MT - Densitometria GE DPX NT
MT - Densitometria GE DPX NT
MT - Densitometria GE DPX NT
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1. LU44246ADW_s1_r3.pdf
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Approval Information
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© 2009 by GE Healthcare
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GE Healthcare makes no warranty of any kind with regard to this material, and
shall not be held liable for errors contained herein or for incidental or
consequential damages in connection with the furnishings or use of this manual.
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tutvumist ja sellest aru saamist.
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patsiendi vigastamist elektrilöögi, mehaanilise või muu ohu tagajärjel.
VAROITUS Tämä huolto-ohje on saatavilla vain englanniksi.
(FI) x Jos asiakkaan huoltohenkilöstö vaatii muuta kuin englanninkielistä materiaalia,
tarvittavan käännöksen hankkiminen on asiakkaan vastuulla.
x Älä yritä korjata laitteistoa ennen kuin olet varmasti lukenut ja ymmärtänyt tämän
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x Mikäli tätä varoitusta ei noudateta, seurauksena voi olla huoltohenkilöstön,
laitteiston käyttäjän tai potilaan vahingoittuminen sähköiskun, mekaanisen vian
tai muun vaaratilanteen vuoksi.
prevod.
x Ne poskušajte servisirati opreme, þe tega priroþnika niste v celoti prebrali in razumeli.
x ýe tega opozorila ne upoštevate, se lahko zaradi elektriþnega udara, mehanskih ali
drugih nevarnosti poškoduje ponudnik storitev, operater ali bolnik.
DøKKAT Bu servis kılavuzunun sadece ingilizcesi mevcuttur.
(TR) x E÷er müúteri teknisyeni bu kılavuzu ingilizce dıúında bir baúka lisandan talep
ederse, bunu tercüme ettirmek müúteriye düúer.
x Servis kılavuzunu okuyup anlamadan ekipmanlara müdahale etmeyiniz.
x Bu uyarıya uyulmaması, elektrik, mekanik veya di÷er tehlikelerden dolayı
teknisyen, operatör veya hastanın yaralanmasına yol açabilir.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
A person who will be performing service work on the DPX-NT / MD+ should use this
manual in the following manner:
Read the Safety and Overview Chapters to familiarize yourself with the scanner
as a whole and with the genera lfunction of the circuit boards.
information and can be read as needed, but are good sources of information.
This manual commonly references other Sections and pages of the manual as
needed, so often procedures in the Chapter 5 and the Appendix are referred to
as ways to solve problems described in Chapter 4.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
Page 12 of 141
Chapter 1: Safety 15
Chapter 4: Troubleshooting 95
Chapter Contents:
1.0 General Safety
1.1 Symbols and labels found on the DPX-NT / MD+
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1.1.1 Symbols
1.1.2 Labels
1.2 Emergency Stop Button
1.3 Laser Exposure
1.4 Shutter Indicator
1.5 Cautions, Warnings, and Notes
1.5.1 Caution Statements
1.5.2 Warning Statements
1.5.3 Note Statements
1.6 Safety Concerns
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
Page 16 of 141
maintaining a safe distance from the x-ray beam. See the Safety and
Specification manual for equipment appropriate distance and other
precautions regarding ionizing radiation. All operators must be
properly trained regarding ionizing radiation and take adequate steps
to protect against injury.
x Electric Shock: This equipment contains high voltages. When the
tabletop/panels/ shrouds are removed, visually confirm that power
cord is unplugged and remains unplugged until power is required to
complete the procedure. When servicing while energized, take
precautions to prevent electric shock.
x Moving Parts and Pinch Points: Avoid moving parts and pinch
points (e.g. belt/pulley, arm/back rail, green wheels/rail).
x Sharp Edges: Take precautions to prevent injury from contact with
component edges (e.g. OMI/OMD wheel, arm slot cover).
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
1.1.2 Labels
• The following labels are found on the DPX-NT / MD+ Scanner.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
Radiation Label: This label shows that the system uses ionizing
radiation.
Power is also removed from the scan arm motors, allowing the operator/
patient to push the scan arm out of the way.
• A amber laser-on indicator, located on the front of the scan arm, is lit
when the laser is on. The program activates the laser during positioning
for an image acquisition. The program then turns off the laser when you
begin the scan. The emergency stop button will turn off the laser.
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• There is a caution label (Figure 1.2) on the scan arm near the Display
Panel.
• This symbol appears near the yellow X-ray shutter-open indicator light.
The X-ray shutter-open indicator light is located on the Display Panel on
the scan arm near the front.
Page 27 of 141
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Page 28 of 141
0If the outlet strip was provided by LUNAR, it has a maximum output of 15A,
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
120VAC.
A modem and/or network connection can be made at any time if you are using
the standard room configuration.
Page 32 of 141
2.12.4 Programs
2.12.5 Environmental specifications
2.12.6 Storage and transport environment
2.12.7 X-ray generator specifications
2.12.8 LUNAR 8548 and 8297 X-ray tube housing assemblies
2.12.9 Laser specifications
2.12.10 Compatible components
2.12.11 FDA certified components (US only)
2.13 Secondary Calibration / Daily QA
2.13.1 Secondary Calibration overview
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
Figure 2-10. DPX-NT (A) Systems (71999 and lower) Power Distribution
Block Diagram
Figure 2-11. DPX-NT (A) Systems (71999 and lower) System Block Diagram
Figure 2-13. DPX-NT / MD+ display panel
Figure 2-14. Reference axis and target angles for tube housing assembly
head assembly
Figure 2-15. Anode heating/cooling curves
Page 34 of 141
Figure 2-16. Cathode emission characteristics DPX-NT/MD+ Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010)
Page 36 of 141
NTB
x 1 printed circuit board in the electronics pan
x New X-Ray generator, tube housing assembly and cabling
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
NTC
x Centent motor controller replaced by Gecko
x Bertan bias supply replaced by custom board
x New laser and mount
x New color scheme
NTE
x New transverse and longitudinal motor assembly combines motor
controller and motor.
x New idler assembly, drive pulley, drive belts, cSBC to motor cables
and belt clamps.
x Mid-generation cut-over to dark blue washable table pads.
x The Detector electronics (in the scan arm) are secured by an upper
and lower shroud, held in place by screws.
x Each metal panel is grounded to the electronics pan.
It is not usually necessary to remove the front and back panels for most
service needs. However, if access is needed to the Front and Rear
Longitudinal Carriages, these can be removed.
The back panel is secured by hex socket head-head screws and must be slid
out of the way, for it is between the Arm Column and the frame.
If access is needed to the detector, Transverse Limit Switches or the other
components mounted above in the arm, the covers of the arm must be
removed.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
x The lower arm shroud is held in place by four screws, and must be
removed prior to removing the upper scan arm shroud
x The upper scan arm shroud can be removed by loosening the two
screws holding it in place (on the back of the arm column) and tipping
it forward.
2.1 Electronics
2.1.1 Electronics Pan
The electronic components of the DPX-NT / MD+ are mounted on the
grounded Electronics Pan which is horizontally fastened inside the frame.
x There is one switchable low voltage DC power supply (all outputs
under 30VDC), and one (DPX-NT (B) / MD+) or two (DPX-NT (A))
high-voltage DC power supplies (x-ray generator, to supply 76kV to
the x-ray tube housing assembly) on the pan.
x One high-voltage DC power supply (1000VDC) is located in the upper
arm near the X-ray detector and provides power to the Detector.
