Honeywell WEB 201 Thermostat User Manual

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McDonald’s HEMS II  
End User Operations Manual  
Table of Contents  
Overview………………………………………………………………………...3  
Navigation to Login Page from local or remote personal computer.…..……4  
Local Personal Computer & Remote Personal Computer Login …………..5  
Panel Face Mounted Display Local Login…..………………………………..6  
Home Page……………………………………………………………………....7-12  
HVAC Units…………………………………………………………………….13  
Schedules & Holidays………………………………………………………….14-17  
Data Logging and Trended Points…………………………………………….18  
Electrical Demand Limiting Adjustments…………………………………….19  
Lighting Photocell Adjustments………………………………………………..19  
Embedded Touch Screen “Operating Instructions” Link…………………....20-27  
HEMS II System Drawings & Sequence of Operations……………………....28-37  
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Overview  
McDonald’s HEMS II Energy Management Control System & User Interface  
The McDonald’s HEMS II energy management and control system runs on a WEB -201(Java Application  
Control Engine). The WEB -201 is a compact, embedded controller/server platform. It combines integrated  
control, supervision, data logging, alarming, scheduling and network management functions with Internet  
connectivity and web serving capabilities in a small, compact platform. The WEB -201 makes it possible to  
control and manage external devices over your local network or the Internet and present real-time information  
to users in web-based graphical views.  
The HEMS II system is complete in a 36” X 24” X 4” stainless steel panel with a local touch screen operator  
interface display. All system set points and changes can be made from this local display. With internet access  
provided to the HEMS II, all information and set points are available remotely from any PC browser interface.  
The system is designed to monitor and/or control the following items:  
(3) Roof Top Mounted HVAC Units.  
Freezer/Cooler Temperatures and associated Door Opened/Closed status.  
Outdoor air temperature.  
HVAC Unit Space Temperatures, Discharge Air (supply) Temperatures and Room Temperature Set  
Points.  
Electrical Demand and Electrical Consumption.  
Parking Lot Lights, Exterior Signage Lights, Customer (Dining Area) Lights.  
Employee/Kitchen Lights and Play Place Lights (if present).  
Outdoor Light Level from a Photocell.  
Your installed system may have additional points of control or monitoring that are not covered or included in  
this document.  
Additional points could be:  
Drive through heater control.  
Kitchen equipment monitoring.  
Interface to your security system for status.  
Water heater control.  
Additional Roof Top Mounted HVAC/Units.  
Bulk CO2 levels near beverage and CO2 storage tanks.  
Or additional monitoring & control points that have been customized for your facility.  
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Navigation to Login Page from Local or Remote Personal Computer location  
Open internet  
browser and enter  
store IP address here:  
To begin: First open your internet browser and enter the WEBs Unit IP address in  
the "address bar". The WEBs Unit IP address will be furnished to you by the  
installer of the system. Additionally, you may consider installing a short cut icon on  
your personal computer Desk Top that will direct you to the IP address of your  
system.  
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Navigation to Login Page from Local or Remote Personal Computer location  
Login Page  
The Login Page is where you enter your username (user) and password (pass). Then  
click the login icon. Please wait until the booting process completely loads, once it  
does, it will automatically route you to the Home Page. Note that the first time you  
access your system from any browser it could take several minutes to load the Home  
Page. Subsequent access to the system, from the same Personal Computer will load  
the Home Page must faster.  
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Below is the default Login Page from the Local Touch Screen located on the front  
of panel after unit has been powered “ON”or after the blank screen has been  
touched and unit returns to normal operation mode from power saving standby  
mode.  
Login Page  
The Login Page will be automatically populated with the Username & Password.  
Touch the Login icon once and the system will automatically route you to the Home  
Page.  
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Home Page  
The Home Page will display your systems current conditions with any active alarms.  
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Home Page – continued  
This area of Home Page shows the following:  
1
2
. Your store number and physical location.  
