial File Transfer Protocol See TFTP U UPC Universal Product Code A relatively complex numeric symbology Each character consists of two bars and two spaces each of which is any of four widths The standard symbology for retail food packages in the United States UDP User Datagram Protocol A protocol within the IP protocol suite that is used in place of TCP when a reliable delivery is not required For example UDP is
95. ransfer Protocol Flash Memory Flash memory is responsible for storing the system firmware and is non volatile If the system power is interrupted the data is not be lost H Hard Reset See Cold Boot Hz Hertz A unit of frequency equal to one cycle per second Glossary 4 WT4090 Wearable Terminal User Guide Host Computer A computer that serves other terminals in a network providing such services as computation database access supervisory programs and network control IEC International Electrotechnical Commission This international agency regulates laser safety by specifying various laser operation classes based on power output during operation IEC 825 Class 1 This is the lowest power IEC laser classification Conformity is ensured through a software restriction of 120 seconds of laser operation within any 1000 second window and an automatic laser shutdown if the scanner s oscillating mirror fails IEEE Address See MAC Address Interleaved 2 of 5 A binary bar code symbology representing character pairs in groups of five bars and five interleaved spaces Interleaving provides for greater information density The location of wide elements bar spaces within each group determines which characters are encoded This continuous code type uses no intercharacter spaces Only numeric 0 to 9 and START STOP characters may be encoded IOCTL Input Output Control Interleaved Bar Code A bar code in which characters are paired toge
96. rowsers and most Web server products Developed by Netscape SSL also gained the support of Microsoft and other Internet client server developers as well and became the de facto standard until evolving into Transport Layer Security The sockets part of the term refers to the sockets method of passing data back and forth between a client and a server program in a network or between program layers in the same computer SSL uses the public and private key encryption system from RSA which also includes the use of a digital certificate Shared Key Shared Key authentication is an algorithm where both the AP and the MU share an authentication key SID System Identification code An identifier issued by the FCC for each market It is also broadcast by the cellular carriers to allow cellular devices to distinguish between the home and roaming service SMDK Symbol Mobility Developer s Kit Soft Reset See Warm Boot Subnet A subset of nodes on a network that are serviced by the same router See Router Subnet Mask A 32 bit number used to separate the network and host sections of an IP address A custom subnet mask subdivides an IP network into smaller subsections The mask is a binary pattern that is matched up with the IP address to turn part of the host ID address field into a field for subnets Default is often 255 255 255 0 Substrate A foundation material on which a substance or image is placed Symbol A scannable unit that encodes data
97. stallation 4 Rotate the trigger assembly to the correct position for the hand that the scanner mounts to Accessories 3 9 5 Slide the RS409 onto the index finger with the scan trigger next to the thumb Figure 3 6 Place the RS409 on Index Finger 6 Tighten the finger strap Figure 3 7 Tightening Straps 7 f required cut excess finger strap material After connecting the scanner warm boot the wearable terminal See Resetting the Wearable Terminal on page 2 17 for information on performing a warm boot 3 10 W1T4070 90 Wearable Terminal User Guide RS309 Scanner The RS309 connects to the wearable terminal and mounts on the back of either hand using the RS309 glove 1 Remove the rubber plug from the wearable terminal interface connector 2 Connect the RS309 trigger cable to the back of the RS309 Trigger Connector Figure 3 8 Connecting Trigger Cable to RS309 3 Connect the end of the RS309 interface cable to the wearable terminal interface connector If the wearable terminal is mounted on the arm connect the cable to the interface connector closest to the wrist 4 Ifthe wearable terminal is mounted on the hip route the interface cable up to the shoulder and down to the hand that the scanner mounts on Attach two cable clips to clothing and secure cable to cable clip Figure 3 9 Cable Clip Installation Accessories 3 11 5 Mount the RS309 on the RS309 glove Refer to the RS309 Glove Installat
98. tern to represent a specific character or numeric value Bits are numbered from the right 0 through 7 with bit 0 the low order bit One byte in memory is used to store one ASCII character boot or boot up The process a computer goes through when it starts During boot up the computer can run self diagnostic tests and configure hardware and software C CDRH Center for Devices and Radiological Health A federal agency responsible for regulating laser product safety This agency specifies various laser operation classes based on power output during operation CDRH Class 1 This is the lowest power CDRH laser classification This class is considered intrinsically safe even if all laser output were directed into the eye s pupil There are no special operating procedures for this class CDRH Class 2 No additional software mechanisms are needed to conform to this limit Laser operation in this class poses no danger for unintentional direct human exposure Character A pattern of bars and spaces which either directly represents data or indicates a control function such as a number letter punctuation mark or communications control contained in a message Codabar A discrete self checking code with a character set consisting of digits 0 to 9 and six additional characters Code 128 A high density symbology which allows the controller to encode all 128 ASCII characters without adding extra symbol elements Code 3 of 9 Code 39 A