Page 38 of 141 DPX-NT/MD+ Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010)
Page 40Figure
of 141 2-10. DPX-NT (A) Systems (71999 and lower) PowerDPX-NT/MD+
DistributionService
BlockManual
Diagram
(Rev. 3 - 2010)
Page 42 of 141
F2
Condor PS
F3.15 AH 5x20 mm
F3
MAX PCB
F1 (NT (A)
Systems F0.5 AL 1/4 x 1 1/4 in
71999 and
lower only)
FLASH RAM
At startup the CPU executes the boots code which programs the FLEX PLD
and then maps in either NT or Prodigy runtime firmware as appropriate based
on the most significant bit of the CCA REV register. To switch from boot code
to run code the firmware jumps to SRAM and executes a code snippet which
pages the boot code out of 0xFF and the desired firmware into 0xFF. The
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
snippet then jumps from SRAM back to 0xFF to execute the firmware.
The cSBC contains a single 128K x 8 bit SRAM which provides read/write
memory. The SRAM's segments are arbitrarily mapped to any CPU segment
by the CPU mapping registers.
cSBC Functions
PORT A
0 trans_enable R/W 0 Transverse motor enable – low blocks trans motor pulses and
forces Centent drive to standby current level.
3 trans_lsw_override R/W 0 Transverse limit switch override – prevent limit switch contact
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
4 long_enable R/W 0 Longitudinal motor enable – low blocks trans motor pulses and
forces Centent drive to standby current level.
6 long_lsw_override R/W 0 Longitudinal limit switch override – prevent limit switch contact
from blocking step pulses at hardware level
7 /collimator_open_ctrl R/W 1 Collimator solenoid control.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
PORT C
PORT E
PORT G
Dual axis stepper motor control is provided entirely by the FLEX PLD. The
drives provide 10 micro steps per full step. The firmware can track move
status by reading the 16 bit READ register.
As part of the setup for a move the host and/or firmware must enable the
motors via the /motor_power, trans_enable, and long_enable outputs and
setup the trans_lsw_override, long_lsw_override, /motion_fail_enable, /
motor_fail_enable, and long_motor_fail_axis outputs as desired. If the
system is in scanner reset for any reason the FLEX PLD will over-ride the /
motor_power output and prevent 24V power from reaching the motor drives.
This is a read only 8 bit register which returns the count of AGS roll-over
events since the previous read of the register. The AGS roll counter is reset
on read only.
AGS DAC
This port provides R/W access to the AGS circuit's 8 bit U/D counter. The
DAC's analog voltage is tied to the gain control input of the variable gain
amplifier (VGA) used to control gain of the detector input signal. As such the
firmware can read this counter to determine the current DAC voltage level
and hence gain level. If ags_enable is low this port gives the firmware direct
control of the AGS DAC as a parallel R/W device. If ags_enable is high, the
firmware can write to the port but the DAC will continue to respond to UP/
DOWN requests from the AGS DCA circuitry and hence quickly return to the
AGS current operating voltage.
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
HE/LE COUNTERS
These read only ports provide access to the 16 bit event counters which are
incremented each time the DCA circuitry detects an input pulse within the HE
or LE windows (as defined by the LEL, LEH, HEL, and HEH DAC settings).
These counters are read in two 8 bit bus cycles, MSB then LSB. TPIT MSB/
SCANNER RESET
The MAX's master reset register will remain latched until the next rising edge
on the HOST_RTS input. When the cSBC is latched into reset by a scanner
error it will remain in CPU reset until the host drops the RTS line and
reasserts it. It will remain in scanner reset until the CPU reads the scanner
reset register following the next raising edge of the RTS line at which the
condition causing the /SCAN_FAIL_ANY has been cleared. The firmware
passes the value of the reset registers to the host to allowing the host to
display appropriate error messages to the operator. The host will be unable
to perform any scanner related operations until the SCANNER_RESET has
been cleared. Red diagnostic LED's are provided for both scanner and CPU
reset lines (D19 and D20). The CPU reset line is tied to the host CTS output
such that the host sees a CTS event when the cSBC enters CPU reset. The
The firmware can also initiate a reset sequence in response to fatal error
conditions by writing a 'death code' to the suicide reset register. Resets can
also be initiated by the manual push button on the cSBC and by a low 5VDC
power condition as sensed by the MAX705 supervisor. The scanner register
is also latched at the end of read cycles such that current status can be
ascertained by a double read. A bit map of the scanner reset register is
provided below
12VDC, or +24VDC.
3 /long_motor_fail R N/A Motor failure detected on longitudinal axis.
4 /trans_motor_fail R N/A Motor failure detected on transverse axis.
DMB dropped it’s CTS indicating a DMB reset
5 /dmb_error R N/A
event.
OMI/OMD pulses detected without step pulse
6 /motion_fail R N/A
(manual arm motion).
7 /watchdog_reset R N/A Watchdog time-out indicates firmware crash.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
HVPS Errors
The HVPS error register is used to monitor the status of the LUNAR p/n 7681
(NT (B) and MD+ only) X-ray Generator HVPS. If the register value is not
equal to 0xF when /hvps_enable is low, the FLEX will raise the
HVPS_ERROR_INT output to the MAX PLD. The MAX PLD latches this into
the IIR register and issues an interrupt to the CPU. As such status of the X-
ray Generator is monitored when the unit is enabled. The handler for X-ray
Generator interrupt reads this register to determine the cause of the interrupt.
The X-ray Generator register is also latched at the end of read cycles such
that current status can be ascertained by a double read. A bit map of the
register is provided below.
DC FAIL
The DC fail error register latches the status of the DC power monitors at the
time of reset. If scanner reset code indicates /dc_power_fail the firmware can
read this register to identify the specific DC source failure. The register is
also latched at the end of read cycles such that current status can be
ascertained by a double read.
The cSBC uses a single 10 bit octal DAC, the Linear Technology LTC1660,
to generate the AGS and DAC window reference voltages and the bias
program voltage. KV/mA DAC
The cSBC uses a single 12 bit dual DAC, the Linear Technology LTC1454, to
generate the HVPS kV and mA program voltages.
The cSBC uses a single 10 bit dual DAC, the Linear Technology LTC1661, to
generate the HVPS filament limit and arc detect threshold voltages.
PEAK DAC
The cSBC uses a 12 bit DAC, the Linear Technology LTC8043, to generate
the detector peak gain voltage.
Interrupts
4 8mS_CLOCK R/C N/A 8ms clock tick interrupt from FLEX PLD.
5 POWER_FAIL_INT R/C N/A Power down pending in 5ms interrupt from DC supply.
The master reset register will force a CPU and scanner reset condition on the
falling edge of any of its listed inputs. The contents of the register will be
latched at the time of reset such that when the CPU next comes out of reset
the firmware can read the register to determine what caused the preceding
reset and report the appropriate code to the host. If the reset was cause by
the CPU_RST_WR input, the suicide reset register contains the specific error
code. If the reset was cause by the /SCAN_FAIL_ANY input, the scanner
reset register contains the specific error code.
The CPU and scanner resets will remain latched until the next rising edge of
the RTS input. At this time the CPU reset will be cleared if /POWER_RESET
bit is not asserted and the scanner reset will be cleared if /SCAN_FAIL_ANY
is high.
6 CPU_RST_WR R N/A Write to the suicide register, read suicide reg for error code.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
7 /SCAN_FAIL_ANY R N/A Scanner reset register latched, read scanner reg for error code.
