
ZETRON AMERICAS
PO Box 97004, Redmond, WA USA 98073-9704
(P) +1 425 820 6363 (F) +1 425 820 7031 (E) zetron@zetron.com
ZETRON EMEA
27-29 Campbell Court, Bramley, Hampshire RG26 5EG, United Kingdom
(P) +44 1256 880663 (F) +44 1256 880491 (E) uk@zetron.com
ZETRON AUSTRALASIA
PO Box 3045, Staord Mail Centre, Staord QLD 4053, Australia
(P) +61 7 3856 4888 (F) +61 7 3356 6877 (E) au@zetron.com
©Zetron, Inc. All rights reserved. Zetron® and Zetron
and Design® are registered trademarks of Zetron, Inc.
All other trademarks are properes of their respecve
owners.
See Zetron price list for opon pricing. Specicaons
subject to change without noce.
www.zetron.com
005-0262Q May 2015
SPECIFICATIONS
General
Standard Model 2100 and Model 2200 are equipped with a hard
disk for system soware, subscriber database, and voice storage,
as well as an autobaud modem for remote programming, diag-
noscs, and factory support.
Environmental: +40° to +120° F. (+5° to +50° C.),
10,000 . (3,000 m.) altude, 8% to
80% relave humidity, non-condensing.
Power (Model 2100): 115/230 volts AC +/- 10%, 47-63 Hz
AC input 150 Was maximum.
Power (Model 2200) 115/230 volts AC +/- 10%, 47-63 Hz
AC input 40-70 volts DC
DC input opon 300 Was maximum.
TAP Capabilies
Inbound TAP: Via telephone line modems or direct
RS-232 connecon (up to 16 ports).
Outdial TAP: Up to 32 dierent desnaons via single
external modem.
TNPP Capabilies
Maximum nodes
supported: 64
Telco Interface
Available Interface
Types: Central oce DID selector-level (up
(eld congurable) to 7-digit feed), End-to-End loop and
ground start (ring and overdial), PABX
2-wire trunk, E&M Type I 2-wire audio,
Local Access telephone set for priority
override. E&M Type 2 with 4-wire audio
available as a separate interface .
Line Coupling: 600-ohm Transformer, adjustable
balance duplex hybrid.
Input: DTMF (0-9, *, #, A-D), Dial Pulse (0-9),
oponal MF R1 (0-9, KP, ST), MF R2 (for
internaonal use), 300/1200 baud
modem (oponal Alpha Messaging
Input Modem), oponal Dual Dial Click
Decoder.
Radio Transmier Interface
Conguraons: Transmit only Paging, oponal Transmit/
Receive Talk-back Paging .
Signaling Formats
Analog: 2-tone sequenal, 5/6-tone analog
Digital: Multone Mark IV / V / VI / VII, POCSAG
(512, 1200, and 2400 baud), Golay
Sequenal Code (GSC), NEC D3, D4,
and FLEX (1600 baud).
Transmit Audio: Balanced 600 ohm transformer,
selectable at tone or -6 dB per octave
de-emphasis @ 300-3000Hz, selectable
at voice or +6 dB per octave
pre-emphasis.
Format Encoding: Analog frequency accuracy +/-0.02%,
analog tone distoron less than 0.2%,
digital data stability +/- 2 ppm
Remote Control: Motorola PURC (sequenal signaling of
up to 16 transmier zones per channel),
Quintron SCM/SCU, tone formats. Four
binary TTL leads provide informaon for
outboard controller units to select up to
16 transmier zones per channel.
Voice Capabilies (Oponal)
Independent Voice
Channels: 14 or 28, each dynamically allocated to
trunks on an as-needed basis.
PageSaver Voice
Message Retrieval: 72 hours voice storage, 999-second
maximum voice message length, 100
messages per subscriber maximum
(50 messages per mode), maximum
message retenon me is 255 hours.
SIMULCAST THROUGH MODEL 600/620
Model 600 Wireless Data Manager
The Model 600 accepts TNPP input from up to three TNPP
links, eciently batches the pages with ming informaon
from an aached GPS, and delivers the pages across a link to
mulple Model 620 Wireless Data Encoders.
Model 620 Wireless Data Encoder
The Model 620 receives batches of paging data from the
Model 600, and encodes the data for POCSAG or FLEX.
At the precise me indicated by an aached GPS, the
encoded message batch is sent to the transmier, resulng
in synchronous broadcast with other Model 620 controlled
transmiers.
SYSTEM MANAGEMENT THROUGH ZBASE
ZBASE is the database management program for the Series
2000 Paging Terminals, included with each paging terminal
purchased. It allows the system operator access to the
subscriber, group, and message databases.
In addion, ZBASE aids the system operator in monitoring
system usage. Detailed reports on account status and call
counts show the levels of service for all subscribers. Stascs
are presented as graphs that show trunk, channel, TNPP, and
voice storage use. System call logs keep a record of every page
that the terminal handles.
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