Planemo Posted March 1, 2022 Share Posted March 1, 2022 Sorry guys I think this may have been asked before but google isn't helping... On the web app, looking at the current/voltage graph, I have brown dots and what look like red dots at the top of the graph. I know the brown are current alarm triggers, but what are the red? I thought they may be temp alarm triggers but the temp graph looks fine. Further, if they were for temp I would have expected them to be on the temp graph itself. Unless reds are 'current' and brown are 'peak current' maybe? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paradox Posted March 1, 2022 Share Posted March 1, 2022 Helpful videos. https://www.youtube.com/c/EUCWorld Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Planemo Posted March 1, 2022 Author Share Posted March 1, 2022 Cheers, but I saw those many months ago, they don't help with the question I asked. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Seba Posted March 1, 2022 Popular Post Share Posted March 1, 2022 3 hours ago, Planemo said: Sorry guys I think this may have been asked before but google isn't helping... On the web app, looking at the current/voltage graph, I have brown dots and what look like red dots at the top of the graph. I know the brown are current alarm triggers, but what are the red? I thought they may be temp alarm triggers but the temp graph looks fine. Further, if they were for temp I would have expected them to be on the temp graph itself. Unless reds are 'current' and brown are 'peak current' maybe? They are alarms. Dots incidate moments where the alarm was active: speed chart - yellow is 1st (low priority) speed alarm, orange is 2nd (medium priority) speed alarm, red is 3rt (highest priority) speed alarm, violet is speed limit alarm; battery/safety margin chart - green is safety margin alarm; temperature chart - red is overtemperature alarm; voltage/current chart - brown is overcurrent alarm (there is no distinction between peak and sustained current), blue is overvoltage alarm. 5 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Planemo Posted March 2, 2022 Author Share Posted March 2, 2022 Hi @Seba Thats great info thanks, but it still doesnt seem to explain the red dots I have on the voltage/current chart, which according to your post should only ever be brown or blue?! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Seba Posted March 2, 2022 Popular Post Share Posted March 2, 2022 10 hours ago, Planemo said: Hi @Seba Thats great info thanks, but it still doesnt seem to explain the red dots I have on the voltage/current chart, which according to your post should only ever be brown or blue?! Ok... Seems that EUC World is getting so complex that I forget about some features I add during its development I just looked into code and realized that I added distinction between peak and sustained current alarm... "Light red" (or "light brown") is for peak current alarm, while "dark red" (or "dark brown") is for sustained current alarm (or just current alarm as in the app). Sorry for the colors, I'm just a men, so by design unable to distinguish more that three colors 4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Planemo Posted March 3, 2022 Author Share Posted March 3, 2022 On 3/2/2022 at 7:05 PM, Seba said: "Light red" (or "light brown") is for peak current alarm, while "dark red" (or "dark brown") is for sustained current alarm Great, cheers. That was my best guess tbh, so thanks for confirming Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
supercurio Posted March 4, 2022 Share Posted March 4, 2022 Thanks @Seba for the description. A legend would definitely helpful, many times I'm looking at the graph and forgot which is which despite figuring it out earlier. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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