Motorola MP6000 Integrator Manual

Page 1
MP6000
INTEGRATOR GUIDE
Page 2
Page 3
MP6000
INTEGRATOR GUIDE
72E-172632-05
Revision A
July 2014
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ii MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
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 i s” basis. All sof a licensed basis. Motorola grants to the user a non-transferab le 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 unde r 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 include the same on any authorized copies it makes, in whole or in part. The user agrees not to deco mpile, disassemble, decode, or reverse engineer any licensed program delivered to the user or any portion thereof.
Motorola reserves the right to make changes design.
Motorola does not assume any product liability any product, circuit, or application described herein.
No license is granted, either expressly or by implicatio intellectual property rights. An implied license only exists for equipment, circuits, and subsystems contained in Motorola products.
to any software or product to improve reliability, function, or
arising out of, or in connection with, the application or use of
any form, or by any electrical or mechanical means,
tware, including firmware, furnished to the user is on
n, estoppel, or otherwise under any Motorola, Inc.,
MOTOROLA, MOTO, MOTOROLA SOLUTIONS and the S trademarks of Motorola Trademark Holdings, LLC and are used under license. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Motorola Solutions, Inc. One Motorola Plaza Holtsville, New York 11742-1300
http://www.motorolasolutions.com

Warranty

Subject to the terms of Motorola’s hardware warranty statement, the MP6000 is warranted against defects in workmanship and materials for a period of 1 (one) year from the date of shipment.
For the complete Motorola hardware product warranty statement, go to:
http://www.motorolasolutions.com/warrant
tylized M Logo are trademarks or registered
y
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Revision History

Changes to the original guide are listed below:
Change Date Description
-01 Rev A 6/2013 Initial Release.
-02 Rev A 6/2013 Added:
-03 Rev A 12/2014 Added:
- Figure 3-43, Sensormatic Coil Routing
Updated:
- Figure 1-2, Left Side View
- Figure 3-44, Checkpoint Antenna Installation
- Figure A-2 callouts
- Checkpoint antenna routing color
- NCR single cable scanner/scale, NCR scanner RS-232 bar codes.
- Support for third party hand-held scanners
- RS-232 host connection to AUX 2 port ( lea use).
- Programmable scale initial zero setting range.
- IBM scale 3-byte status support.
- Volume button disable feature.
- Dual cable scale (SASI only).
- Wincor A/B, and RS-232 host interfaces (see Table 2-4 on page 2-15).
- USB HID keyboard interface.
- Drivers License Parsing (some models).
Updated:
- Host interface ports, and cables.
, Datalogic scanner only , and new
using USB auxiliary ports. ves USB host port available for future
iii
-04 Rev A 5/2014 Added:
- Third Party Scale bar codes.
- Price Computational Scale Interface circuit drawing.
- Mounting frame.
Updated:
- Added information to step 2 on page 4-7.
-05 Rev A 7/2014 Updated:
-Table A-1;
-From Act peak.
E18, E25, E27 and E30 e
ive Mode 5.0 average, <12W peak to Active Mode 4.65 average, <12W
rrors changed to warnings.
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iv MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Warranty ......................................................................................................................................... ii
Revision History.............................................................................................................................. iii
About This Guide
Introduction..................................................................................................................................... v
Chapter Descriptions ...................................................................................................................... v
Notational Conventions................................................................................................................... vi
Related Publications....................................................................................................................... vi
Recommended Services Information.............................................................................................. vii
Chapter 1: PRODUCT OVERVIEW AND FEATURES
Introduction .................................................................................................................................... 1-1
Product Overview ........................................................................................................................... 1-2
Configurations ................................................................................................................................ 1-3
Peripherals ..................................................................................................................................... 1-8
Supported Auxiliary Hand-held Scanner .................................................................................. 1-8
EAS Devices ............................................................................................................................ 1-8
Scale Devices .......................................................................................................................... 1-8
USB Flash Drives ..................................................................................................................... 1-8
Customer Side Scanner (CSS) ................................................................................................ 1-8
Features of the MP6000 ................................................................................................................ 1-9
Features Summary .................................................................................................................. 1-13
Chapter 2: HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS
Overview ........................................................................................................................................ 2-1
Interfaces, Components, and Communication ............................................................................... 2-2
POS Interfaces and Host Communication ............................................................................... 2-2
Auxiliary Ports and Peripherals ................................................................................................ 2-2
Programming Management Tools ............................................................................................ 2-3
Application Programming Interfaces ........................................................................................ 2-3
Connecting a USB Interface .......................................................................................................... 2-4
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vi MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
USB Host Parameters ................................................................................................................... 2-6
USB Device Type ..................................................................................................................... 2-6
Connecting an RS-232 Interface ................................................................................................... 2-12
MP6000 Scanner Only or MP6200/6500 Scale with Single Cable Protocol ............................ 2-12
Price Computational Scale Interface Circuit Drawing .............................................................. 2-13
Connect MP6000 to RS-232 Host ............................................................................................ 2-14
MP6000 with a Dual Cable Scanner/Scale .............................................................................. 2-14
RS-232 Parameters .......................................................................................... .......... ................... 2-15
RS-232 Host Parameters ............................................................................................................... 2-16
RS-232 Host Types ............................................................................................................. ..... 2-20
RS-232 Host -NCR Variant ................................................................................................ 2-30
RS-232 Host -Datalogic Variant ......................................................................................... 2-31
RS-232 Device Port Configuration ........................................................................................... 2-32
Third Party Scale Parameters .................................................................................................. 2-37
Third Party Scale ............................................................................................................... 2-37
Third Party Scale LED Pin ................................................................................................. 2-39
Third Party Scale Zero Pin ................................................................................................. 2-41
Connecting an IBM RS-485 Interface ............................................................................................ 2-43
IBM RS-485 Host Parameters ....................................................................................................... 2-44
IBM Scale Port Addresses ....................................................................................................... 2-49
Connector Pins .............................................................................................................................. 2-53
RS-232 AUX 1 ................................................................................................................... 2-53
Scale Display Port .............................................................................................................. 2-53
RS-232 AUX 2 ................................................................................................................... 2-54
Checkpoint Interlock .......................................................................................................... 2-54
AUX A-B (Stacked USB) .................................................................................................... 2-54
POS ................................................................................................................................... 2-55
12V DC ............................................................................................................................. 2-55
Chapter 3: SITE PREPARATION AND INSTALLATION
Overview ........................................................................................................................................ 3-1
Site Preparation ............................................................................................................................. 3-2
Ventilation and Spacing Requirements .................................................................................... 3-2
Service Access Requirements ................................................................................................. 3-2
Electrical Power Considerations .............................................................................................. 3-3
Grounding .......................................................................................................................... 3-3
Checkstand Preparation .......................................................................................................... 3-4
Liquid Spills and Moisture .................................................................................................. 3-4
Vertical Clearance .............................................................................................................. 3-4
Tools .................................................................................................................................. 3-4
Counter Cutout ................................................................................................................... 3-5
Ergonomics ........................................................................................................................ 3-5
Installing Components ................................................................................................................... 3-6
Quick Reference Installation Steps .......................................................................................... 3-6
Remove Existing Bioptic Scanner and Accessories ................................................................ 3-7
Unpacking MP6000 Equipment ............................................................................................... 3-7
Pre-Installation Notes ......................................................................................................... 3-8
Assemble the Dual Head Scale Display .................................................................................. 3-9
Required Tools ................................................................................................................... 3-9
Install the Scale Display ........................................................................................................... 3-12
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Table of Contents vii
Getting Started ................................................................................................................... 3-14
Installing ............................................................................................................................. 3-15
Cables and Connections .......................................................................................................... 3-15
Install the Customer Side Scanner (MX101) ............................................................................ 3-16
Installing the MX101 on the Customer’s Right Side (Default) of the Tower Cover ............ 3-17
Installing the MX101 on the Customer’s Left Side of the Tower Cover .............................. 3-21
Affixing the Identification Label .......................................................................................... 3-23
Install the MP6000 /Scale ........................................................................................................ 3-24
Checkstand Counter Cutouts and MP6000 Dimensions .................................................... 3-24
Cutout/Dimensions - MP6000 Short ................................................................................... 3-25
Cutout/Dimensions - MP6000 Short (continued) ................................................................ 3-26
Cutout/Dimensions - MP6000 Medium .............................................................................. 3-27
Cutout/Dimensions - MP6000 Long ................................................................................... 3-29
Install Sensormatic Coils .......................................................................................................... 3-33
Install Checkpoint Antenna ...................................................................................................... 3-35
Trim Kit Installation (If Required) ............................................................................................. 3-36
MP6000 Mounting Frame (If Required) ................................................................................... 3-37
Chapter 4: SCALE CALIBRATION (MODELS WITH A SCALE ONLY)
Overview ........................................................................................................................................ 4-1
Scale Calibration Procedure (Scanner/Scale Configurations Only) ............................................... 4-2
Scale Configurations ................................................................................................................ 4-2
Step 1 - Electronic Entry into Calibration Mode ....................................................................... 4-3
Step 2 - Program Legal Parameters ........................................................................................ 4-3
Legal Scale Units (Unit Selection) - Kilograms or Pounds ................................................. 4-3
Important Notes .................................................................................................................. 4-3
Legal Scale Dampening Filter ............................................................................................ 4-4
Step 3 - Calibration at NO LOAD ............................................................................................. 4-4
Step 4 - Calibration at LOAD ................................................................................................... 4-4
Step 5 - Calibration Success or Failure ................................................................................... 4-7
Calibration Success ........................................................................................................... 4-7
Calibration Failure .............................................................................................................. 4-7
Possible Reasons for a Fail ............................................................................................... 4-7
Calibration Mode Exit Conditions ............................................................................................. 4-7
Verification Test ....................................................................................................................... 4-8
Audit Tallies ............................................................................................................................. 4-11
Scale Configuration Parameters .................................................................................................... 4-12
Legal Scale Units ..................................................................................................................... 4-12
Scale Display Configuration ..................................................................................................... 4-14
Legal Scale Dampening Filter Setting ...................................................................................... 4-16
User Interface Displays and Signals .............................................................................................. 4-20
Chapter 5: OPERATING THE SCANNER
Overview ........................................................................................................................................ 5-1
Controls and Indicators .................................................................................................................. 5-2
LED Array Bar .......................................................................................................................... 5-2
Diagnostic LED/7-segment Display ......................................................................................... 5-3
Front Panel Buttons ................................................................................................................. 5-4
The three front panel user interface buttons are backlit for ease of use. ........................... 5-4
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viii MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
Scale Zero Button (Configurations with Scale Only) .......................................................... 5-4
Volume/Tone Control Button .............................................................................................. 5-4
Sensormatic Manual Activation and Sensormatic Status Button ....................................... 5-5
Soft Reset Buttons ..................................................................................................... ........ 5-5
MP6000 Related Hardware ........................................................................................................... 5-6
Scale Display (Scanner/Scale Configurations Only) ................................................................ 5-6
Scale (Scanner/Scale Configurations Only) ............................................................................. 5-6
Single Interval Range Scales ............................................................................................. 5-6
Dual Interval Range Scales ............................................................................................... 5-6
Customer Side Scanner (CSS) - Optional ............................................................................... 5-6
Platter ....................................................................................................................................... 5-7
Installing/Removing the Short and Medium Non-Scale Platters ........................................ 5-7
Installing/Removing the Long Non-Scale and Medium Scale Platters ............................... 5-7
Installing/Removing the Long Scale Platter ....................................................................... 5-8
Scan Windows ......................................................................................................................... 5-9
Operating Modes ........................................................................................................................... 5-10
Programming the MP6000 ............................................................................................................. 5-10
Programming Management tools ............................................................................................. 5-10
Application Programming Interfaces ........................................................................................ 5-10
Programming Bar Codes ......................................................................................................... 5-10
USB Staging Flash Drive ............................................................................................................... 5-11
MP6000 Menu Structure for the USB Staging Flash Drive ...................................................... 5-11
Manually Staging/Configuring MP6000 Devices ...................................................................... 5-12
Loading Cloning Files ........................................................................................................ 5-13
123Scan2 Staging Flash Drive Configuration .......................................................................... 5-14
Approved USB Flash Drives for the Flash Drive Well .............................................................. 5-14
Scanning ........................................................................................................................................ 5-15
Weighing Items .............................................................................................................................. 5-16
Electronic Article Surveillance (EAS) ............................................................................................. 5-17
Supported EAS Controllers ...................................................................................................... 5-17
EAS Operating Modes and Settings ........................................................................................ 5-17
Checkpoint Controller .............................................................................................................. 5-18
Sensormatic Controller ............................................................................................................ 5-18
Sensormatic EAS Hard Tags ................................................................................................... 5-18
Sensormatic EAS Soft Tags (Labels) ...................................................................................... 5-19
Beeper and LED Conditions .......................................................................................................... 5-20
Chapter 6: 123SCAN2
Introduction .................................................................................................................................... 6-1
Communication with 123Scan2 ..................................................................................................... 6-1
123Scan2 Requirements ............................................................................................................... 6-2
Scanner SDK, Other Software Tools, and Videos ......................................................................... 6-2
Appendix A: MAINTENANCE, TROUBLESHOOTING, AND ERROR CODES
Overview ........................................................................................................................................ A-1
Maintenance .................................................................................................................................. A-1
Troubleshooting ............................................................................................................................. A-2
Diagnostic LED 7-segment Display - Error and Warning Codes ............................................. A-2
LED Display Notes ................................................................................................................... A-2
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Table of Contents ix
Status Indicator Light ............................................................................................................... A-2
Troubleshooting Assistance ..................................................................................................... A-3
General Error and Warning Codes .......................................................................................... A-5
Scale Warning Codes .............................................................................................................. A-6
Appendix B: TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS
Technical Specifications ................................................................................................................ B-1
Appendix C: HOST INTERFACE CHARACTER SETS
Introduction .................................................................................................................................... C-1
RS-232 Character Sets .................................................................................................................. C-2
Appendix D: PARAMETER DEFAULT TABLE
Index
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Page 13