SUICIDE RESET
The CPU Reset SFR is a byte register into which the CPU can write a failure
code. In response to the write the MAX PLD will store the failure code and
assert the CPU_RESET line. The CPU_RESET line will be released on the
next rising edge of the host RTS, at which time the CPU will be able to read
the bit code from this SFR to determine the cause of the previous reset.
MISC OUT
The misc. output register is used to control the misc. output functions listed in
the following table.
3 RESET OVERRIDE R/W 1 Enable override of CPU_RESET signal. Set to 1 on power-up such
that firmware can load the FLEX PLD at power-up regardless of
the host RTS state.
4 Unused N/A N/A Expansion room.
MISC IN
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The misc. output register is used to control the misc. input functions listed in
the following table
0 BOOT JUMPER R N/A JP4, placed to force firmware to remain in boot code.
1 CPU_P1_2 R N/A Input from CPU port 1, pin 2 (diagnostic use only).
The stepper motors use the same interface design as used on previous
LUNAR products DPX-IQ and Prodigy. The solid state relay has been
replaced with a FET switch to save cost and board space. Diodes are placed
in series on the Centent power lines to prevent back EMF generated when
the arm is moved manually from reaching the 24V planes and damaging the
cSBC.
OMI/OMD Input
manner the system can sense a drive circuit, motor, or belt failure which
might otherwise result is a concentrated exposure point during a patient
scan. As on Prodigy, logic in the FLEX PLD is used to qualify the CH A and
CH B inputs into a single 'valid motion' output. Based on the phases of the
square wave inputs on CH's A&B, the FLEX is able to sense a change in
direction. The circuit provides hysteresis to reject false motion inputs
resulting from scanner vibration when a wheel edge stops in the center of the
opto beam at the end of a move.
Note: The OMI for DPX-IQ motion detection and Prodigy, DPX-NT, DPX-
Bravo and DPX-Duo shutter open/close detection (LNR2817) is NOT end of
life.
Four optically isolated inputs are provided for patient positioning. These are
used by the firmware to implement a joystick mode which is used in
conjunction with the laser to position the X-ray beam as desired over the
patient immediately prior to a scan.
Limit Switches
Four optically isolated inputs are provided for limit switches. These are used
by the firmware to define the transverse and longitudinal table limits.
Mechanical Interlocks
The cSBC is designed such that a high on the scanner reset net disables all
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
scanner functionality and assures a know, fail safe, state. All scanner control
outputs are driven by the FLEX PLD. T. A scanner reset will force all these
FLEX scanner outputs to a high impedance state, de-energizing the opto's
and disabling the scanner.
The FLEX device is SRAM based and hence must be reprogrammed by the
CPU at power up. When the device is not programmed all I/O pins default to
the high impedance state. As such the scanner will also be in a fail safe state
when the FLEX is not programmed.
power to the emitter anode of all opto's which drive critical scanner functions.
As such the scanner will enter a failsafe state in response to these
mechanical interlocks, even in the event of a PLD device failure. The +5V_IO
FET will also be disabled by either a HOST_RTS or CPU_RESET.
The shutter and collimator solenoid drive circuits are the same as that used
on Prodigy. The first FET is used for an initial 'hard hit' on open commands. It
presents 24V directly to the solenoid for several hundred msec's, resulting in
a large initial current pulse to the solenoid. The second FET provides the
'hold' current through a pair of current limiting power resistors. The hold FET
is tied directly to the /shutter_open_ctrl bit.
A jumper and/or DNP'd resistor pad is provide to drive the IQ_HVPS line,
which the firmware reads to determine which HVPS it is intended to operate.
The PWB provides lemo style connector pads for use with the traditional
0311/0312 (DPX-NT (A)) X-ray Generator and D-MAX CCA. For the 7681
(DPX-NT (B) and MD+) the lemos are DNP'd and a single DB-25 connector
is used to control the X-ray Generator. An opto bank is also provided to
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
2.4.8 ADC
A single LTC1454 12 bit, serial, dual channel, DAC is used to provide the kV
and mA program voltages. The DAC is used in the x2 configuration such that
the full scale output is twice the reference voltage. Voltage outputs feed back
to the ADC MUX such that firmware can calibrate out DAC INL errors.
A single LTC1661 10 bit, serial, dual channel, DAC is used to provide the arc
threshold and filament current limit input voltages to the 7681 x-ray generator
(DPX-NT (B) and MD+).
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
To support the 50uA scan mode required by NT's thinner Cerium filter, an mA
low range circuit is provided. The FLEX PLD provides a control bit by which
the firmware can switch the mA DAC reference voltage from 2.048V to 0.5V,
hence decreasing the LSB size, hence allowing the firmware to take smaller
voltage steps when ramping to low uA settings. A second control bit is
provided to switch the ADC from 5.0 to 0.5V reference.
The cSBC is deigned to work with a traditional DPX IQ AMP 1890 CCA. The
bipolar input from the AMP is received via a lemo connector and sees a 50
Ohm line termination. The Linear Tech LT1228 variable gain amplifier is used
to provide peak and AGS gain control.
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
The gain control stage uses cascaded AGS and peak DAC's to generate the
gain control voltage to the LT1228.
The cSBC uses the same CMP401 high speed comparators to convert the
analog bipolar signal to multiple digital threshold outputs.
The 7th channel of the DCA octal DAC is used to generate the program
voltage for the PMT bias supply. The 0-3V output it mapped to 0-9V and
driven by the OPA2131 op-amp to the bias supply control cable. Bias
program voltage from the DAC and bias monitor voltage from the supply are
both fed to the ADC MUX such that the firmware has full control over the
PMT bias supply.
Host RS-232
The host I/O port provides optical isolation per medical leakage requirements
of EN 60601-1-1, Annex BBB, section 7. QT's 6N136 opto's are used to
provide the required 115.2KB operational bandwidth and the required 2500
Vrms standoff. A DB-9 female connector is provided on the host side of the
isolation barrier. RS-232 is supported by populating the XCVR U26. R. All NT
/ MD+ scanners run at 19.2KB.
The debug port is provided such that the firmware can echo status messages
and other information to a dumb terminal to support debugging, development,
testing, and servicing.
D22 Amber MAX DIAG 2 Diagnostic LED for misc use by firmware, control reg in
MAX.
D28 Amber TRANS OMI Valid transverse motion sensed by OMI/OMD circuitry.
D22 Amber LONG OMI Valid longitudinal motion sensed by OMI/OMD circuitry.
D25 Amber HE COUNT Valid high energy photon event sensed by DCA circuitry.
D23 Amber LE COUNT Valid low energy photon event sensed by DCA circuitry.
D21 Amber HVPS 7681(NT (B) and MD+ ONLY) HVPS enabled.
ENABLE
The laser control circuit uses a PS2501-2 opto to control a FET which in turn
drives +5V_ANA to the patient locator laser.
The X-ray tube housing assembly gets its input from the high voltage power
supply(s) which provide a constant potential of up to 5 mA at 76kV and operate at a
high frequency of 50 kHz. This produces a stream of electrons in the cathode and
accelerates them towards the anode thus producing X-rays as well as heat.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
x The X-ray Insert converts current into x-rays by accelerating the electrons across
a large potential from the cathode into a tungsten target on the anode.
x The x-rays produced by the x-ray insert are filtered by the cerium filter to produce
a dual energy spectrum. The x-ray spectrum has peaks at 70 and 38 kV.
x Insert potential is provided by the High Voltage Power Supplies (see section 2.6)
x The tube housing assembly current is set by the cSBC at 0.1 mA or 1.50 mA
(DPX-NT) 0.1mA or 0.750 mA for DPX-MD+ depending on the acquisition type.
x Tube Current is set by the cSBC and regulated by the D-MAX Board (DPX-NT
(A) NT (B) and MD+ units use the model 7861 X-ray generator which includes all
tube current regulation functions (see section 2.7).
