68 V6.70 20131017mm1/0/1/n1 where mm1=Parameter # and n1=1,2,3,4,5,6mm2/0/1/n1 where mm2=Parameter # and n1=1,2,3,4,5,6Then assign the output, OUTn2, commanding cooling to OUTn1 as follows:Using the LCD: OUTn2 OUTn1where n1=1,2,3,4 and n2=1,2,3,4,5,6Using RS232: n1/0/0/n2where n1=Parameter # and n2=1,2,3,4,5,64.10 Setting Output Control With AlarmThe TTC-1000 monitors two critical conditions: processor (DEVICE) andtemperature (TPROBE) and allows the user to control how each output reactswhen an alarm occurs. A DEVICE alarm occurs anytime the microprocessordetects a failure in any of the peripheral hardware including the non-volatile E2memory, the real time clock, analog outputs, corruption of stored data and powersupply brown out.The TPROBE alarm is generated anytime the processor is unable to obtainreliable temperature information. This failure can be due to a discontinuity in theleads connected to the temperature probe or with any of the internal circuitryassociated with the analog to digital conversion process. For a single probealarm condition, only temperature set point evaluation for that probe channel aresuspended until the alarm condition is cleared.The TTC-1000 allows you to program how an output will react whenever there isa DEVICE or TPROBE alarm. There are three (3) ways an output can reactwhenever there is a DEVICE or TPROBE alarm:1. Unchanged (UNCHG): the output remains as it was prior to thealarm.2. Picked Up (PCKUP): the output picks up when alarm occurs.3. Supervised (SUPVS): the output drops out when alarm occurs.4. No action (NOACT): the output logic is not processed at all.The TTC-1000 output control default is UNCHG for each output.Because of redundant top oil probe operation, the TTC-1000 will only invoke thisfunction for a failure under the following conditions: Only one RTD probe named top oil. Any RTD probe named winding.