. Current outside air temperature. By touching or clicking on the CYAN colored area you will be  
directed to a trend log of accumulated outside temperature data. See page 18 of this document for  
more information on this.  
3
4
. Current time and date in the control system.  
. By touching or clicking on “Operating Instructions” icon you will be presented with a complete  
description and use of each section of displays and completed system electrical drawings and  
written sequence of operations. See pages 20-27 and 28-37 of this document for more information  
on this.  
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Home Page – continued  
This area of Home Page shows the following:  
1
.
Current electrical peak demand and current electrical (KWH) consumption for the current month and  
current year. By touching or clicking on any CYAN colored area you will be directed to a trend log of  
accumulated electrical data. See page 18 of this document for more information on this.  
Current electrical demand set point. See page 19 of this document for more information this.  
Energy Demand Limiting: When active the box will say Active and the background will be RED. When  
Inactive the box will say Inactive and the background will be YELLOW. When Active the temperature set  
points for all HVAC Units will be automatically raised 3°F (when in cooling mode) or lowered 3°F (when in  
heating mode). HVAC Units automatically switch between Cooling/Heating modes to maintain room  
temperatures. Active condition exists when current electrical demand is within 2.5% of electrical demand set  
point.  
2
3
.
.
4
.
By touching or clicking on Electrical icon you will be directed to another page for set point adjustments. See  
page 19 of this document for more information on this.  
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Home Page – continued  
This area of Home Page shows the following:  
1
.
Current freezer and cooler temperatures. By touching or clicking on any numeric value you will be directed  
to a trend log of accumulated freezer or cooler temperature data. See page 18 of this document for more  
information on this. RED bullet light (next to Freezer or Cooler) indicates an alarm condition. No alarm  
condition and the light will be GREEN. If freezer temperature is 25°F or greater for 5 minutes or more an  
alarm condition will exist. If cooler temperature is 42°F or greater for 5 minutes or more and alarm condition  
will exist. When in an alarm condition an internal panel alarm horn will sound continuously. Pressing the  
Alarm Silence icon causes the internal alarm horn to stop temporarily, yet will start up again if alarm  
condition exists after another 5 minutes.  
2
3
.
.
Current status of freezer and cooler doors. RED bullet light (next to Freezer or Cooler) indicates an alarm  
condition. No alarm condition and the light will be GREEN. With freezer or cooler doors closed the  
nomenclature to the right will indicate Door Closed with a gray background color. With freezer or cooler  
doors open for more than 5 continous minutes the nomenclature will read Door Opened with a RED  
background and the internal panel alarm horn will sound continuously. Pressing the Alarm Silence icon  
causes the internal alarm horn to stop temporarily, yet will start up again if alarm condition exists after  
another 5 minutes.  
Current bulk C02 reading in parts per million (PPM). RED bullet light (next to CO2) indicates an alarm  
condition. GREEN indicates unit is OK. When in alarm condition for more than five minutes (CO2 reading  
at 15,000 PPM or greater) an internal panel alarm horn will sound continuously and the NORMAL  
nomenclature to the right will change to ALARM with a RED background color. Pressing the Alarm Silence  
icon causes the internal alarm horn to stop temporarily, yet will start up again if alarm condition exists after  
another 5 minutes. CO2 point information and alarming is an option for the HEMS II panel and may or may  
not be included with your system based on what was ordered.  
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Home Page – continued  
This area of Home Page shows the following:  
1
.
Current Lighting controls. RED bullet lights next to a lighting zone name indicates the lighting zone is  
commanded OFF by the associated time of day schedule or photocell. GREEN indicates the lighting zone is  
commanded ON by the associated time of day schedule or photocell. The photocells and their set points are  
only associated with Parking Lot and Signage lighting zones.  
2
3
.
.
By touching or clicking on Lighting icon you will be directed to another page for photocell set point  
adjustments. See page 19 of this document for more information on this.  