• The yellow Shutter Open LED comes on is the Shutter open and
exposure possible.
• DPX-NT (B) and MD+ scanners use a single high-voltage power supply
(40kVDC) During normal operation, 76kVp is applied to (+38kV at the
anode and -38kV at the cathode),
• The High Voltage Power Supply(s) are controlled by the cSBC (see
section 2.4).
• The power supply(s) are powered by the AC line voltage and have their
own built in fusing.
• The AC power is routed thru and the supplies are enabled by a solid
state relay(s) which is mounted on the electronics pan (see section
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
2.1.1).
• The Tube Head and D-MAX Board work with the DC power supply to
supply tube housing assembly head current.
• When errors are detected by the cSBC, (for example, loss of arm motion)
the relay will switch off and prevent production of x-rays.
• There may be occasional static discharges within the Tube Head. The
transients caused by these static discharges (arcs) are shunted to
ground through the array of transorbs present on the XORB board.
• The light emitted by the scintilator is passed to the Photo Multiplier Tube
(PMT) which amplifies the signal
• The detector has its own dedicated High Voltage Power Supply, used for
supplying detector (PMT) bias.
• A limit switch determines the shutter position and reports it to the cSBC.
Table 3-2 gives specifications for standard components shipped with the
DPX-NT / MD+ system.
Component Specifications
Dimensions: 197.5 cm x 62.3 cm x 132.5 cm
Scanner table* Weight aprox 272kg
Maximum patient weight supported: 136kg
Console table 78.5 cm x 63.3 cm x 48.1 cm
Greater than 266 Mhz Pentium
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
64MB
Greater than 1GB hard disk
17” SVGA monitor (800x600x16-bit color) #
Computer
LS-120 Super Drive
CD ROM
NT operating system (with Service Pack 6.0 and Internet
Explorer 4.01 or greater with service pack 2.0)
HP DeskJet 930C
Printer
44.7 cm x 35.6 cm x 19.1 cm
*Width is measured from the front edge of the scanner table to the back edge of the
scanner arm. Height is measured from the top of the scanner arm to the bottom of the
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
scanner arm.
#Some languages may require 1024x768x16-bit color to fit the translated software text
on the screen
General specifications
• AP Spine Measurements
40.9 cm x 22cm
• Femur Measurements
20.9 cm x 17.9cm
2.12.4 Programs
• Quality Assurance
Operational environment
X-ray generator
Table 2-3 contains information about the x-ray generator for DPX-NT (B) and
MD+ series devices and the standard referenced. Table 2-4 contains
information DPX-NT (A) systems.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
Table 2-3. LUNAR 7681 X-ray generator technical information (system no. 72000 and higher)
Classification Class I Equipment IEC 601-2-7 5.1
Degree of protection against electrical
Type B equipment IEC 601-2-7 5.2
shock
Ordinary medical electrical equip-
Protection against ingress of liquids IEC 601-2-7 5.3
ment
Connection to supply mains Power supply cord IEC 601-2-7 6.1g)
Mode of operation Continuous IEC 601-2-7 6.1m)
Maximum X-ray tube voltage 76 kV IEC 601-2-7 6.1m)
Maximum X-ray tube current 3 mA IEC 601-2-7 6.1m)
Rated mains voltage 100-240 VAC IEC 601-2-7 6.1j)1
Number of phases in mains 1 IEC 601-2-7 6.1j)2
Mains frequency 50/60 Hertz IEC 601-2-7 6.1j)3
Required over-current releases 15 Amp dedicated service IEC 601-2-7 6.1j)5
Table 2-4. LUNAR 0311 / 0312 or 8531 / 8532 X-ray generator technical information (NT (A)
Systems numbered 71999 and lower).
Classification Class I Equipment IEC 601-2-7 5.1
Degree of protection against electrical
Type B equipment IEC 601-2-7 5.2
shock
Ordinary medical electrical equip-
Protection against ingress of liquids IEC 601-2-7 5.3
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
ment
Connection to supply mains Power supply cord IEC 601-2-7 6.1g)
Mode of operation Continuous IEC 601-2-7 6.1m)
Maximum X-ray tube housing assembly
76 kV IEC 601-2-7 6.1m)
voltage
Maximum X-ray tube housing assembly
5 mA IEC 601-2-7 6.1m)
current
Rated mains voltage 100, 115, 230, 240 volts IEC 601-2-7 6.1j)1
Number of phases in mains 1 IEC 601-2-7 6.1j)2
Mains frequency 50/60 Hertz IEC 601-2-7 6.1j)3
Required over-current releases 20 Amp dedicated service IEC 601-2-7 6.1j)5
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
Figure 2-14. Reference axis and target angles for tube housing assembly
head assembly
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Table 2-6. LUNAR 8548 x-ray tube head assembly (DPX-NT (B) and MD+ systems numbered 72000
and higher) technical information.
IEC 522/
Inherent filtration >3.0 mm Al/70 kV
1976
IEC 613/
Filament characteristics Refer to Figure 6.
1989
76 kV - Anode to Cathode
IEC 613/
Nominal x-ray tube voltage 38 kV - Anode to Earth
1989
Page 72 of 141 38 kV - Cathode to Earth Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010)
DPX-NT/MD+
Table 2-7. LUNAR 8297 x-ray tube housing assembly (DPX-NT (A) systems 71999 and lower)
technical information.
IEC 522/
Inherent filtration >3.0 mm Al/70 kV
1976
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
IEC 613/
Filament characteristics Refer to Figure 6.
1989
76 kV - Anode to Cathode
IEC 613/
Nominal x-ray tube voltage 38 kV - Anode to Earth
1989
38 kV - Cathode to Earth
361 W (4.75 mA, 76 kV) for up to 4
IEC 613/
Single load rating min.,
1989
59 sec.
361 W (4.75 mA, 76 kV) for up to 4
min., IEC 613/
Serial load rating
59 sec. with a 10 min. cool down time 1989
between measurements.
Maximum x-ray tube assembly heat con- IEC 613/
260 kJoules
tent 1989
X-ray tube assembly heating and cooling IEC 613/
Refer to Figure 7.
curves 1989
• 64 MB RAM
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• 8X CD ROM
• NT operating system (with service pack 6.0 and Internet Explorer 4.01
with Service Pack 2)
Table 2-6 gives components certified to the FDA for use with DPX-NT / MD+
scanners and is updated periodically. Contact LUNAR for a current listing of
compatible components.
Table 2-9. FDA certified components (DPX-NT and MD+ Systems number 72000 and Page
DPX-NT/MD+ Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010)
greater)
75 of 141
NY
Table 2-10. FDA certified components (DPX-NT Systems number 71999 and lower)
LUNAR Model
Component Description
#
LUNAR DPX-NT single board
X-ray Controller 7844
controller
Bertan1 Models:
High Voltage Power
2411 N 0311 or 8531
Supplies
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Operator presses [F4] to start [Daily QA] which presents a plot of the last used
parameter from the last Daily QA run. (Default display is the medium bone
chamber.) At this point operator can interactively manipulate the data in QA
database to create tables and graphs that can be printed.
Scan arm moves to the "Home" position. In this case, Home is always at head
of scanner for QA independent of user setting for Home.