ABOUT THIS GUIDE

Introduction

The MP6000 Integrator Guide provides information on installing, operating, and programming the MP6000.

Chapter Descriptions

Following are brief descriptions of each chapter in this guide.
Chapter 1, PRODUCT OVERVIEW AND FEATURES provides an overview of the MP6000 including
configurations, peripherals, and features.
Chapter 2, HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS describes the host interfaces supported by the
MP6000, how to connect the MP6000 to a host, setup, and cable codes.
Chapter 3, SITE PREPARATION AND INSTALLATION describes how to install the MP6000 into a counter
top.
pin-outs. It also includes host interface bar
Chapter 4, SCALE CALIBRATION (MODELS WITH A SCALE ONLY) describes how to change weight
measurement, calibrate the scale, verify calibration, and recognize errors.
Chapter 5, OPERA TING THE SCANNER descr ibes how to ope rate the MP6000 including bu ttons, switches,
LED indicators, and scanning.
Chapter 6, 123SCAN2 provides information about configuring the MP6000 using the 123Scan2 utility.
Appendix A, MAINTENANCE, TROUBLESHOOTING, AND ERROR CODES provides error/warning codes,
troubleshooting, and maintenance information.
Appendix B, TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS provides technical information about the MP6000.
Appendix C, HOST INTERFACE CHARACTER SETS provides ASCII character sets for some host
interfaces.

Notational Conventions

This document uses these conventions:
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vi MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
“User” refers to anyone operating the device.
“Device” refers to the MP6000.
Italics are used to highlight specific items in the general text, and to identify chap ters and sectio ns in this and related documents. It also identifies names of windows, menus, menu items, and fields within windows.
Bold identifies buttons, and switches to be tapped or clicked, and bar code names.
Bullets (•) indicate:
s of alternatives or action items.
list
lists of required steps that are not necessarily sequential.
Numbered lists indicate a set of sequential steps, i.e., those that describe step-by-step procedur es.
NOTE This symbol indicates something of special interest to the reader. Failure to read the note will not result in
physical harm to the bar code reader, equipment or data.
IMPORTANT This symbol indicates something of importance to the reader. Failure to read the note may impair
the equipment or data.
CAUTION This symbol indicates th at if this information is ignored, th e possibility of data or material damage
may occur.
WARNING! This symbol indicates that if this information is ignored the possibility that serious
personal injury may occur.

Related Publications

Following is a list of documents that provide additional information about configuring the MP6000:
MP6000 BAR CODE PROGRAMMING GUIDE, p/n 72E-172633-xx, provides bar codes for MP6000 configuration.
MX101 PRODUCT REFERENCE GUIDE, p/n 72E-171320-xx, provides general instructions for setting up, operating, maintaining, and troubleshootin g the MX101 digital scanner.
MP6000 MULTI-PLANE IMAGING SCANNER REGULATORY GUIDE, p/n 72-171321-xx, provides domestic and international regulatory information.
Advanced Data Formatting Programmer Guide, p/n 72E-69680-xx, provides information on ADF, a means of customizing data before transmission to a host.
For the latest version of this guide and all Motorola Solutions
http://www.motorolasolutions.com/support
guides, go to:

Recommended Services Information

If you have a problem using the equipment, contact your facility's technical or systems support. If there is a problem with the equipment, they will contact the Motorola Solutions Global Customer Support Center at:
http://www.motorolasolutions.com/support
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About This Guide vii
When contacting Motorola Solutions support, please have the following information available:
Serial number of the unit
Model number or product name
Software type and version number (if available). Motorola responds to calls by e-mail, telephone or fax within the time limits set forth in service agreements. If your problem cannot be solved by the Motorola Solutions Global Customer Supp ort Center, you may need to
return
your equipment for servicing and will be given specific directions, a Field Service Technician from Motorola, or your authorized service provider may be sent to yo ur location to p er form th e repair, depending on your level of entitlement set forth in the service agreement. 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 business product from a Motorola business partner, please contact that business partner
support.
for Motorola recommends the following Service options to
throughout its lifecycle:
Service from the Start with Advance Exchange Support (available for scanner-only configurations).
Service from the Start with On Site System Support (available for scanner-only and scanner/scale configurations).
Motorola also offers service support through authorized resellers who qualify as authorized service partners.
keep the MP6000 operating at peak performance
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viii MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
Page 17
CHAPTER 1 PRODUCT OVERVIEW AND
FEATURES

Introduction

This chapter includes the following topics:
Product Overview on page 1-2
Configurations on page 1-3
Peripherals on page 1-8
Features of the MP6000 on page 1-9.
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1 - 2 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE

Product Overview

The MP6000 is a data capture solution that uses a sophisticated optical arrangement to view six sides of an object as it passes through the scanning area. Bar code data is transmitted to a Point-Of-Sale (POS) host via USB, RS-232, or RS-485. Auxiliary device support includes USB and RS-232 hand-held scanners, Checkpoint and Sensormatic Electronic Article Surveillance (EAS), scale and optional Scale Display (varies with the model), USB staging flash drive (memory stick), as well as an optional Customer Side Scanner (2D imager) that may be mounted into the tower.
The MP6000 is designed to be embedded in a cutout in the retail checkstand. Features include:
Six sided scanning
Rea
Omni-directional symbol orientation.
Optional integrated scale (single/dual interval).
Optional Checkpoint EAS antenna.
ds top-bottom, left-right, and cashier-customer side bar codes
Optional integrated Sensormatic EAS coil antennas.
Optional Scale Display (single/dual head) for scale installations.
Auxiliary scanner support (USB and RS-232).
High swipe speed for increased throughpu t.
User interface (LED indicators, touch controls, audio).
Aggressive scanning performance on high density, truncated, and poorly printed bar codes.
2D scanning (PDF, Aztec etc.) in both vertical and horizontal windows, or all six-sided orientations.
Mobile bar code scanning (cell phone) in both vertical and horizontal windows, or all six-sided orientations.
Optional integrated Customer Side Scanner (CSS) [1D/2D support].
Scanner Management Service (SMS), and 123Scan² support enables remote configur ation and monitoring attached peripherals.
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Configurations