Each individual lighting zone has a separate AUTO or ON icon. By touching or clicking on the AUTO icon,  
that icon will turn GREEN and the associated lighting zone will start and stop based on a time of day  
schedule. By touching or clicking on the ON icon that lighting zone will be on continuously.  
Photocell for Parking and Signage indicate ON when outdoor light level is below the set point for each  
lighting zone and OFF when outdoor light level is higher than the set point for each lighting zone. See page 19  
of this document for more information on this.  
There is a separate time of day schedule associated with each lighting zone. Touching or clicking on the  
associated schedule icon and you will be automatically routed to another page for schedule adjustments. See  
pages 14-17 of this document for more information on this.  
4
5
6
.
.
.
Schedule icons that show three people (in color) indicate that the schedule is currently in the Occupied Mode  
of operations. Schedule icons that show three people (in ghost white) indicate that the schedule is currently in  
the Unoccupied Mode of operation.  
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Home Page – continued  
This area of Home Page shows the following:  
1
2
3
4
5
6
.
.
.
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Current HVAC Units. RED bullet lights next to FAN indicate the HVAC Unit is commanded OFF by the  
associated time of day schedule. GREEN indicates the HVAC Unit is commanded ON by the associated time  
of day schedule.  
By touching or clicking on Kitchen Area, Dining Area or Playplace Area icons you will be directed to another  
page for additional information and set point adjustments. See page 13 of this document for more  
information on this.  
Each individual HVAC Unit has a separate AUTO or ON icon. By touching or clicking on the AUTO icon,  
that icon will turn GREEN and the associated HVAC Unit will start and stop based on a time of day schedule.  
By touching or clicking on the ON icon that HVAC Unit will be on continuously.  
There is a separate time of day schedule associated with each HVAC Unit. Touch or Click on the associated  
schedule icon and you will be automatically routed to another page for schedule adjustments. See page 14-17  
of this document for more information on this.  
Schedule icons that show three people (in color) indicate that the schedule is currently in the Occupied Mode  
of operations. Schedule icons that show three people (in ghost white) indicate that the schedule is currently in  
the Unoccupied Mode of operation.  
Each HVAC Unit shows the current Room Temperature and current Heating and Cooling set points. These  
set points are adjustable. Refer to page 13 of this document to make adjustments.  
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HVAC Units  
This area of HVAC Unit page shows the following:  
1
2
.
.
Each HVAC Unit has a page similar to above associated with it. The current view is that of the Kitchen  
HVAC Unit (Kitchen RTU – Roof Top Unit).  
On the left side is the system information section that indicates current Outdoor Air Temperature, Schedule  
Status (Occupied or Unoccupied), Current HVAC Mode of Heat or Cool (this mode changes automatically  
based on space temperature verses space temperature set point), Current Space Temperature, Occupied  
Heating Set Point and associated raise and lower buttons, Occupied Cooling Set Point and associated raise  
and lower buttons, Unoccupied Heating Set Point and associated raise and lower buttons, Unoccupied  
Cooling Set Point and associated raise and lower buttons, Status of HVAC Unit controller and icons to return  
to Main (Home Page) or the associated Schedule for the selected HVAC Unit.  
3
.
This graphic also shows the commanded status of the Economizer (Enabled or Disabled), Unit Fan (On or  
Off) and number of Heating (1-4) or Cooling Stages (1-4) commanded ON. Additionally the current  
Discharge Air (supply air to area served by the HVAC Unit) Temperature and state of Electrical Demand  
Limiting (Inactive or Active) are shown.  
4
5
.
.
By touching or clicking on the CYAN colored background area of the Space Temperature or Discharge Air  
temperature you will be directed to a trend log of values for these points.  
Energy Demand Limiting: When Active the box will say Active and the background will be RED. When  
Inactive the box will say Inactive and the background will be YELLOW. When Active the temperature set  
points for the HVAC Unit will be automatically raised 3°F (when in Cooling Mode) or lowered 3°F (when in  
Heating Mode). HVAC Units automatically switch between Cooling/Heating Modes to maintain room  
temperatures. Active condition exists when current electrical demand is within 2.5% of electrical demand set  
point.  