The scanner performs a scout scan to find the block. If block is not properly
positioned, the scanner will prompt the user to Reposition standard more
accurately.
All tests are run all of the time. The tests are executed and test results
reported as each test completes. Test results include pass/fail and any
quantitative information when appropriate.
This test adjusts the sensitivity of the photon counting electronics. The test
determines the optimal voltage setting for the detector amplifier so the
maximum number of photons are detected.
During this test, the shutter opens with the x-rays on.
The detector peak test then determines the optimal voltage setting for the
detector amplifier based on these curves. The actual peak setting is taken
from the high energy count rates, the low energy channel is essentially
blocked by the brass spillover piece in the QA standard.
The next set of functional tests consist of a shutter test and motion tests for
transverse and longitudinal directions.
Beam Stop test - Measures the movement of the source shutter. A functional
test checks the shutter LSW and ensures the shutter stops all photons.
Motor motion and limit switches - Each motor (transverse, longitudinal) will
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be run between hard limits and back to home position. If the hard limits do not
engage, this is a failure. Also compare steps against predetermined scan
window size.
Spillover test - Measures the effect of high energy photons registering as low
energy photons in the detector system. The beam passes through a brass
piece that stops all low energy photons. The detector then measures the
number of low energy photons detected as a measure of spillover. Spillover
should be less than 13%. Spillover with the CZT detector will degrade about
0.2% per year.
database. As part of primary calibration, the spillover value used during that
calibration is stored. The delta spillover calculation using the spillover from
primary calibration and the running average of the last five spillover
measurements. This information is in the scan file.
• The system determines the%fat for two different materials with different
compositions.
At the end of Daily QA, a report is automatically printed. If printer is not on line
or fails, post an error to screen.
A view with plot of medium bone chamber is generated, and user the user is
allowed to manipulate data interactively.
2.13.9 QA Database
• High (1.5mA) Results - fat is hidden - only bone results are viewable
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• When the drop down menu appears double click on User Options
• The Tools option on the menu bar will now contain Service Options, and
Service scanning options will also be available under the F2 Measure
Option
Allows the service engineer to view and print the raw energy spectrum for the
detector. The detector can also be repeaked from Spectrum.
3.1.6 Pileup
Used in the manufacturing process
3.1.13 Outbox
Configure Printing, E-mail and Faxing options.
3.2.3 Spillover
Perform and Acquire a Spillover Measurement (test of source spectrum and/
or detector resolution).
• Configure check box- this box must be checked when limit to limit is
run to establish the scanners range of motion (scan window).
Note: When the Home position is changed from the head end of the
table to the foot or vice versa, the Limit to Limit test (see
Motion Tests tab above) must be run with the Configure box
selected.
•Move Steps - move the scan arm to a specific location on the table -
move Absolute moves an absolute distance from home, Move
Relative - move relative to last position
•Lower portion of the screen displays the status of limit switches, scan
arm position, and positioning switch (joystick) status.
•Gain Control - adjusts the gain on the AGS amplifier used in the
detector peak setting - peak adjusts only the AGS amplifier.
•Bias Control - adjusts the bias of the detector - bias peak adjusts both
the detector bias and the AGS amplifier gain.
•AGS Mode - the operate / calibrate signal (disables the AGS systems
so that the detector can be peaked correctly) can be toggled.
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•X-ray cycle test - cyclically ramp the source - (can be used to test
ramping failures or for arcing)
•X-rays Tab
•Ramp the kV and / or the mA of the x-ray generation system and view
feedback real-time. Faults are displayed and polled real-time in the
window on the right.
DPX-NT/MD+ Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010) Page 87 of 141
3.2.8 Lin/Rep
Not Used for Service
3.3.4 Hacksaw
Not used for DPX-NT.
The error log file is named errorlog.bin, this file is the current error log session.
Older sessions are named errorlog.1, errorlog.2 and so on up to errorlog.4.
When requesting help from LUNAR, E-mailing the current error log file and a
description of the symptoms will aid in a rapid diagnosis (see Copy
Configuration in section 3.1.10 for information on copying the error log to an
E-mailable file).
• The Error Log is located under the Tools dropdown menu. Left click on
Tools / and then on Error Log.
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•To view a session, left click on it, all errors (if present) will be shown
in the box below.
•The details of the failure are shown when the error is highlighted and
then right clicked on.
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See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
This Help software is based on Fault Tree Analysis of FTA. The fault trees are in an
outline form. Each heading in the outline represents an “or” choice. For example, the
basic fault below “Shutter will not close” has three possible causes: “Shutter stuck”,
“Solenoid Return Spring not working”, or “Solenoid powered when it should not be”.
Each of these in turn lists their possible causes.
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Error Event 6: The Scanner was unable to ramp the tubehead due to a mA
feedback failure, the error log entry indicates that this was attempt #5 (all five
entries are in the log - only entry 5 is shown to save space). Entry (6) in the
log is Unable to Ramp X-ray current. The status of the x-ray generator(s)
are listed, Program, Expected Values and Feedback are all listed. From the
readings listed the feedback for mA is 0.00 - causing the failure. The failure
was induced by disconnecting the mA feedback at the D-MAX board on an
NT(A) system.
Page 92 of 141 DPX-NT/MD+ Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010)
The final entry in the error event is DET SBC DTR Reset this is the cSBC
resetting.
Error Event 8: Shutter failed to open is listed in the error log, the cause of
the event was a disconnected shutter solenoid on a DPX-NT(A). The shutter
failure is the only error log entry for the failure.
motor failed to
move.
Note: The cause was actually the loss of the OMI/OMD signal - as the cSBC
does not know if the motor moved or if OMI/OMD signal is lost and the
probability of OMI/OMD failure is lower than a motor failure - the error
message reads “Longitudinal motor failed to move”.
Note: If you are unsure as to which errors belong together, start a new
session in the error log, and then recreate the error condition. when this is
done, only the errors involved in the
error event will be in that log.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
3.5.3 QA Tab
• The lockout times (in hours) for when the user is locked out of the
scanning options and needs to run a QA or secondary calibration may be
modified.
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
• The warning time (in hours) for when the user is prompted”Reccomend
Daily QA before measuring patients“ warning them that a QA or
Secondary calibration is advised, but not required may be modified.
Motion Detection
x cSBC / OMI/OMD fail to see transverse motion during a patient scan, an
interrupt signal is generated and the cSBC resets and closes the shutter.
o A slotted disk at the end of the arm rotates through an infrared
beam (OMI/OMD), and pulses are sent to the cSBC board when
there is transverse motion.
x The transverse and longitudinal motion detection system (on cSBC) is
operational during patient scans and the “find block” test of the daily
QA. If the problem occurs during a quality assurance, it may be high
voltage arcing or a problem with the OMI/OMD.
Solution: If the patient is not centered on the table top or if the region
being scanned is too close to a limit in transverse travel, the limit switch
may be close while scanning. Re position the patient on the table, further
away from the limit.
• Centent
• Stepper Motor
Troubleshooting Binding
Turn off the power to the scanner and move the affected parts by hand. Feel
the motion for spots where the carriages are more difficult to move. Listen for
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
unusual noises.
One of the most common problems is a failure of the Source and Detector to
reach the rear Limit Switch due to the Tube Head running into its own high
voltage cables. These cables must have a hump formed at the Rear
Longitudinal Carriage that allows the lower portion of the Tube Head to pass
under the cables.