The MP6000 captures printed or mobile 1D or 2D bar codes. An optional custo mer-side scanner (CSS) can be added for bar codes displayed on mobile phones, traditional loyalty cards, or item bar codes. Hand-held scanner, integrated EAS, and scale support is also available.
This guide covers the configurations listed in Table 1-1.
NOTE 1. All configurations of the MP6000 include a sapphire glass ho rizontal platter.
2. New scale configurations are added continually. If you don’t see your country listed, call your Motorola Solutions office.
PRODUCT OVERVIEW AND FEATURES 1 - 3
Table 1-1
MP6000-LN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, long, with Checkpoint, worldwide. MP6000-LP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, long, with Checkpoint, with DL Parsing, US/CA. MP6000-MN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, medium, with Checkpoint, worldwide. MP6000-MP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, medium, with Checkpoint, with DL Parsing, US/CA. MP6000-SN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, short, with Checkpoint, worldwide. MP6000-SP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, short, with Checkpoint, with DL Parsing, US/CA. MP6010-LN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, long, with Checkpoint, with CSS, worldwide. MP6010-LP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, long, with Checkpoint, with D MP6010-MN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, medium, with Checkpoint, with CSS, worldwide. MP6010-MP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, medium, with Checkpoint, with DL Parsing, US/CA. MP6010-SN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, short, with Check MP6010-SP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, short, with Checkpoint, with DL Parsing, US/CA. MP6200-LN000M010AU Multi-plane scanner, long, with single inter
MP6000 Configurations
Configuration Description
L Parsing, US/CA.
point, with CSS, worldwide.
val scale, with Checkpoint, scale for
Australia/NZ/SA.
MP6200-LN000M010CM Multi-plane scanner, long, single inter
Canada-Mexico scale label.
MP6200-LN000M010EU
Notes:
1. EU scales are legally accepted in the following countries: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Iceland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Latvia, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom
2. OIML scales are legally accepted in the following countries: Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Hong Kong, Jamaica, Saint Lucia, Philippines, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago, Vietnam
Multi-plane scanner, long, with single interval scale, with Checkpoint, scale for EU countries.
val kg scale, no CSS, Checkpoint,
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1 - 4 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
Table 1-1
MP6200-LN000M010NN Multi-plane scanner, long, with single interval scale, with Checkpoint, scale for
MP6200-LN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, long, with single inter
MP6200-LN000M01ABE Multi-plane scanner , Lon g with singl e interva
MP6200-LN000M01BBE Multi-plane scanner , Lon g with singl e interva
MP6200-LN000M01CBE Multi-plane scanner, Long with single interva
MP6200-LP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, long, with single interv
MP6200-MN000M010AU Multi-plane scanner , medium, with single interval scale, with Checkpoint, sca le
MP6200-MN000M010CM Multi-plane scanner, medium, single interva
MP6000 Configurations (Continued)
Configuration Description
OIML countries.
val scale, with Checkpoint, scale for
US/Puerto Rico/Guam/USVI/British VI.
l kg scale, with Checkpoint, scale
Gravity Zone A for Belgium.
l kg scale, with Checkpoint, scale
Gravity Zone B for Belgium.
l kg scale, with Checkpoint, scale
Gravity Zone C for Belgium.
al scale, with Checkpoint, with DL
parsing, scale for US.
for Australia/NZ/SA.
l kg scale, no CSS, Checkpoint,
Canada-Mexico scale label.
MP6200-MN000M010EU Multi-plane scanner , medium, with single interval scale, with Checkpoint, sca le
or EU countries.
f
MP6200-MN000M010NN Multi-plane scanner , medium, with single inter val scale, with Checkpoint, scale
r OIML countries.
fo
MP6200-MN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, medium, with single interval scale, with Checkpoint, scale
or US/Puerto Rico/Guam/USVI/British VI.
f
MP6200-MN000M01ABE Multi-plane scanner, Medium with single
scale Gravity Zone A for Belgium.
MP6200-MN000M01BBE Multi-plane scanner, Medium with single
scale Gravity Zone B for Belgium.
MP6200-MN000M01CBE Multi-plane scanner, Medium with single
scale Gravity Zone C for Belgium.
MP6200-MP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, medium, with single inter
DL parsing, scale for US.
MP6210-LN000M010AU Multi-plane scanner, long, with single interval scale, with Checkpoint, with
S, scale for Australia/NZ/SA.
CS
Notes:
1. EU scales are legally accepted in the following countries: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Iceland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Latvia, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom
interval kg scale, with Checkpoint,
interval kg scale, with Checkpoint,
interval kg scale, with Checkpoint,
val scale, with Checkpoint, with
2. OIML scales are legally accepted in the following countries: Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Hong Kong, Jamaica, Saint Lucia, Philippines, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago, Vietnam
Page 21
PRODUCT OVERVIEW AND FEATURES 1 - 5
Table 1-1
MP6210-LN000M010CM Multi-plane scanner, long, single interval kg scale, with CSS, Checkpoint,
MP6210-LN000M010EU Multi-plane scanner, long, with single interv
MP6210-LN000M010NN Multi-plane scanner, long, with single interv
MP6210-LN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, long, with single interv
MP6210-LN000M01ABE Multi-plane scanner, Long with single interval kg s
MP6210-LN000M01BBE Multi-plane scanner, Long with single interval kg s
MP6210-LN000M01CBE Multi-plane scanner, Long with single interval kg s
MP6210-LP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, long, with single interv
MP6000 Configurations (Continued)
Configuration Description
Canada-Mexico scale label.
al scale, with Checkpoint, with
CSS, scale for EU countries.
al scale, with Checkpoint, with
CSS, scale for OIML countries.
al scale, with Checkpoint, with
CSS, scale for US/Puerto Rico/Guam/USVI/British VI.
cale, with CSS, with
Checkpoint, scale Gravity Zone A for Belgium.
cale, with CSS, with
Checkpoint, scale Gravity B for Belgium.
cale, with CSS, with
Checkpoint, scale Gravity Central C for Belgium.
al scale, with Checkpoint, with
CSS, with DL parsing, scale for US.
MP6210-MN000M010AU Multi-plane scanner, medium, with single inter
CSS, scale for Australia/NZ/SA.
MP6210-MN000M010CM Multi-plane scanner, medium, single interval
Canada-Mexico scale label.
MP6210-MN000M010EU Multi-plane scanner, medium, with single inter
CSS, scale for EU countries.
MP6210-MN000M010NN Multi-plane scanner , medium, single interval sc
scale for OIML countries.
MP6210-MN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, medium, with single inter
CSS, scale for US/Puerto Rico/Guam/USVI/British VI.
MP6210-MN000M01ABE Multi-plane scanner, Medium with single
Checkpoint, scale Gravity Zone A for Belgium.
MP6210-MN000M01BBE Multi-plane scanner, Medium with single
Checkpoint, scale Gravity Zone B for Belgium.
MP6210-MN000M01CBE Multi-plane scanner, Medium with single
Checkpoint, scale Gravity Zone C for Belgium.
Notes:
1. EU scales are legally accepted in the following countries: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Iceland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Latvia, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom
val scale, with Checkpoint, with
kg scale, with CSS, Checkpoint,
val scale, with Checkpoint, with
ale, with Checkpoint, with CSS,
val scale, with Checkpoint, with
interval kg scale, with CSS, with
interval kg scale, with CSS, with
interval kg scale, with CSS, with
2. OIML scales are legally accepted in the following countries: Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Hong Kong, Jamaica, Saint Lucia, Philippines, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago, Vietnam
Page 22
1 - 6 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
Table 1-1
MP6210-MP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, medium, with single interval scale, with Checkpoint, with
MP6500-LN000M010CM Multi-plane scanner, long, with dual inter
MP6500-LN000M010EU Multi-plane scanner, long, with dual inter
MP6500-LN000M010NN Multi-plane scanner, long, with dual inter
MP6500-LN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, long, with dual inter
MP6500-LP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, long, with dual inter
MP6500-MN000M010CM Multi-plane scanner, medium, with dual int
MP6500-MN000M010EU Multi-plane scanner, long, with dual inter
MP6000 Configurations (Continued)
Configuration Description
CSS, with DL parsing, scale for US.
val scale, with Checkpoint, scale for
Canada/Mexico.
val scale, with Checkpoint, scale for
EU.
val scale, with Checkpoint, scale for
NN.
val scale, with Checkpoint, scale for
US.
val scale, Drivers License Parsing,
with Checkpoint, scale for US.
erval scale, with Checkpoint, scale
for Canada/Mexico.
val scale, with Checkpoint, scale for
EU.
MP6500-MN000M010NN Multi-plane scanner, medium, with dual int
for NN.
MP6500-MN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, medium, with dual int
for US.
MP6500-MP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, medium, with dual inter
with Checkpoint, scale for US.
MP6510-LN000M010CM Multi-plane scanner, long, with dual inter
scale for Canada/Mexico.
MP6510-LN000M010EU Multi-plane scanner, long, with dual inter
scale for EU.
MP6510-LN000M010NN Multi-plane scanner, long, with dual inter
scale for NN.
MP6510-LN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, long, with dual inter
scale for US.
MP6510-LP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, long, with dual inter
with Checkpoint, with CSS, scale for US.
Notes:
1. EU scales are legally accepted in the following countries: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Iceland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Latvia, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom
erval scale, with Checkpoint, scale
erval scale, with Checkpoint, scale
val scale, Drivers License Parsing,
val scale, with Checkpoint, with CSS,
val scale, with Checkpoint, with CSS,
val scale, with Checkpoint, with CSS,
val scale, with Checkpoint, with CSS,
val scale, Drivers License Parsing,
2. OIML scales are legally accepted in the following countries: Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Hong Kong, Jamaica, Saint Lucia, Philippines, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago, Vietnam
Page 23
PRODUCT OVERVIEW AND FEATURES 1 - 7
Table 1-1
MP6510-MN000M010CM Multi-plane scanner, medium, with dual interval scale, with Checkpoint, with
MP6510-MN000M010EU Multi-plane scanner, medium, with dual int
MP6510-MN000M010NN Multi-plane scanner, medium, with dual int
MP6510-MN000M010US Multi-plane scanner, medium, with dual int
MP6510-MP000M010US Multi-plane scanner, medium, with dual inter
Notes:
1. EU scales are legally accepted in the following countries:
2. OIML scales are legally accepted in the following countries:
MP6000 Configurations (Continued)
Configuration Description
CSS, scale for Canada/Mexico.
erval scale, with Checkpoint, with
CSS, scale for EU.
erval scale, with Checkpoint, with
CSS, scale for NN.
erval scale, with Checkpoint, with
CSS, scale for US.
val scale, Drivers License Parsing,
with Checkpoint, with CSS, scale for US.
Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Iceland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Latvia, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom
Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Hong Kong, Jamaica, Saint Lucia, Philippines, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago, Vietnam
Page 24
1 - 8 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE

Peripherals

The MP6000 supports the peripheral devices listed below.