6
.
The Occupied Cooling set point must ALWAYS be set 2-3°F higher than the Occupied Heating set point,  
otherwise a set point conflict will occur and the Controller Status indication will show ALARM state.  
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Time of Day Schedules & Holidays for HVAC Units and Lighting Zones  
By touching or clicking on any HVAC Unit or Lighting Zone Schedule icon from the  
Home Page you will see the following:  
1
2
.
.
Each HVAC Unit and Lighting Zone has a separate and distinctive time of day schedule associated with it.  
In this case you are looking at the Kitchen HVAC Unit schedule. The green areas indicate the Occupied  
Schedule and the gray areas indicate an Unoccupied Schedule. In this case the Kitchen unit is set to the  
Occupied Mode of operation from 4am to12am Monday through Friday and on Saturdays and Sundays the  
Occupied Mode of operations is from 4am to 1am the next day. Otherwise the unit is in the Unoccupied Mode  
of operation. In Occupied Mode of operation the HVAC fan runs continuously to maintain room or area  
Occupied temperature set points. In the Unoccupied Mode the fan, heating and cooling stages all cycle to  
maintain Unoccupied temperature set points. See additional sections of this document for more information  
on this.  
3
4
.
.
Adjustments are easily made. See next page.  
For stores where the dining room is closed and yet the drive through is open 24 hours you will want to touch  
or click on the ON icon from the Home Page Schedule icon associated with the Dining Room HVAC Unit.  
This will keep the HVAC Unit fan operating continuously for make up air to your hood exhaust system.  
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Time of Day Schedules & Holidays for HVAC Units and Lighting Zones - continued  
1
.
By touching or left clicking your mouse on any green area of the schedule that section will then turn blue and  
you can edit it.  
2
3
.
.
Notice that Monday was touched or clicked on and the background color changed to blue for editing.  
You can drag your finger or mouse (double arrow) to a new Occupied start and/or stop time. In the case  
above the start was retained at 4am and the stop time has now been set to 6pm. The same adjustments for any  
day can also be made by using the up and down arrow keys in the lower left hand corner of screen.  
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Time of Day Schedules & Holidays for HVAC Units and Lighting Zones- continued  
1
.
By touching and holding your finger on any green area of the schedule or right clicking your mouse that  
section will then turn blue and you are presented with a drop down selection where you can: Delete the Event,  
Make an All Day Event, Apply the Schedule to M-F, Copy the Day to the next Day, Clear the Day or Clear  
the Week. This is very intuitive and easy to understand after just a few minutes.  
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Time of Day Schedules & Holidays for HVAC Units and Lighting Zones- continued  
1
2
.
.
By touching or clicking on the Special Events tab at the bottom left of the screen to can add and edit special  
events. The example above shows that on Sat December 25 of 2010 (Christmas) the schedule has been set to  
Unoccupied for the complete day.  
It is very easy and intuitive to add special events or holidays for any unit or lighting zone that has a schedule  
associated with it. Additionally, just like indicated on previous pages use your finger or mouse to adjust the  
time of day for these events, either in the box in the lower right hand corner or through the up/down arrow  
keys in the lower right hand corner.  
th  
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Data Logging and Trended Points  
1
2
.
.
The following points are all selectable from the Home and/or HVAC Unit graphic pages by touching or  
clicking on the numeric value ( CYAN background color) shown for each: OSA Temperature (Outside Air  
Temperature), Peak Electrical Demand, KWH Monthly (monthly electrical consumption), KWH Yearly  
(
yearly electrical consumption), Freezer (temperature), Cooler (temperature), Space Temp (space  
temperature for each area of building) and DA Temp (discharge or supply air temperature from each HVAC  
Unit).  