The High Voltage Cables can also impede transverse motion toward the front
Limit Switch. This is caused when the cables have been tied down without
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enough play for the Tube Head and Detector to move all the way forward.
These problems should be investigated by manually tripping both Limit
Switches while inspecting for cable conflicts, binding, or tension problems.
• Check to see that the bottom of the Tube Head is not hitting the
Transverse Centent
• Wiring
In rare instances, the wires from the Shutter Solenoid and/or Fans can snag
on the bolts that protrude through the frame on the foot end of the scanner.
This is solved by properly tying down these wires.
• Transverse Belt
The Transverse Belt should not be excessively tightened or this will cause
excessive binding in the transverse mechanism. It should be possible to
deflect the belt by 4 cm when it is properly tightened. Sometimes the spare
belt material near the clamp on the Tube Head Carriage comes into contact
with the forward gear and prevents the scanner from going all the way to
Home position.
Check all appropriate gears and pulleys. Verify that the set screws
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
are tightened and the gears and pulleys are not out of position.
• Transverse Motor
Check the Transverse Motor for a broken wire in one of the internal
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• Transverse Centent
x The slotted disk must be completely flat and remain in the center
of the sensor slot during its entire rotation.
x If the slotted disk has been in physical contact with the optical
sensor, the sensor may have debris on it, disassemble this
mechanism, and clean the sensor and the slots of the disk.
x Check the Cable running from the cSBC to the OMI/OMD for a
cable break by checking the individual wires for continuity.
shutter.
o A slotted disk at the foot end of the table on the pulley for the
Longitudinal Drive Belt rotates through an infrared beam
(OMI/OMD), and pulses are sent to the cSBC board when there is
transverse motion.
x The transverse and longitudinal motion detection system (on cSBC) is
operational during patient scans and the find block portion of the daily
QA. If the problem occurs during a quality assurance, for instance, it may
be the high voltage system is arcing or the OMI/OMD may be
malfunctioning.
Solution: If the patient is not centered on the table top (length wise) or if
the region being scanned is too close to a limit in longitudinal travel, the
limit switch may be close while scanning. Re position the patient on the
table, further away from the limit.
Turn off the power to the scanner and move the affected parts by hand. Feel
the motion for spots where the arm is more difficult to move. Listen for unusual
noises.
• Cable Track
The major impediment to longitudinal motion is the plastic Cable Track that
runs through the trough at the rear of the scanner.
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This track is attached at two points: at the Rear Longitudinal Carriage and to
the scanner frame (low, rear and center) each spot by 4 bolts. Also, adequate
slack must be left in the cables inside the Cable Track or they will stop the arm
from moving fully to the foot end.
Should the Cable Track detach from the scanner frame, it will slide freely in
the trough and will eventually cause trouble. This can allow the Cable Track to
get in between the Rear Longitudinal Carriage and the scanner frame on the
foot end preventing the tripping of the limit switch.
Check the distance between the front longitudinal carriage and the
longitudinal rail with a go/nogo gauge (See installation Procedure DXAP2000
Chapter 5 appendices). The carriage should not rub the front rail, if necessary
insert shims behind the front longitudinal carriage.
• Slip Clutch
A slip clutch is part of the longitudinal motion system to limit torque. This is a
feature to protect the patient should he/she pinch an arm or leg between the
back side of the scanner and the Arm Column. If the Slip Clutch is set too
loose, it will fail to move the belt and will just "slip" as the motor turns. This
may produce the following symptoms:
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
Check all appropriate gears and pulleys. Verify that the set screws are
tightened and the gears and pulleys are not out of position.
the Quality Assurance Test is failing, check the position of the Limit Switches.
On Total Body scans, a limit switch out of position could allow the Source/
Detector Carriages to hit the frame or panels of the scanner before the Limit
Switch.
If the mechanical stop is reached before the Limit Switch is actuated, check
carefully to see which part of the Arm Assembly is in contact with the Table
Assembly. The front part of the Lower Transverse Extrusion is clamped to the
Longitudinal Drive Cable at the front of the scanner. If the Lower Transverse
Extrusion is not clamped in such a way that it forms a 90 degree angle with
the length of the table, the rollers at the front end of the Lower Transverse
Extrusion may strike the end of the scan table before the Limit Switch is
actuated.
• Longitudinal Motor
Check the motor for a broken wire in one of the internal coils, or a bad
electrical connection to the Centent Motor Controller.
• Longitudinal Centent
• Longitudinal Belt
The Longitudinal Belt should not be tightened too much or this will cause the
brackets holding the gears to deform at either end of the scanner. When the
belt is properly tightened, it should be possible to deflect the upper and lower
sides of the belt so that they touch within 8 cm of the gears at either end.
• Drive Wheels
The rollers in front and the wheels in back that support the Arm must be
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
adjusted so that they come into perfect contact with the Longitudinal Rails.
Test them by preventing any wheel from turning and see if the carriage will
still move. By preventing any wheel from turning, it should be possible to
slide the carriage along the rail with one wheel dragging while the others roll.
This indicates that the wheel has not been excessively tightened down.
Adjustments can be made by loosening and rotating the eccentric bearings of
any of the lower wheels.
If the error occurs consistently after the first line of a patient scan, and the
scanner is moving in the longitudinal direction, then check the following:
Solution 1: The pulses that normally enter the FOINK board at J (the black
wire at the center of the connector) may have stopped. These pulses are
necessary to keep the cSBC board from interrupting. These pulses can be
seen on the cSBC.
The Red and Green LED’s on the MAX board will be lit whenever the DC
power supply is up and running.
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
• Verify that the emergency stop button is out. If it has been pressed in,
press it again to release it.
• If 26 VDC is missing, the Circuit is open between the cSBC and the
Switch.
• Check the continuity of the wires from the switch to the cSBC board.
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
• The thermostat will close again automatically after a cool down period of
usually less than 30 minutes. If 0 VDC is measured on both pins of cSBC
connector J15, the Thermostat and the wires connecting it to the cSBC
board are good and the cSBC board should be replaced.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
If this is unsuccessful, verify that the I/O cable from the computer to the cSBC
Board is secure. Also, verify that the comm port is configured correctly (see
DXPC 2000 Chapter 5 appendices) and that all required drivers are present. If
all fails, the cSBC or computer serial port is defective.
If any of the QA test results fail, none of the results are considered valid. The
results will be stored in the Quality Assurance History file, but these values will
not be averaged with the other results for calibration purposes. In addition, the
software will prevent patient scans until a passing daily QA has been
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
The scanner may not be finding the correct "Home" position. The correct
"Home" position aligns the center of the x-ray beam with the center of the
Brass Piece when the Standard is correctly positioned. The Air Counts must
be obtained outside of the QA standard, next to the Brass Piece. If the
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Reference Counts are obtained with the x-ray beam passing through the
Brass Piece, the Quality Assurance Scan will fail.
• Verify that the scanner limit switches are set correctly with the DPX-NT
home position jig (see DXAP2000 - DPX-NT Installation Procedure
Chapter 5 appendices).
Spillover stability is a test of detector bias drift. if the detector bias is drifting,
Page 106 of 141 DPX-NT/MD+ Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010)
the mean spillover value will also drift.
Approved Document - LU44246ADW_r3.pdf Page 107 of 142
4.8.4 Reference Counts and Ratio
During this test the baseline is established which will later be used for
comparing with the values obtained during the scan of the standard. Care
should be taken that the x-ray beam is not missing the standard, nor being
obstructed by the brass piece on the standard during the High and Low Air
Count test.