Supported Auxiliary Hand-held Scanner

The MP6000 provides auxiliary data ports (USB and RS-232) to which a hand-held scanner can be connected.
NOTE An auxiliary cordless scanner, such as the LI4278, LS4278, or DS6878, can be attached to the MP6000. If
a presentation cradle is used with any of these scanners, a separate cradle power supply is required.
IMPORTANT The MP6000 scanner does not configure an auxiliary scanner. Auxiliary scanners must be
configured separately, independently of the MP6000 scanner.

EAS Devices

Sensormatic AMB-9010 controller (available December 2014)
Sensormatic AMB-9010-IPS controller
Sensormatic ScanMax-Pro controller
Checkpoint controller
Checkpoint with interlock controller.
See Electronic Article Surveillance (EAS)

Scale Devices

OEM standard scale
Single/dual head Scale Displays.
Mettler-Toledo price computing scale for parts of Europe (available September 2014).

USB Flash Drives

Typical USB flash drive with Type A connector. (See USB Staging Flash Drive on page 5-11.)

Customer Side Scanner (CSS)

The CSS (MX101) is an optional integrated device that supports 1D and 2D bar code scanning. The CSS unit replaces the MP6000 tower cover, and can be installed on either side of the MP6000. Refer to the MX101 PRODUCT REFERENCE GUIDE, p/n 72E-171320-xx, for installation and configuration information.
on page 5-17 for detailed information.
Page 25

Features of the MP6000

Horizontal
Scan
Window
Volume/Tone Control Button
LED Array Bar
Scale Zero Button
EAS Deactivation Button (Sensormatic only)
Vertical Scan Window
Platter
Optional CSS MP6000
CSS Scan Window
Scale
(optional)
7-segment Display
Speaker
The following illustrations of the medium model show the features of the MP6000. See Table 1-2 on page 1-13 for brief descriptions of all features. See Controls and Indicat or s on page 5-2 for detailed descriptions of each feature.
NOTE Refer to the MX101 Product Reference Guide (p/n 72E-171320-xx) for information about the optional
Customer Side Scanner (CSS). The CSS is shown in its default (left side) position, but it can be moved to the other side at any time - no tools required.
PRODUCT OVERVIEW AND FEATURES 1 - 9
Figure 1-1
CSS and MP6000 Front View
Page 26
1 - 10 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
Scale Cable Channel
EAS Cable Channel (also see Figure 3-43 on page 3-34 for Sensormatic coil routing)
Drainage/Ventilation Holes
Tower Bezel
Tower Cover
RS-232
AUX 1
0.0
Scale
Display
RS-232 AUX 2
AUX
A-B
2
POS
12V
DC
CKP
I-LOCK
1
Drainage/Ventilation Holes
1
Checkpoint Interlock Port
2
Auxiliary USB Ports
Strain Relief Groove (for cables)
CSS Cable Channels
Figure 1-2
Left Side View
Figure 1-3
Right Side View/Connector Ports
Page 27
PRODUCT OVERVIEW AND FEATURES 1 - 11
Optional Scale (scale is not available in MP6000 short models)
Staging USB Flash
Drive Cap/Port
4 Leveling Screws (2 screws on opposite side)
1
Leveling Screw Access Holes
(medium and short units only)
NOTE The tower bezel must be
removed, and the Tower Cover slid backwards to access the leveling screws.
1
Leveling screws are an
optional accessory. To use leveling screws, buy
accessory kit MX301-SR00004ZZWR for standard-length screws, or accessory kit MX302-SR00004ZZWR for 1 in. (25 mm) extra length.
Figure 1-4
Figure 1-5
View Under Platter
Leveling Screws
Page 28
1 - 12 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
290
o
290
o
Figure 1-6
Scale Displays (Some Scanner/Scale Configurations Only) - Single Head (MX201) and Dual Head
(MX202; additional head added during installation)
Page 29

Features Summary

PRODUCT OVERVIEW AND FEATURES 1 - 13
Table 1-2
Diagnostic LED/7-segment Display
LED Array Bar Provides visual feedback for system statuses
Scale Zero Button Scale status LED and touch bu
Volume/Tone Control Button
EAS Deactivation Button (Sensormatic
Scale (Optional/ Scanner Scale Configurations Only)
Platter Stainless steel horizontal scan
Features on the MP6000
Feature Description Page
Internal display provides detailed status, troubleshooting information, and scale legal parameters during calibration.
alerts.
and
tton provides
scale status, and allows user to "zero" the scale. User selectable settings for audible system
indications. (Status LED and button.)
only) Indicates the state of the Sensormatic EAS
device, and controls manual deactivation (optional).
Scales are available for the medium length and
length configurations.
long
ning surface; imaging window for processing bar code data, and placing items on the surface to determine weight.
5-3
5-2
5-4
5-4
5-5
5-6
5-7
Calibration Switch Used in manual scale calib
unavailable).
CSS (Optional) Modular unit that fits into the MP6000 tower;
for customer scanning.
used
Scale Display Single or dual display optio
of items on the scale.
Leveling Screws (medium and short models
ly)
on
Connectors Connect the MP6000 to peripherals, and
Internal USB Cap/Port The internal USB port is available under the
EAS Cable Channel Cable routing channel for Scale Cable Channel Cable routing channel for the scale cable. 1-10 Drainage/Ventilation Holes Outlet for spills. 1-10 CSS Cable Channels Channels for routing CSS cables. 1-10,
Screws for leveling the MP6000 when shelf mounting is required. Leveling screws are an optional accessory.
POS/host.
.
platter
ration (currently
n provides the weight
EAS antennas. 1-10
n/a
5-6
5-6
1-11
Tab le 1- 3
1-11
3-16
Page 30
1 - 14 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
Table 1-3
Description of Connectors
Port Description
RS-232 AUX 1 (J7) See Table 2-3 on page 2-13 for description.
0.0 (J6) Scale Display port. RS-232 AUX 2 (J5) See Table 2-3 on page 2-13 for description. CKP I-LOCK (J4) Checkpoint EAS Interlock. AUX A-B (J3) Dual USB 2.0 full speed ports for auxiliary
USB scanners, CSS, or mass
storage device.
NOTE An additional USB port is available in the front under the platter. All USB
ports can be used for the USB staging flash drive. See Table 2-14 on page
2-54 and USB Staging Flash Drive on page 5-11 for more information.
POS (J2) Point of Sale terminal port. 12V DC (J1) External power input. 12V / 3.33A (not required if powered from terminal).
NOTE If a power supply plug is inserted to the J1 connector, with no voltage to the
power supply, the scanner will not power up.
Page 31
CHAPTER 2 HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE
PINOUTS

Overview

This chapter describes the host interfaces sup po rt ed by the MP6000, and how to connect the MP6000 to a host. It also include host interface bar codes. See Figure 1-1 on page 1-9 for locations of the interface connectors.
OPOS/JAVAPOS settings are outside the scope of this guide. For
www.motorolasolutions.com/windowssdk.
the Motorola Solutions SDK, go to:
Page 32
2 - 2 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE

Interfaces, Components, and Communication

The MP6000 supports the following.

POS Interfaces and Host Communication

IMPORTANT Avoid inserting a POS cable in the AUX 1 or AUX 2 port.
USB 2.0 full speed using Motorola USB multi-host cables
RS-232 connection using several communication protocols.
RS-485 communication protocol.

Auxiliary Ports and Peripherals

Three USB 2.0 full speed auxiliary ports (see AUX A-B (Stacked USB) on page 2-54).
Two RS-232 auxiliary ports (AUX 1/AUX 2; see Figure 1-3 on page 1-10).
The MP6000 can support the following combinations of peripherals:
Hand-held scanners supported in USB mode, or RS-2 32 mo de .
CSS (CSS is USB only).
NOTE A total of one hand-held scanner plus one CSS is supported.
Wireless auxiliary scanner support may be provided via a corded cradle as an auxiliary device.
An auxiliary cordless scanner, such as the LI4278, LS4278, or DS6878, can be attached to the MP6000. If a standard cradle is used with the DS6878, a separate cradle power supply is required.
Sensormatic controller via the RS-232 auxiliary port.
IMPORTANT Use only Motorola approved cables when connecting pe ripherals to the ports on the MP6000.
Dual cable scanner/scale: Via RS-2 32 AUX 1, or RS-232 AUX 2 port s (see Figure 1-3 on p age 1-1 0, and
Table 2-3 on page 2-13).
Page 33

Programming Management Tools

123Scan2 (see Chapter 6, 123SCAN2)
SMS
Staging flash drive reprogramming (USB memory stick)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 3
NOTE Only Motorola hand-held scanners can be managed via 123Scan
through the MP6000 scanner.
2
(see Chapter 6, 123SCAN2), and SMS

Application Programming Interfaces

Motorola scanner SDK APIs (CoreScanner APIs)
Motorola scanner OPOS/JPOS APIs.
For access to these programming interfaces, go to: www.motorolasolutions.com/windowss
NOTE If the MP6000 is powered up with no interface cable present, it reverts to “no host mode.” This is useful for
demonstrations where no host is present.
dk.
Page 34
2 - 4 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
AUX A-B
POS
12V
DC

Connecting a USB Interface

The MP6000 connects directly to a USB host. An additional power supply may be required (PWRS-14000-148R). Only a USB Power Plus host can power the MP6000 using a Motorola Power Plus cable, without an external power supply.
Figure 2-1
USB Connections
NOTE Interface cables vary depending on configuration.
There are three possible USB connection methods for the MP6000:
POS connection using USB Power Plus (12V); requires a CBA-U52-S16PAR cable between POS equipment (e.g., IBM) and the MP6000 POS RJ-45 connector. The MP6000 is a USB device for this connection; no power supply is required (the MP6000 draws power from USB cable).
POS connection using USB Standard A (5V); requires a CBA-U51-S16ZAR cable between POS equipment (standard device - PC) and MP6000 POS RJ-45 connector. The MP6000 is USB device but requires an external power supply (MP6000 does NOT draw power from USB cable).
AUX scanner connection using a Motorola USB hand-held scanner; requires a Motorola USB type A cable between the Motorola USB hand-held scanner (RJ-45), and the MP6000 AUX A-B USB port. The MP6000 is the USB host, and the Motorola scanner is the USB device which draws power from 5V cable.
Page 35
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 5
To set up the MP6000:
1. Connect the RJ-45 modular connector of the USB interface cable to the POS interface port on the
MP6000.
2. Plug the series A connector, or the Power Plus connector in the USB host. If Power Plus is used, the
MP6000 powers up with the POS.
3. If no Power Plus is used, connect a 12V power supply. Connecting the 12V power supply immediately
turns the unit on.
4. Select the USB device type by scanning the appropriate bar cod e (see USB Device Type on page 2-6).
5. To modify any parameter options: a. Scan the appropriate bar codes in the MP6000 Bar Code Programming Guide, p/n 72E-172633-xx.
or
b. Use 123Scan
or
c. Use the 123Scan
2
.
2
2D configuration bar code.
or
d. Use a USB staging flash drive (see USB Staging Flash Drive on page 5-11).
Page 36
2 - 6 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE

USB Host Parameters

USB Device Type

To select a USB device type, scan one of the ba r co de s listed in Table 2-1.
NOTE 1.When changing USB device types, the MP6000 automatically resets and issues the standard startup
beep sequences.
2.Before selecting CDC COM Port Emulation, install the the scanner does not stall during power up (due to a failure to enumerate USB). If the scanner stalls, recover it by installing the CDC INF file, and reboot the MP6000.
NOTE This guide includes limited parameter bar codes. For ALL MP6000 programming bar codes, refer to the
MP6000 Bar Code Programming Guide (p/n 72E-172633-xx
Table 2-1
USB Device Type
IBM Table-top USB (default) IBM Hand-held USB IBM OPOS
(IBM Hand-held USB with Full Scan Disable) HID Keyboard Emulation CDC COM Port Emulation
USB Host Parameters
Parameter
Motorola USB CDC driver on the host to ensure
).
Page
Number
2-7 2-8 2-9
2-10 2-11
Page 37
USB Device Type (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 7
* IBM Table-top USB
Page 38
2 - 8 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
USB Device Type (continued)
IBM Hand-held USB
Page 39
USB Device Type (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 9
IBM OPOS
(IBM Hand-held USB with Full Scan Disable)
Page 40
2 - 10 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
USB Device Type (continued)
When the HID Keyboard host is selected, and the MP6000 has auxiliary scanners connected, use ADF rules to program the auxiliary scanners to add a 500 msec pause to the end of the data to prevent the interleaving of bar code data from multiple scanners. This works with standard RS-232, and SSI over RS-232 (with the Send Raw Decode Data setting).
HID Keyboard Emulation
Page 41
USB Device Type (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 11
CDC COM Port Emulation
Page 42
2 - 12 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
RS-232
AUX 1
RS-232
AUX 2
POS
12V
DC

Connecting an RS-232 Interface

MP6000 Scanner Only or MP6200/6500 Scale with Single Cable Protocol

Use the RS-232 interface to connect the MP6000 to POS devices, host computers, or other devices with an available RS-232 port (e.g., com port).
NOTE The MP6000 uses +/-6V RS-232 signal levels to accommodate long cable lengths, and increased noise
immunity.
Figure 2-2
Table 2-2
Host Connections
RS-232 Connections.
NOTE Interface cables vary depending on configuration.
Port Connection Options
POS Unpowered USB
(p/n CBA-U51-S16ZAR)
Powered USB (p/n CBA-U52-S16PAR)
RS-232 (p/n CBA-R51-S16ZAR)
RS-485 (p/n CBA-M51-S16PAR)
Page 43
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 13
Table 2-3
Auxiliary Connections
RS-232
Connect Device to These Ports
Device Port Configuration Choices for the Devices Below
RS-232 auxiliary scanner, and a
Sensormatic Controller RS-232 auxiliary
scanner, and a Dual Cable Scanner/Scale
Dual Cable Scanner/Scale, and a
Sensormatic Controller Third-Party-Scale &
Sensormatic-Controller
1
Default setting
2
The Dual Cable Scanner/Scale protocol is 'SASI'
3
In all configurations up to one or two additional USB auxiliary scanners can be connected, but the
Configuration
Value
(see parameter
page 2-32
1246
1
0
3
)
1 Dual Cable
3
2 Sensormatic
3
AUX 1 AUX 2 USB2 USB3
Sensormatic Controller
RS-232 auxiliary
scanner RS-232
2
Scanner/Scale
auxiliary scanner
Dual Cable
Controller
Scanner/Scale
2
4 Third-Party-Scale Sensormatic
Controller
USB auxiliary
3
scanner
3
USB auxiliary
3
scanner
3
USB auxiliary scanner
3
USB auxiliary scanner
3
total RS-232 auxiliary scanners plus USB auxiliary scanners cannot exceed two. An auxiliary scanner is not counted until it is attached.
USB auxiliary scanner
3
USB auxiliary scanner
3
USB auxiliary scanner
3
USB auxiliary scanner
3

Price Computational Scale Interface Circuit Drawing

Price Computational Scale Interface available on AUX 1. (Also see Third Party Scale on page 2-37.)
Figure 2-3
Price Computational Scale Interface
Page 44
2 - 14 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE

Connect MP6000 to RS-232 Host

To connect the MP6000 to an RS-232 host:
1. Connect the modular connector of the RS-232 interfa ce cable to the POS interface port on the MP6000.
2. Connect the other end of the RS-232 interface cable to the serial port on the host.
3. Connect a 12V power supply directly to the MP6000.
4. Select the RS-232 host type by scanning the ap propriate bar code ( see RS-232 Host Types on page 2-20).
If your host does not appear in the terminal specific t ables, refer to the document ation for the host de vice to set communication parameters to match the host.
5. To modify any other parameter options, scan the appropriate bar codes in the MP6000 Bar Code
Programming Guide, p/n 72E-172633-xx.

MP6000 with a Dual Cable Scanner/Scale

Use the RS-232 interface to connect the MP6000 to POS devices, host computers, or other devices with an available RS-232 port (e.g., com port). Then use a second RS-232 cable (p/n CBA-R51-S16ZAR, and CBA-R52-S16ZAR) to connect the MP6000 Dual Cable Scanner/Scale AUX port to a scale-o nly port on the POS device.
The Dual Cable Scanner/Scale interface supports the communicates with a POS using a 9600 baud rate, 7 data bits, and even parity.
To set up the MP6000 and Dual Cable Scanner/Scale:
1. Attach the RJ-45 modular connector of the RS-232 scanner interface cable to the POS port on the
MP6000. Connect the other end of the RS-232 scanner interface cable to the serial scanner port on the host.
2. Attach the RJ-45 end of the RS-232 slave interface cable to AUX 2 (see Figure 1-3 on page 1-10) on the
MP6000. Connect the other end of the RS-232 interface cable to the scale-only port on the host.
3. Connect the power supply directly to the MP6000.
4. Select the RS-232 scanner host type by scanning the appropriate bar code (see RS-232 Host Types on
page 2-20). If your host does not appear in the terminal specific tables, refer to the documentation for the
host device to set communication parameters to match the host. To modify any other paramete r op tio ns , scan the appropriate bar codes in the MP6000 Bar Code Programming Guide, p/n 72E-172633-xx.
5. The protocol on this Dual Cable Scanner/Scale port is SASI.
6. Select the device port configuration by scanning the appropriate bar code (r efer to the MP6000 Bar Code
Programming Guide for RS-232 device port configuration).
7. Cycle power on the MP6000.
industry standard SASI scale-only protocol, and
Page 45

RS-232 Parameters

NOTE This guide includes limited parameter bar codes. For ALL MP6000 programming bar codes, refer to the
MP6000 Bar Code Programming Guide (p/n 72E-172633-xx
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 15
).
Table 2-4
RS-232 Host Type
Standard RS-232 (default) ICL RS-232 Wincor-Nixdorf RS-232 Mode A Wincor-Nixdorf RS-232 Mode B Olivetti ORS4500 Omron OPOS/JPOS Fujitsu RS-232 CUTE NCR Variant Datalogic Variant
RS-232 Device Port Configuration
RS-232 Host Parameters
Parameter
Page
Number
2-21 2-22 2-23 2-24 2-25 2-26 2-27 2-28 2-29 2-30 2-31
AUX 1 Sensormatic and AUX 2 RS-232 Scanner (default) 2-33
Third Party Scale
Disable Third Party Scale (default - Disable) 2-38 Third Party Scale LED Pin (default - Active High) 2-40 Third Party Scale Zero Pin (d
efault - Active High) 2-42
Page 46
2 - 16 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE

RS-232 Host Parameters

Various RS-232 hosts use their own parameter default settings. Selecting standard, ICL, Fujitsu, Wincor-Nixdorf Mode A, Wincor-Nixdorf Mode B, OPOS/JPOS, Olivetti, Omron, Common Use Terminal Equipment (CUTE-LP/LG bar code readers), NCR, or Datalogic sets the defaults listed in Table 2-5 and Table
2-6.
NOTE All items listed in Table 2-5 and Table 2-6 are for scanner only connections, except for NCR which can
support scanner and scale.
Table 2-5
Terminal Specific RS-232
Parameter ICL Fujitsu
Baud Rate Parity Stop Bit Select ASCII Format Hardware Handshaking Software Handshaking Serial Response Timeout RTS Line State Beep On <BEL> Transmit Code ID Data Transmission Format Prefix Suffix
Wincor-Nixdorf
Mode A
9600 9600 9600 9600 Even None Odd Odd One One One One 8-Bit 8-Bit 8-Bit 8-Bit RTS/CTS Option 3 None RTS/CTS Option 3 RTS/CTS Option 3 None None None None
9.9 Sec. 2 Sec. None None High Low Low Low = No data to send Disable Disable Disable Disable Yes Yes Yes Yes Data/Suffix Data/Suffix Data/Suffix Data/Suffix None None None None CR (1013) CR (1013) CR (1013) CR (1013)
Wincor-Nixdorf Mode
B/OPOS/JPOS
In the Nixdorf Mode B, if CTS is low, scanning is disabled. When CTS is high, scanning is enabled. If you scan Nixdorf Mode B without connecting the digital scanner to the proper host, it may appear unable to scan. If this happens, scan a different RS-232 host type within 5 seconds of cycling power to the digital scanner
.
Page 47
RS-232 Host Parameters (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 17
Table 2-6
Terminal Specific RS-232
Parameter Olivetti Omron CUTE
Baud Rate Parity Stop Bit Select ASCII Format Hardware Handshaking Software Handshaking Serial Response Timeout RTS Line State Beep On <BEL> Transmit Code ID Data Transmission Format
Prefix
NCR
(Single
Cable
Datalogic
Scale)
9600 9600 9600 9600 9600 Even None Even Odd Odd One One One One One 7-Bit 8-Bit 7-Bit 7-Bit 7-Bit None None None None None ACK/NAK None None None None
9.9 Sec. 9.9 Sec. 9.9 Sec. 9.9 Sec. 9.9 Sec. Low High High High High Disable Disable Disable Disable Enable Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Prefix/Data/Suffix Data/Suffix Prefix/Data/
Suffix
STX (1002) None STX (1002) STX * None
Prefix/ Suffix *
Data/Suffix
Suffix
ETX (1003) CR (1013) CR (1013) ETX
(1003)
ETX * CR (1013)
The CUTE host disables all parameter scanning, including Set Defaults. If you inadvertently select CUTE, scan Enable Parameter Bar Code Scanning (located in the MP6000 Bar Code Programming Guide) then change the host selection.
Page 48
2 - 18 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
RS-232 Host Parameters (continued)
Selecting ICL, Fujitsu, Wincor-Nixdorf Mode A, Wincor-Nixdorf Mode B, OPOS/JPOS, Olivetti, Omron, Common Use Terminal Equipment (CUTE-LP/LG bar code readers), NCR, or Datalogic enables the transmission of code ID characters listed in Table 2-7 an programmable and are separate from the Transmit Code ID feature. Do not enable the Transmit Code ID
ture for these terminals.
fea
d Table 2-8. These code ID characters are not
Table 2-7
UPC-A UPC-E EAN-8/JAN-8 EAN-13/JAN-13 Bookland EAN Code 39 Code 39 Full ASCII Trioptic Code 32 Codabar Code 128 GS1-128
Terminal Specific Code ID Characters
Code Type ICL Fujitsu
Wincor-Nixdorf
Mode A
A A A A E E C C FF FF B B F F A A F F A A C <len> None M M None None M M None None None None None None None None N <len> None N N L <len> None K K L <len> None P P
Wincor-Nixdorf
Mode B/
OPOS/JPOS
Code 93 I 2 of 5 D 2 of 5 MSI IATA GS1 Databar Variants PDF417 MicroPDF417 Data Matrix QR Codes Aztec/Aztec Rune
* 2D bar codes are not supported.
None None L L I <len> None I I H <len> None H H None None O O H<len> None H H None None E E None None Q Q None None S S None None R R None None U U None None V V
Page 49
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 19
Table 2-8
UPC-A UPC-E EAN-8/JAN-8 EAN-13/JAN-13 Bookland EAN Code 39 Code 39 Full ASCII Trioptic Code 32 Codabar Code 128 GS1-128 Code 93
Terminal Specific Code ID Characters
Code Type Olivetti Omron CUTE NCR Datalogic
A A A C E None E E B FF None FF FF A F A F F A F None None None M <len> C <len> 3 B1 * None None 3 None None None None None None $T None None None None AE N <len> N <len> None None % K <len> L <len> 5 B3 # P <len> L <len> 5 None None L <len> None None None &
A A
I 2 of 5 D 2 of 5 MSI IATA GS1 Databar Variants
PDF417 MicroPDF417 Data Matrix QR Codes Aztec/Aztec Rune
* 2D bar codes are not supported with NCR.
I <len> I <len> 1 B2 i H <len> H <len> 2 None None O <len> None None None @ H<len> H<len> 2 None IA None None None ]e0 GS1 Databar - R4
None None 6 n/a* P None None 6 n/a* mP None None 4 n/a* Dm None None 7 n/a* QR None None 8 n/a* Az
GS1 Databar Limited - RL GS1 Databar Expanded - RX
Page 50
2 - 20 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE

RS-232 Host Types

To select an RS-232 host interface, scan one of the following bar codes.
NOTES 1. Scanning Standard RS-232 activates the RS-232 driver, but does not change port settings (e.g., parity,
data bits, handshaking). Selecting another RS-232 host type bar code changes these settings.
2. The CUTE host disables all parameter scanning, including Set Defaults. If you inadvertently select CUTE, scan Enable Parameter Bar Code Guide) then change the host selection.
Options:
Standard RS-232 (default)
ICL RS-232
Wincor-Nixdorf RS-232 Mode A
Wincor-Nixdorf RS-232 Mode B
Olivetti ORS4500
Omron
Scanning (located in the MP6000 Bar Code Programming
OPOS/JPOS
Fujitsu RS-232
CUTE
NCR Variant
Datalogic Variant.
Page 51
RS-232 Host Types (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 21
*Standard RS-232
Page 52
2 - 22 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
RS-232 Host Types (continued)
ICL RS-232
Page 53
RS-232 Host Types (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 23
Wincor-Nixdorf RS-232 Mode A
Page 54
2 - 24 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
RS-232 Host Types (continued)
Wincor-Nixdorf RS-232 Mode B
Page 55
RS-232 Host Types (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 25
Olivetti ORS4500
Page 56
2 - 26 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
RS-232 Host Types (continued)
Omron
Page 57
RS-232 Host Types (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 27
OPOS/JPOS
Page 58
2 - 28 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
RS-232 Host Types (continued)
Fujitsu RS-232
Page 59
RS-232 Host Types (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 29
CUTE
2
Page 60
2 - 30 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
RS-232 Host Types (continued)
RS-232 Host -NCR Variant
Scan the bar code below to enable the NCR variant of the RS-232 host.
IMPORTANT There are several parameter options available with the NCR variant for RS-232. Refer to the
MP6000 Bar Code Programming Guide, p/n 72E-172633-xx to manage
related parameters:
NCR Use Prefix
NCR Prefix
NCR Suff ix
NCR Use BCC
NCR Interface.
the following NCR
NCR Variant
Page 61
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 31
RS-232 Host Types (continued)
RS-232 Host -Datalogic Variant
Scan the bar code below to enable the Datalogic variant of the RS-232 host.
Datalogic Variant
Page 62
2 - 32 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE

RS-232 Device Port Configuration

Parameter # 1246
This option allows the user to select which devices to attach to the MP6000, and to which port they are attached. Scan the appropriate bar codes that follow to select the proper configuration. The available configurations are:
0 = AUX 1 Sensormatic, and AUX 2 RS-232 Scanner (default)
1 = AUX 1 Dual Cable Scale, and AUX 2 RS-232 Scanner
2 = AUX 1 Sensormatic, and AUX 2 Dual Cable Scale
4 = AUX 1 Third Party Scale, AUX 2 Sensormatic.
For Motorola hand-held scanners Rate of 9600, 8 Data Bits, 1 Stop Bit, and No Parity. Refer to the Auxiliary Scanner Parameters section in the MP6000 Bar Code Programming Guide, p/n 72E-172633-xx. for alternate settings.
Changes to this parameter d 123Scan port parameter.
When selecting any of the device port configuration o correctly match the devices defined for the option. For example, if option 1 is scanned, only a dual cable scale should be connected to the AUX 1 port, and an RS-232 scanner should be connected to the AUX 2 port. Turning on the MP6000 with connected devices that do not match the option can result in communication failures. To ensure successful operation the proper sequence for setting this option is as follows.
1. Power off the MP6000 (disconnect the power cable).
2. Disconnect all RS-232 devices (RS-232 scanner, Sensormatic, and/or dual cable scale).
3. Power on the MP6000(reconnect the power cable).
4. Scan the appropriate bar code option that matches the intended configuration.
2
). For that reason always remember to perform one of the functions below after scanning a device
Cycle power to the scanner (disconnect, and re-connect scanner cable). or
Use the MP6000 Reset button (button combination to reboot the MP6000).
, configure the auxiliary scanner for a standard RS-232 interface with a Baud
o not take effect until the next power cycle (power cycling does not apply to
ptions, ensure the devices connected to the MP6000
5. Power off the MP6000.
6. Connect the appropriate devices.
7. Power on the MP6000.
Page 63
RS-232 Device Port Configuration (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 33
*AUX 1 Sensormatic and AUX 2 RS-232 Scanner
(00h)
Page 64
2 - 34 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
RS-232 Device Port Configuration (continued)
AUX 1 Dual Cable Scale and AUX 2 RS-232 Scanner
(01h)
Page 65
RS-232 Device Port Configuration (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 35
AUX 1 Sensormatic and AUX 2 Dual Cable Scale
(02h)
Page 66
2 - 36 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
RS-232 Device Port Configuration (continued)
AUX 1 Third Party Scale, AUX 2 Sensormatic
(04h)
Page 67
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 37

Third Party Scale Parameters

Third Party Scale
Parameter # 1294
Enable or disable Third Party Scale functionality. When disabled Third Party Scale LED Pin (parameter #
1295) and Third Party Scale Zero Pin (parameter # 1296) are ignored/overridden. (Also see Price
Computational Scale Interface Circuit Drawing on page 2-13.)
Options:
Enable Third Party Scale
*Disable Third Party Scale.
Enable Third Party Scale
(1
)
Page 68
2 - 38 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
Third Party Scale (continued)
* Disable Third Party Scale
(0)
Page 69
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 39
Third Party Scale LED Pin
Parameter # 1295
This parameter defines the polarity of the LED/Tare input pin that illuminates the scale LED. This parameter has no effect if Third Party Scale (parameter # 1294) is disabled.
Options:
Active Low
*Active High.
Active Low
(0
)
Page 70
2 - 40 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
Third Party Scale LED Pin (continued)
*Active High
(1)
Page 71
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 41
Third Party Scale Zero Pin
Parameter # 1296
This parameter defines the polarity of the zero output pin when the Scale Zero button is pressed. This parameter has no effect if Third Party Scale (parameter # 1294) is disabled.
Options:
Active Low
*Active High.
Active Low
(0
)
Page 72
2 - 42 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
Third Party Scale Zero Pin (continued)
*Active High
(1)
Page 73

Connecting an IBM RS-485 Interface

POS
12V
DC
Connect the MP6000 directly to the host interface.
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 43
Figure 2-4
IBM RS-485 Connections
To set up the MP6000:
1. Attach the modular connector of the IBM RS-485 interface cable to the POS interface port on the MP6000.
2. Connect the other end of the IBM RS-485 interface cable to th e appr opriate por t on the host ( typica lly Port
9). The unit should power up immediately upon connection. If not, wait for unit to power up.
NOTE Older POS systems, and/or some retailers will require use of the external power supply
PWRS-14000-148R.
3. Select the port address by scanning the appropriate bar code (refer to MP6000 Bar Code Programming
Guide, p/n 72E-172633-xx.).
4. If a scale is present in the unit, scan the appropriate scale port address (IBM Scale Port Addresses on
page 2-49).
5. To modify any other parameter options, scan the appropriate bar codes in the MP6000 Bar Code
Programming Guide, p/n 72E-172633-xx.
NOTE The only required configurations are the port addresses (IBM RS-485 port address, and a scale port
address if the model has a scale), and type directives (see Step 6). The IBM system typically controls other MP6000 parameters.
6. To prevent the IBM POS from configuring the MP6000, refer to the MP6000 Bar Code Programming Guide
for information about RS-485 and IBM USB configuration, beep, scale, and type directives.
Page 74
2 - 44 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE

IBM RS-485 Host Parameters

IMPORTANT This chapter includes port address parameters only. For additional user preferences (including IBM
Directives, refer to
To select the IBM RS-485 port used, scan one of the bar codes listed in Table 2-9..
NOTE 1. Scanning one of these bar codes enables the RS-485 interface on the MP6000.
2. The port numbers in Table 2-9 are no longer physical ports on the IBM POS.
NOTE This guide includes limited parameter bar codes. For ALL MP6000 programming bar codes, refer to the
MP6000 Bar Code Programming Guide (p/n 72E-172633-xx
the MP6000 Bar Code Programming Guide (p/n 72E-172633-xx).
).
Table 2-9
IBM RS-485 Port Parameters
Parameter
IBM Port Addresses
None Selected (default) Hand-Held Scanner Emulation (Port 9B) Non-IBM Scanner Emulation (Port 5B) Table Top Scanner Emulation (Port 17)
IBM Scale Port Addresses
None Selected (default) Port 6A Port 6B Port 6E
Page
Number
2-45 2-46 2-47 2-48
2-49 2-50 2-51 2-52
Page 75
IBM Port Addresses
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 45
*None Selected
Page 76
2 - 46 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
IBM Port Addresses (continued)
Hand-held Scanner Emulation (Port 9B)
Page 77
IBM Port Addresses (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 47
Non-IBM Scanner Emulation (Port 5B)
Page 78
2 - 48 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
IBM Port Addresses (continued)
Tabletop Scanner Emulation (Port 17)
Page 79
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 49

IBM Scale Port Addresses

The scale port address must be configured for the scale to operate on the IBM RS-485 bus. The default is
None Selected.
*None Selected
Page 80
2 - 50 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
IBM Scale Port Addresses (continued)
Port 6A
Page 81
IBM Scale Port Addresses (continued)
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 51
Port 6B
Page 82
2 - 52 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
IBM Scale Port Addresses (continued)
Port 6E
Page 83

Connector Pins

RS-232 AUX 1

HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 53
Table 2-10
Pin # Signal/Name Direction Description
1 N/C N/A No Connection 2 5V Out
3 GND N/A Signal Ground 4 TXD Out Serial TXD (±5.4V) 5 RXD In Serial RXD (±5.4V) 6 RTS Out Serial RTS (±5.4V) 7 CTS In Serial CTS (±5.4V) 8
(GEN II
ly)
on 9
(GEN II
ly)
on 10
(GEN II
ly)
on
RJ-45
RS-232 scanner 5VDC Supply
Scale LED In Indicates price computational scale
zero - reflected in UI Scale Status LED (if enabled). I/O signals are 5V TTL.
Scale Zero Out Zeros price computational scale when the Zer
button is pressed (if enabled). I/O signals are 5V TTL.
12V/150mA Out Power output for price computational scale.
*
has returned to
o UI

Scale Display Port

Table 2-11
Pin # Signal/Name Direction Description
1 DEBUG_TXD Out Debug serial TX 2 5V Out
3 TXD Out Scale Display serial TX (3.3V TTL) 4 RXD In Scale Display serial RX (3.3V TTL) 5 GND N/A Signal ground 6 DEBUG_RXD In
* The total combined current for the USB and RS-232 peripheral ports should be less than
750mA total auxiliary current. Each individual port should not exceed 500mA.
RJ-11, Scale Display
Auxiliary 5V output
Debug serial RX
*
Page 84
2 - 54 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE

RS-232 AUX 2

Table 2-12
1 N/C N/A No connection 2 5V Out
3 GND N/A Signal ground 4 TXD Out Serial TXD (±5.4V) 5 RXD In Serial RXD (±5.4V) 6 RTS Out Serial RTS (±5.4V) 7 CTS In Serial CTS (±5.4V) 8 N/C N/A No connection 9 N/C N/A No connection 10 12V/150mA Out Output for auxiliary device.
* The total combined current for the USB and RS-232 peripheral ports should be less than
750mA total auxiliary current. Each individual port should not exceed 500mA.
RJ-45
Pin # Signal/Name Direction Description
RS-232 scanner 5V supply
NOTE 150mA maximum available
between both AUX 1 and AUX 2.
*

Checkpoint Interlock

Table 2-13
1 Interlock Out Checkpoint EAS Interlock (5V 4mA PNP collector out) 2 GND N/A Sig n al gr ou nd
EAS Interlock Connector
Pin # Signal/Name Direction Description

AUX A-B (Stacked USB)

Table 2-14
1 5V Out 2 D- Bidirectional USB D-
3 D+ Bidirectional USB D+ 4 GND N/A
* The total combined current for the USB and RS-232 peripheral ports should be less than 750mA
total auxiliary current. Each individual port should not exceed 500mA.
Stacked USB Port
Pin # Signal/Name Direction Description
USB 5V output
Signal ground
*
Page 85
POS
HOST INTERFACES AND CABLE PINOUTS 2 - 55
NOTE An additional USB port is available in the front under the platter. All USB ports can be used for
the USB staging flash drive. See Table 1-3 on page 1-14 and USB St aging Fla sh Drive on p age
5-11 for addition al information.
Table 2-15
1 DETECT Out USB cable detect output 2 5V In USB cable 5V detect input 3 GND N/A Signal ground 4 TXD/IBM-A Bidirectional Multiplexed serial TXD/IBM-A 5 RXD/D+ Bidirectional Multiplexed serial RXD/USB D+ 6 RTS/IBM-B Bidirectional Multiplexed serial RTS/IBM-B 7 CTS/USB D- Bidirectional Multiplexed serial CTS/USB D 8 DOWNLOAD In POS download 9 N/C N/A 10 12V In Terminal 12VDC to MP6000
* Terminal systems vary in power capabilities. Ensure your system power supply is capable
of the MP6000 configuration power requirements. For terminals unable to support P.O.T., a 12V DC barrel jack is available for external power.
RJ-45, Primary POS
Pin # Signal/Name Direction Description
(Power From Terminal)
*

12V DC

Table 2-16
1 EXT 12V In Center pin: 12VDC (primary power) 2 GND N/A Barrel: signal ground
12V DC Jack, 2.5mm
Pin # Signal/Name Direction Description
Page 86
2 - 56 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
Page 87
CHAPTER 3 SITE PREPARATION AND
INSTALLATION

Overview

The MP6000 was designed to drop into an existing bioptic checksta nd cutout with no modifications. The unit is available in three industry standard sizes (for more detailed information, see Appendix B, TECHNICAL
SPECIFICATIONS):
Short - no scale available Length: 13.9 in. +0/-.05 in. (353.0 mm) Width: 11.5 in. +0/-.05 in. (292.0 mm)
Medium - with or without scale Length: 15.7 in. +0/-.05 in. (399.0 mm) Width: 11.5 in. +0/-.05 in. (292.0 mm)
Long - with or without scale Length: 20.0 in. +0/-.05 in. (508.0 mm) Width: 11.5 in. +0/-.05 in. (292.0 mm)
Page 88
3 - 2 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
MP6000 Top View
(Drainage/Ventilation Holes on Both Sides)
MP6000 Side View
(Drainage/Ventilation Holes on Both Sides)

Site Preparation

IMPORTANT This guide does not encompass all factors related to worker safety and check stand design. It does
offer a list of considerations which may be helpful in ensuring greater safety and productivity.

Ventilation and Spacing Requirements

The scanner/scale housing was designed to provide adequate space for ventilation and drainage for spills.
Figure 3-1 shows the drainage holes, under the platter
scanning/weighing
items.
, for possible spills that may occur when
Checkstand ventilation may be required to ensure the MP60 air ventilation is used, it must not pass through the MP6000 as this can produce an unstable weighing environment. The ambient air temperature inside the checkstand, adjacen t to the device, must not exceed 104°F (40°C).
Figure 3-1
Drainage/Ventilation Holes
00 temperature limits are not exceeded. If forced

Service Access Requirements

The MP6000 was engineered to allow performance of all routine service and maintenance (including scale zeroing, and calibration) without removing the scanner from the counter.
Service must be performed by a Motorola Certified Training course, and (if applicable) the Scale Calibration Training course. For MP6200 and MP6500 scanner/scales, depending on the region of installation, a certified Weights & Measures technician is required to place the device in trade before using, and after certain repairs.
Repair Provider who has completed the Service Repair
Page 89

Electrical Power Considerations

4.3 in.(+/- 0.01)
1 10.0 mm (+/- 0.25)
2.4 in.(+/- 0.01)
62.0 mm (+/- 0.25)
1.2 in.(+/- 0.01)
62.0 mm (+/- 0.25)
The MP6000 may be powered from two different sources:
POS Equipment
IBM
NCR POS with powered RS-232 interface (using p/n CBA-R55-S16PAR accessory cable)
Any register with powered USB interface - 12V only (using p/n CBA-U52-S16PAR accessory cable)
AC/DC power cube (using p/n PWRS-140000-148R) with IEC style modular line cord.
register with powered Port 9B interface (using p/n C BA-M 5 1-S1 6PAR accessory cable)
SITE PREPARATION AND INSTALLATION 3 - 3
Figure 3-2
If using the AC/DC accessory power supply, a 115V/230V outlet must
Power Supply
be available in the checkstand near the
scanner.
Grounding
All POS equipment should be properly grounded, and only a three prong IEC style line cord should be used with the AC/DC accessory power supply.
If you are unsure how to verify proper ground of equipment in th review the equipment installation.
NOTE In an effort to eliminate a possible safety hazard all metal parts of a metal checkstand must be electrically
grounded.
e checkstand ask a qualified electrician to
Page 90
3 - 4 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE

Checkstand Preparation

If the MP6000 is not replacing an old bioptic device, and you are installing for the first time into a new checkstand, verify that the area allows for proper cabling, and an AC/DC power supply. Mounting may require installation of support(s), leveling screws, and peripheral devices. See Counter Cutout on page 3-5 for more details about the location and preparation of the opening.
Figure 3-3
Preparing the Checkstand
IMPORTANT The long (20.0 in./50.2 cm) versions are not available with leveling screws. The checkstand should
provide for two leveling screws under the front and rear of the MP6000. The medium (15.7 in./39.9 cm) and short (13.9 in./35.3 cm) MP6000 models have available accessory kits for standard and long leveling screws.
Liquid Spills and Moisture
Select a checkstand design which allows fluids to flow throu gh, a nd di rects liquids and moisture build up away from any electronic equipment or storage areas. Should a liquid spill occur, ensure that moisture can flow through the checkstand without pooling. The power supply should be away from any area where spills may occur.
Vertical Clearance
For all configurations of the MP6000, the maximum height above the platter is below the platter is
4.08 in.
5.1 in.;
the maximum depth
Tools
No tools are required to install a MP6000 without a scale, or a Checkpoint antenna. The following tools are required to mount the Scale Display:
Ruler (or similar measuring device)
Pencil (or similar measuring device)
Drill
2.4 mm (3/32 in.) diameter drill bit (to make screw holes where display is to be mounted)
19 mm (3/4 in.) diameter drill bit (to make cable pass through hole where display is to be mounted)
#2 Phillips screwdriver.
If the optional leveling screws are used on a needed.
small or medium MP6000, a Phillips or flat blade screwdriver is
Page 91
SITE PREPARATION AND INSTALLATION 3 - 5
Counter Cutout
There are three different MP6000 models: long, medium, and short. Prior to cutting the counter opening, ensure you have the dimensions for the scanner/ sca le bein g installed (se e Figure 3-29, Fig ur e 3- 33 , an d
Figure 3-37). The counter cutout size should reflect the model (also see page 3-30 for installation information).
Ergonomics
Ensure the installation is designed for maximum comfort, efficiency, safety, and ease of use. Allow items to be directed within easy reach, and a scanning area requiring no lifting or special orientation of items.
Page 92
3 - 6 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE

Installing Components

The MP6000 can be installed with or without the following options:
Scale and Scale Display (depending on Weights and Measure regulatory jurisdictions, a Scale Display may be required for units with a scale)
Checkpoint EAS antenna
Sensormatic EAS coil antennae and RS-232 cabling
CSS
AUX hand-held scanners.

Quick Reference Installation Steps

1. Remove the existing bioptic scanner, and accessories (page 3 -7).
2. Unpack the MP6000, and accessories (page 3-7).
3. Assemble the dual head Scale Display, if applicable (page 3-9).
NOTE This only applies when adding a second display head to a single Scale Display.
4. Install the Scale Display, if applicable (page 3-12).
5. Connect the cables (page 3-15).
6. Install CSS, if applicable (page 3-16).
7. Install the MP6000/scale in the checkstand (page 3-24).
8. Power up the MP6000 (page 3-32).
9. Lower and level the MP6000 in the checkstand (page 3-30).
10. Calibrate the scale, if applicable (see Chapter 4, SCALE CALIBRATION (MODELS WITH A SCALE
ONLY).
11. Install Sensormatic coil, if applicable (page 3-33).
12. Install Checkpoint antenna, if applicable (page 3-35).
13. Install the MP6000 trim kit, if applicable (page 3-36).
Page 93
SITE PREPARATION AND INSTALLATION 3 - 7

Remove Existing Bioptic Scanner and Accessories

If you are replacing existing equipment, follow these step to remove the old unit:
1. Ensure the POS is logged off, and the drawer was cleared by the store personnel. This varies by location.
Some IT Departments may require the POS to be completely shut down.
2. Unplug the current bioptic scanner from its power supply.
3. Prior to removing cables, make a note of the current cable runs.
4. Remove all cables connected to the bioptic scanner. Do not cut cables if you are using, or selling the old
equipment.
5. If applicable, unplug the current hand-held device fr om it s power supply, and disconnect it from the current
bioptic scanner/host.
a. If reusing the hand-held device, leave its cable runs intact. b. If the hand-held device was attached to the bioptic scanner with an RS-232 cable, a new cable and a
new hand-held device configuration is required.
6. If a Sensormatic connection is present, there are two cables to be aware of: a. The large cable to the coils/antennas - disconnect from the current bioptic but leave in place. b. The RS-232 cable to the Sensormatic controller communications port - use its run to assist re placing it.
7. If a Scale Display is present: a. Make a note of how the current display was mounted and determine if the current placement can
accommodate the new Scale Display. Adjustments to the layout, and cable run may be required.
b. Unplug the old Scale Display power. c. Remove it from the checkstand. d. Remove its cables. e. Remove the Scale Display.
8. Remove the existing bioptic scanner.

Unpacking MP6000 Equipment

To unpack equipment:
1. Remove all components from their packaging, and check that all parts are present. Each box includes the
material listed in Table 3-1. Each of the items listed is contained in separate packaging within the box and is recognizable as a discrete item. Power cables, host to scanner communications cables, leveling screws, and trim filler kit are all sold separately in kits.
Table 3-1
Description Part Number
MP6000 w/o Platter MP6xx0-xx000M010xx Platter 22-159817-xxx Checkpoint Antenna 10-162248-xx Regulatory Guide 72-171321-xx
MP6000 Box Contents
NOTE An optional Scale Display, p/n MX201-SR00004ZZWR, is available separately for scale models only.
Page 94
3 - 8 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
2. For added protection during shipment, the MP6000 platter is covered with a tight fitting layer of plastic as
shown in Figure 3-4. This plastic layer must be removed before placing the unit into service. (In the case of a scale model, just before scale calibration; and, in case of a non-scale model, as the final step of installation)
Figure 3-4
3. Keep the packing (it is the approved shippi ng container, and should be used if the MP6000 needs to be
returned for servicing), or dispose of the packing in an environmentally sensitive manner.
Platter Protector
CAUTION Do not use a sharp object to remove the protector. Doing so can damage the platter.
Pre-Installation Notes
If a Scale Display is included, it is recommended to mount it in an appropriate location, preferably where the old display was mounted. The cable should be routed through the checkstand.
If the unit includes a scale, scale calibration is required.
If the unit includes EAS Sensormatic:
s coils require installation
it
the large Sensormatic cable should be threaded from the controller box to the coils
The Sensormatic RS-232 cable should be connected to the unit.
If EAS Checkpoint is required, unravel the Checkpoint antenna and ensure a Checkpoint representative connects the device to the controller.
If EAS Checkpoint with interlock is used, connect the interlock cable to the MP6000.
All accessories (hand-held scanner, CSS, etc.) require connections.
Page 95
SITE PREPARATION AND INSTALLATION 3 - 9
Pole Grip

Assemble the Dual Head Scale Display

NOTE This only applies when adding a second display head to a single display.
Required Tools
Phillips head screw driver.
To convert a single display to a double display:
1. The second Scale Display head ships with a cable (already fitted), pole grip , two M3 x 12 self tapping
Phillips screws, and a set of four display overlays.
Figure 3-5
2. Remove the adhesive backing of the required overlay, and carefully secure it in place on the front face of
Second Scale Display
the new display.
NOTE The new overlay must contain exactly the same information as the existing display.
3. Remove the four securing screws from the rear of the existing display before removing the front of the
existing display, complete with LCD and PCB.
Figure 3-6
Dismantling Existing Display
Page 96
3 - 10 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
4. Remove the circular cap from the existing display and either discard, or keep it as a spare part.
Figure 3-7
5. Connect the cable from the new display to the RJ-11 port marked “To Slave” on the PCB in the existing
Removing Circular Cap
(single head) display.
6. Place the short pole extension of the new display into the vacant slot in the rear cover of the existing
display.
Figure 3-8
Short Pole Extension
NOTE There is a rotation limiting tab on the top and bottom surfaces of the pole extension (see Figure
3-9). These need to be fitted one side or the other of the mating projection in the rear cover. If not,
there may be difficulty replacing the existing front cover.
Figure 3-9
Rotation Limiting Tab
Page 97
SITE PREPARATION AND INSTALLATION 3 - 11
7. Secure in place using the pole grip and two M3 x 12 self tapping screws supplied. These are Phillips screw
heads.
Figure 3-10
8. Replace the case back of the existing (original single-head) display using the four M3 x 18 self tapping
Secure in Place
screws (removed earlier).
Page 98
3 - 12 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
3.0 in
75.0 mm
2.3 in
58.0 mm
4.5 in/115.0 mm
0.6 in
15.0 mm
3.1in
77.5 mm
6.1 in
155.0 mm
10.7 in
272.0 mm
290
o

Install the Scale Display

When installing the optional Scale Display, consider both the cashier and customer’s viewing angle. Both must see the weight value displayed.
Figure 3-11
Single Scale Display - Dimensions; Display Rotates Independently (Approximately 290 o)
Page 99
2.8 in
70.0 mm
15.5 in
394.0 mm
10.5 in
267.0 mm
3.0 in
75.0 mm
6.1 in
155.0 mm
2.3 in
3.1 in
77.5 mm
2.3 in
57.5 mm
290
o
SITE PREPARATION AND INSTALLATION 3 - 13
Figure 3-12
Dual Scale Display - Dimensions; Display Rotates Independently (Approximately 290 o)
Page 100
3 - 14 MP6000 INTEGRATOR GUIDE
0.75 in.
(19 mm)
3.62 in. (92 mm)
4.53 in. (115 mm)
1.57 in.
(40 mm)
Figure 3-13
Scale Display - Base Install Template
NOTE When printing this template ensure the Page Scaling option is set to None, or a setting that allows
printing the actual size.
Getting Started
For an existing Scale Display from an old scanner:
Unscrew the unit, disconnect its cable from scanner, then remove the unit and cables.
In same location, (or in a new location as specified by the retailer and /or local weights an d measures law) replace with the Motorola Scale Display.
For a new installation:
Identify the location to install the Scale Display. Identify the location to place the Scale Display based on counter design and viewing angle. Place the unit wh ere it cannot impede access to scanned items being swept over the MP6000, payment terminals, printer validation and paper roll slots, access to replace consumables (rolls) etc.
NOTE BOTH cashier and customer need to see the weight value displayed.
Drill the required holes where the display is to be mounted (see the template, Figure 3-13).
a. The 19 mm (3/4 in.) diameter hole is optional, to be used as a through ho le for the ca ble p ass-thr ough.
NOTE The cable can also be routed on top of the counter via the notch in the base of the display. See the
template for hole spacing.
b. The other two holes are pilot holes for the mounting screws and should be made to a diameter of 2.4
mm (3/32 in.) and a depth of 25 mm (.98 in.). See the template for hole spacing.
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