The information above shows the Cooler temperature as an example. Note that in the upper left hand corner  
a time range can be selected from a drop down menu. You can elect to review the trend information by  
specifying a certain time range or values for Today, Last 24 Hours, Yesterday, Week-to-Date, Last Week,  
Last 7 days, Month-to-Date, Last Month, Year-To-Date (data may not be available for this time period) and  
Last Year (data may not be available for this time period). See item 5 below.  
3
4
.
.
You can also place your finger or mouse at any point on the graphic line to see what an exact value was and  
the exact date and time that value was recorded.  
Note that each point is trended or logged every 60 minutes, 24 hours per day, 365 days per year. The  
exception is Peak Demand which is recorded every 15 minutes, 24 hours per day, 365 days per year and  
KWH Monthly and KWH Yearly which are continuously recorded.  
5
.
Also note that the WEBs controller has a limited amount of internal memory for holding and retaining logged  
or trended values. When this internal memory is full, older data values are overwritten by new recorded  
values. With this in mind you may not able to read data values from a long time ago. Typically the WEBs unit  
will retain the last 7-30 days of trended or logged data for each point. Honeywell offers a service that  
automatically retrieves and retains long term trended or logged data for you, as long as, a continuous internet  
connection to the WEBs unit is available. Consult with your Honeywell salesperson on the costs associated  
with additional service.  
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Electrical Demand Limiting and Lighting Photocell Adjustments  
1
2
.
.
You reach this page by touching or clicking on the Lighting or Electrical icons on the Home page.  
Demand set point is easily adjusted by touching or clicking on the plus or minus keys above. For retrofit sites  
a review of your past 12 months of utility bills will allow for a determination of what this value should be.  
Consult with your Honeywell sales person or local electrical utilities representative to help you make this  
initial setting. For new construction projects it may take 6 months to a year before this value can be  
accurately set based on a review of your utility bills. Once set there should be no need for further adjustment,  
unless there is a change in the way the utility company bills or charges you. When actual electrical demand is  
within 2.5% of the setting above the temperature set points for the HVAC unit will be automatically raised  
3
° (when in cooling mode) or lowered 3° (when in heating mode). HVAC units automatically switch between  
Cooling/Heating modes to maintain room temperatures.  
3
.
Parking Lot Lighting and Signage Lighting controls operate the same, but each has a separate adjustable  
turn on” set point based on outdoor light levels as sensed by one common outdoor photocell. Typically the  
values above are set at 3450; this has proven to be a good setting for lighting to turn on based on outdoor light  
levels. You may want your signage to turn on earlier than parking lot lights that is why there is a separate  
darker/lighter adjustment for each. Touching or clicking on darker or lighter will adjust the start point for  
each. Parking and Signage each have a separate (adjustable) time of day schedule associated with them. See  
icons on Home page and refer to Time of Day Schedules & Holidays section of this document for adjustments  
to these schedules. The Parking or Signage lights will start based on outdoor light level and adjustments  
above. In a non 24 hour store the associated schedule is used to enable or shut lights off when the store is  
closed and employees are all gone, no matter what the light level is outside. An Example may be as follows:  
Your employees show up for work at 4am – parking lot lights turn on by time of day schedule. At 5am your  
drive through opens – signage lights turn on by time of day schedule. When outdoor light level is high enough  
say at 6am the parking lot lights shut off by the photocell set point. As outdoor light level increases maybe the  
signage should shut off by the photocell set point (but it does not have to). As light level decreases late in the  
day or evening the parking and signage lights come back on by photocell. Store closes at Midnight and  
signage shuts off on schedule. Employees leave at 1am after clean up, parking lot lights and employee lights  
shut off by schedule.  
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Embedded Touch Screen Operating Instructions  
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Embedded Touch Screen Operating Instructions  
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Embedded Touch Screen Operating Instructions  
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Embedded Touch Screen Operating Instructions  
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Embedded Touch Screen Operating Instructions  
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Embedded Touch Screen Operating Instructions  
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Embedded Touch Screen Operating Instructions  
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Embedded Touch Screen Operating Instructions  
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