It is possible to view the Ratio trends in the Quality Assurance History. Check
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
both the 3mA Ratio and the 150 Ratio to determine if the either Ratio has
changed significantly.
These are very difficult to diagnose by a method other than substitution of new
components until the Reference Counts Ratio returns to normal.
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The specification for XORB Board transorbs is that they must allow less than
0.5 micro amperes reverse bias current. At LUNAR, each transorb is
measured by applying a 5 Volt reverse bias to the transorb and a 100 kW 1%
resistor connected in series. The voltage measured across the 100 kW
resistor must then be less than 50 mV.
• A mechanical constraint
• A defective Motor
If the number of steps continually increases from QA to QA, this could indicate
an impediment to the scanner's motion and should be rectified (see 4.1
(Transverse) or 4.2 (Longitudinal)).
The software contains values which it expects the scanner to measure for the
scan of each chamber. If the mean of the BM measurements made for the
chamber does not fall within the predefined software limits the QA will fail. If
the percent coefficient of variance is over 3%, the QA will fail.
These failures will always occur if the Reference Counts or Reference Ratio
test have deviated severely from normal results. However if the Reference
Count results look normal, and the values are approximately equal to the
numbers obtained during the scanner installation, then the counts may be
unstable.
This will also be apparent (but not obvious) on the QA Results printout. The
arc occurred in the third standard scan and elevated the BM values. If a
customer reports a failing QA because of a bone chmaber measurement
being too high, be aware that this could be an early warning of arcing. Obtain
from the site the QA history file and error log for analysis. Look for variation of
the Large BM values.
It is very important to notice these early warning signs of arcing so that the
system can be re-greased before any damage is done to the high voltage
cable connectors or the tube head.
software program.
• If the "End of Exposure Alarm" rings during the time the Alignment Test
scan is running, see "Alarm Pings During Scan" in section 4.13.4. If the
Shutter Open or the X-ray On lamps on the front panel blink, during the
test, see section 4.13 also.
• While the Alignment Test scan is running, measure the voltage at test
points 1, 2, 5 and 6 of the XORB board. They should have approximately
the following values respectively: -0.150VDC, 3.8VDC, 0.150VDC, and
3.8VDC.
Insert.
• Start and stop the x-rays several times while observing the voltage at
TP3 and TP7 of the XORB board. This is the programming voltage from
the SBC, and although this voltage is dependent on the feedback
information returned to the SBC, the voltages at the XORB board test
points should be approximately the same each time the x-rays are
produced. The AC ripple on this signal must be less than 0.2 Vpp.
Replace the SBC board if the proper control signal is not present.
• When the x-rays are off between scans, verify that the shutter aperture
lines up with the aperture to the Tube Head beneath. Take some
alignment pictures and verify that the image is a bright, rectangular
image and the entire alignment box is visible. If the alignment box is not
visible, the shutter Tube Head and detector apertures are not aligned.
• Open and close the shutter to make sure that it returns to the same
position each time. Turn the x-rays back on, and make sure that you
DPX-NT/MD+ Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010)
obtain nearly the same count rate each time the shutter isPage 109 of 141
opened.
B.If not, the voltage or current ramping has probably failed. Are both the red
and green LED's on the MAX Board illuminated?
If not, measure the output of the 28 Volt Power Supply. Check the operation of
the X-ray Relay or the cSBC Board which controls its operation. If all of the
above are working, the red LED may be defective.
If so, the fuse is blown on the MAX Board (see section 4.16).
2.If the red and green MAX Board LED's are illuminated, verify the following
test point voltages:
• XORB TP2 and XORB TP6 are approximately 3.8 VDC. If these voltages
are incorrect, verify that the voltages on XORB TP3 and XORB TP7 are
approximately 3.8 VDC. If TP3 and TP7 are not equal the XORB jumper
at J26 is set in the wrong position. If they are equal but incorrect, test the
cable from the SBC to XORB, or substitute a new SBC Board.
c.X-ray On LED
Test the X-Ray On LED by inserting it into the Power On receptacle. Replace
if defective.
• If either of the test points is at 1.0 VDC, the High Voltage Power Supply is
delivering as much current as it possibly can, and has automatically
limited the voltage.
• Check TP2 and TP6. If the voltage is approximately 3.8 VDC, the voltage
has been set properly.
Feel the heat sinks on the back of the High Voltage Power Supplies. If one of
the power supplies is cold, this is usually the defective one. If one is warm and
the other is hot, replace the hot one. The best troubleshooting technique may
be to substitute power supplies.
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
• If either TP2 or TP6 are incorrect, the possibility exists that one of the
High Voltage Cables or the Tube Head is shorted. The short may be
possible to find with an ohm meter, but often it takes several kV to break
down the defective component. It will be difficult to troubleshoot this
problem by any method other than part substitution.
A rough edge around the shutter aperture may be wearing away on the tube
head below. The lead filings fall off the shutter aperture and gather on the filter
below, causing a reduction in x-rays over time. Any wear should be easily
visible on the underside of the shutter paddle. If there is visible wear, the lead
dust must be removed from the top of the filter. The Collimator assembly must
be removed, the filter cleaned, and then the Collimator assembly reinstalled
and realigned.
• Verify that the cSBC is properly controlling the current. TP11 of the MAX
board should be approximately 0.75 volts. This voltage is dependent on
feedback information from the power supplies, which makes it difficult to
troubleshoot by any means other than SBC substitution.
• Check the current through the X-ray Insert. The absolute value of the
voltage at test points 1 and 5 on the XORB board is proportional to the
current through the X-ray Insert. 1 millivolt is equal to 1 micro-ampere of
current. A current setting of 750 µA should give a reading of 0.750 VDC
at test points 1 and 5. If either of these voltages vary from the expected
by more than 10 millivolts, the MAX board could be at fault. If TP1 and
TP5 are more than 15 millivolts apart, substitute new high voltage power
supplies.
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4.10 Arcing
The X-ray Tube Head Insert is an evacuated glass enclosure. An AC current
is applied to the filament inside the insert. It glows like the filament in a light
bulb, and electrons are boiled off into the evacuated space. A high voltage is
applied between the anode and the cathode causing electrons to rush toward
the anode, striking it and creating x-rays. As long as the insert is properly
evacuated, there can be no internal arc. However, no insert can be totally
evacuated and impurities can be ionized creating a lightning like effect; arcing.
During the arc the resistance of the insert is dramatically decreased and a
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• a vertical stripe or artifact in the image of the patient's scan (effects all 16
detectors at once)
• After cleaning the old grease off of the connectors, they should be
carefully inspected for carbon tracks. Look for these tracks on both the
rubber cable connectors and on the phenolic sockets of the Tube Head.
If such tracks are found after cleaning, the following are the options for
returning the scanner to service:
• If carbon tracks are found on the rubber cable connectors, they can be
removed by excising the damaged section with a sharp blade. Severe
tracks can burn quite deep into the rubber, so care must taken to remove
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all the damaged rubber. After the carbon tracks have been removed,
additional grease must be used when repacking the connection to fill in
the volume of the removed rubber.
• Arc tracks will be impossible to see on the sockets in the Tube Head.
Therefore, if arc tracks are seen on the rubber cable connectors, the
sockets should be sanded with emory cloth as a precaution. After
sanding the socket, remember to flush the socket with cleaning solution
to remove any particles.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
• If the tracking inside the socket is too severe or the carbon track cannot
be removed, another option is to replace the Tube Head.