99. tery n seen nn 2 12 CHANGING ga garen anna ne RIYAN 1 8 bar codes one dimensional naana anann 2 19 two dimensional 2 22 22 eenenn nn 2 20 battery backup charging 22202 seen 1 8 CHANGING an en 1 8 temperature range A 8 installing 2 222 NAG 2a UNANG AA BAAL PLANG 1 7 FEMOVING aaa ha aNG en 1 9 battery charging four slot cradles 3 5 battery charging temperature A 2 battery icon eresse ceset r CERNIN nenn 2 12 battery status nannu naaa 2 12 boot Old AA 1 14 2 1 2 17 2 18 Wall use een 2 1 2 17 DUNGIS 2 een xii buttons POWER dronea nee ee han 2 1 c characters special eee 2 7 charging spare batteries cee eee eee 1 9 temperature range 2 2 22er nennen A 8 charging batteries 0 eee eee eee 1 8 charging spare batteries 1 9 CIEANING AA 4 1 cold boot 0 00 ee 1 14 2 1 2 17 2 18 configuration 0 0 222m een nn x configurations n nennen xX conventions notational sssaaa aa a e O eee xii OPUN saad Saat sce da A A E te fey E weed E A 1 cradles four slot charge only a 3 1 four slot cradles battery charging seen 3 5 four slot Ethernet 0 000 eee 3 4 four slot Ethernet cradle LED indicators ser 3 5 four slot Ethernet USB 1 3 3 1 seria USB
100. ther using bars to represent the first character and the intervening spaces to represent the second Interleaved 2 of 5 A binary bar code symbology representing character pairs in groups of five bars and five interleaved spaces Interleaving provides for greater information density The location of wide elements bar spaces within each group determines which characters are encoded This continuous code type uses no intercharacter spaces Only numeric 0 to 9 and START STOP characters may be encoded Internet Protocol Address See IP I O Ports interface The connection between two devices defined by common physical characteristics signal characteristics and signal meanings Types of interfaces include RS 232 and PCMCIA Input Output Ports I O ports are primarily dedicated to passing information into or out of the terminal s memory Wearable terminals include Serial and USB ports IP Internet Protocol The IP part of the TCP IP communications protocol IP implements the network layer layer 3 of the protocol which contains a network address and is used to route a message to a different network or subnetwork IP accepts packets from the layer 4 transport protocol TCP or UDP adds its own header to it and delivers a datagram to the layer 2 data link protocol It may also break the packet into fragments to support the maximum transmission unit MTU of the network IP Address Internet Protocol address The address of a comput
101. to remove any grease and dirt near the connector area 7 Use a dry cotton tipped applicator and repeat steps 4 through 7 8 Spray compressed air on the connector areas by pointing the tube nozzle about 1 2 inch away from the surface IN CAUTION Do not point nozzle at yourself and others ensure the nozzle or tube is away from your face 9 Inspect the area for any grease or dirt repeat if required 10 Replace connector rubber plugs if required Cleaning the RS309 RS409 and RS507 Housing Using the alcohol wipes wipe the housing including keys and in between keys Scanner Exit Window Wipe the scanner exit window periodically with a lens cloth or other material suitable for cleaning optical material such as eyeglasses Connectors 1 Disconnect the scanner from mobile computer 2 Dip the cotton portion of the cotton tipped applicator in isopropyl alcohol 3 Rub the cotton portion of the cotton tipped applicator back and forth across the connector pins Do not leave any cotton residue on the connector Repeat at least three times Use the cotton tipped applicator dipped in alcohol to remove any grease and dirt near the connector area Use a dry cotton tipped applicator and repeat steps 3 through 5 no a gt Spray compressed air on the connector area by pointing the tube nozzle about 1 2 inch away from the surface AN CAUTION Do not point nozzle at yourself and others ensure the nozzle or tube is away from your face
102. versatile and widely used alphanumeric bar code symbology with a set of 43 character types including all uppercase letters numerals from O to 9 and 7 special characters space minus plus period dollar sign slash and percent The code name is derived from the fact that 3 of 9 elements representing a character are wide while the remaining 6 are narrow Code 93 An industrial symbology compatible with Code 39 but offering a full character ASCII set and a higher coding density than Code 39 Cold Boot A cold boot restarts the wearable terminal and erases all user stored records and entries COM port Communication port ports are identified by number e g COM1 COM2 Cradle A cradle is used for charging the terminal battery and for communicating with a host computer and provides a storage place for the terminal when not in use D DCP See Device Configuration Package Decode To recognize a bar code symbology e g UPC EAN and then analyze the content of the specific bar code scanned Glossary 3 Decode Algorithm A decoding scheme that converts pulse widths into data representation of the letters or numbers encoded within a bar code symbol Decryption Decryption is the decoding and unscrambling of received encrypted data Also see Encryption and Key Depth of Field The range between minimum and maximum distances at which a scanner can read a symbol with a certain minimum element width Device C

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