SECTION 5: SCHEDULING OPTIONS5-9Holiday Schedule ProgrammingAfter entering Scheduling Menu Mode, press [0] until the “Holidays ?” prompt appears.PROMPT EXPLANATIONHolidays ?1 = YES 0 = NO 0Enter 1 to program holiday schedules.HOLIDAY NUMBER ?01-16,00=Quit 01Enter the 2-digit holiday number (01-16) to be programmed and press [∗] to accept entry.Enter 00 + [∗] at the “Holiday Number?” prompt to quit the holiday menus and display the “Quit ?”prompt.01 ENTER DATE00/00The cursor is now positioned on the tens of months digit. Enter the appropriate month, then press[∗] to proceed to the day field.Enter the appropriate day for the holiday.Press [∗] to accept the entry.Part ? 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Hit 0-8 x xHolidays can be set for any partition but must always include Partition 1, as follows. Press [0] toturn all partitions on or off, or use keys 1-8 to toggle the letter “x” under the partition to which thisholiday will apply.Press the [∗] key when all desired partitions have been assigned.The “Holiday Number?” prompt is displayed again. Repeat the procedure for each holiday to beprogrammed.Quit ?1 = YES 0 = NO 0Enter 0 at the “Quit ?” prompt to return to the main menu choices and continue programming.Enter 1 to quit Scheduling Menu Mode.Time-Driven EventsThese schedules are used to activate outputs, bypass zones, etc. based on time. There are 20 of these schedules thatmay be programmed for the system, each governed by the previously defined time windows.The actions that can be programmed to automatically activate at set times are: relay commands, arm/disarmcommands, zone bypassing commands, and open/close access conditions.Time-Driven Events WorksheetThe following worksheet is an example of the worksheet found in the Programming Guide. Fill out the worksheet usingthe steps outlined below.Schedule Time Days Action Action ActivationNum. Window M T W T F S S H Desired Specifier Time123…201. Enter the schedule number (01-20) and time window number (01-20), and note the day of the week the actionis desired.2. Enter the code for the desired action and action specifier. The action codes represent the events that are totake place when the scheduled time is reached. Each action also requires an action specifier, which defines whatthe action will affect (relay, relay group, partition, zone list, user group). The action specifier varies, depending onthe type of action selected.The following is a list of the Action Codes (desired actions) used when programming Time-Driven events. Notethat these codes are independent of the relay codes programmed during Output Programming in the #93 MenuMode.