A cause of this problem is a loosening of the first drive Reduction Belt which
connects the Transverse Motor to the first Reduction Pulley. This loosening
causes the belt to "walk" on the pulleys causing enough imprecision in the
motion to trip a switch. To tighten the belt, first remove the Pulley Shroud and
loosen all four nuts that hold the motor in place. Then, while holding the motor
such that the belt is pulled taught, tighten the nuts to secure the motor in
place. Replace the shroud and test the scanner (an Alignment Test test works
well).
If the Tube Head cables come into contact with the cable bundle entering the
cable track, it may be impossible for the scanner to complete all of the
necessary transverse steps away from the operator. Consequently, on each
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scan line the detector will move closer to the front transverse limit switch, and
the switch may be eventually closed. Form the cable bundle exiting from the
cable track into an arch such that the Tube Head cables will move under the
arch rather than running into the bundle. This arch must not be too high. If it is,
there will not be sufficient slack in the Tube Head cable bundle to allow the
Tube Head to move to the front transverse limit switch. Also, if the arch is too
small, it may cause too much slack when the Tube Head is at the forward side
of the table. This causes the Tube Head cable bundle to rub against the inside
of the front panel causing a scraping noise to be heard. If the above does not
solve the problem then check the other mechanical components. Electrical
components that could cause such a failure are the Centent Motor Controller,
the Transverse Motor, the FOINK board or the SBC board.
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• loss of the signal from the detector (this effects all 16 detectors at once)
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• loss of current to the x-ray insert filament (28 volt power supply error
message, the orange lamp to go out, and the End of Exposure Alarm to
sound).
• bad x-ray relay contacts (providing power to tube head power supplies)
• faulty operation of the AGS system (white lines are short and found only
where scan lines move from air into tissue).
4.11.8 Arcing
If the tube head is arcing, the arcs will be more likely to occur at the higher
current settings. Arcing generally also causes other strange symptoms such
as:
seconds)
1.View the Quality Assurance History (see section 4.15). In particular note the
trend in BM Values as discussed in the Failing QA's section of this chapter.
Summary
Except for the x-ray relay, the cause of the problem will be difficult to find. Try
to obtain some additional information. If the customer is hearing the end-of-
exposure alarm, or seeing the yellow x-ray on lamp flickering, you can deduce
the tube head control cable is bad. Likewise, it is possible to decide on the
shutter/collimator/fan cable. In the case of no alarm or lamp indications, or in
the case where large deviations occur in the peak, the upper and lower cable
bundles should be replaced, as problems with the coaxial cable will be too
expensive to troubleshoot.
A poor Deviation Image will have lines, streaks or spots (indicating counts
higher or lower than expected). When the image is analized, click first on
points and then back to results, this will typically point type failing points (they
will have a yellow box around them).
• The information tab (see figure 4-2) will show the test outcome (pass /
fail).
The amber LED is controlled by a comparator on the FOINK Board. This LED
illuminates when approximately 40µA (or greater) of current is passing
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through the X-ray Insert. On Spellman system scanners the amber light may
appear to fade out slowly when x-rays are ramped down. This due to the
Spellman power supplies bleeding off current and is not a problem.
If the voltage ramping fails, the High Voltage Power Supplies must be shut
completely off before a second ramping attempt is made. If the amber X-RAY
ON LED turns on momentarily, then turns off for a few seconds before coming
on steadily, the system is having difficulty ramping the high voltage. One of
the High Voltage Power Supplies may be defective.
The SBC does not monitor the Insert current once the proper level has been
reached. Therefore, if the current to the Insert is interrupted, the SBC will not
recognize the problem and will not alert the computer, or terminate the
exposure.
See the GEHC Myworkshop System to determine the status of this document.
If the X-RAY ON LED blinks once the x-ray high voltage has been set, there
must be a problem in one of the following areas:
• The Shutter Open LED-If the Shutter Open LED fails, a properly
operating FOINK board will prevent operation of the Shutter Solenoid.
Check the LED for continuity, replace it, or substitute a working amber
LED temporarily.
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• Solenoid Cable-Remove J11 from the FOINK Board and check continuity
between pin 5 and 6 (see Shutter Open LED Blinking above).
table. In any case, note the status of the SHUTTER OPEN light and the X-
RAY ON light.
• Both the SHUTTER OPEN light and the X-RAY ON light are on and
steady. This would indicate a faulty FOINK board. Replace it
The SHUTTER OPEN light is off. This could indicate the following:
• The LED becomes defective during the scan and since the shutter
solenoid and this light are wired in series, the Shutter closed and the
Alarm sounded.
• The cable to the amber Shutter Open light broke during the scan with the
same result as above.
• The shutter solenoid failed and the Shutter closed followed by the Alarm
sounding.
Check
• the I/O cable connections at the serial port on the back of the Host
computer and at the cSBC. Be sure both connections are tight and that
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the thumb screws are used to hold the connectors firmly together.
• inspect the connector on the cSBC. This connector is very fragile and
may have been damaged. Be very careful when connecting the I/O
cables to the SBC.
• Check the Connection at the Detector Mother Board and the Bulkhead,
where the two halves of the signal cable meet.
• Verify the power LED’s on the cSBC are lit (See section 4.19)
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If the ports are properly configured and all power is present, and
communication still fails, then the probable causes are:
• A faulty cSBC.
If any sudden jumps are noticed in the values of any of the categories,
determine first if these are due to service work such as a Tube Head
replacement. If service work causes a shift in the QA values, then compare
present values to those obtained only after the service.
The Positive High Voltage Power Supply has a current monitor output (mA
MONITOR); the voltage at this output is proportional to the current passing
through the X-ray Insert. This monitor voltage is connected to the MAX board
as feedback (mA FEEDBACK).
• Check the position of the shorting jumpers on pin headers JB1, JB2, and
JB3 for: Be sure pins 1 and 2 are connected as indicated by silk screen.
When the X-ray Relay is on, both the red and green LED's on the MAX board
should be illuminated. If both are out, no power is getting to the MAX board. If
only the red LED is lit, then the MAX board fuse is burned out or missing.
Electrical tests
When the board is powered up, and x-rays are being generated, the following
measurements may be performed:
With a VOM set on 200 VDC, you should measure about 18 to 21 VDC on
TP's 4, 13 and 5 referenced to TP3 (GND).
x Insure that the interrupter disk does not rub against the plastic detector
housing. If it does, adjust by loosening the two machine screws that
attach the plastic detector, reposition the detector and re-tighten the
screws.
Electrical tests
The signal from the OMI/OMD board is nominally rectangular in shape. The
signal is generated when the Interrupter Disk alternately passes and
occludes a light beam between the two posts on the photo-transducer. With
the beam occluded by the disk, the output signal should be about 5 VDC
(close counts). When the beam is allowed to pass through a slot in the disk,
the signal output is near ground potential (see FOINK troubleshooting 4.17).
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• Green LED (C in figure 4-5) is on then you have +5VDC to the board.
• Red LED (A in figure 4-5) is on then you have +12VDC to the board.
• Amber LED (B in figure 4-5) is on then you have -12VDC to the board.
• Red LED (E in figure 4-5) is the DTR reset line, when this LED is lit, the
Detector, FOINK, or SBC are detecting an error.
• Red LED (D in figure 4-5) the scanner Reset, when this LED is lit, the
communications with the Host PC are in Reset.
• Green LEDs (G and H in figure 4-5) flash when data is being received by
the SBC
The reset button near the communications cable connector causes a reset
signal at the SBC microprocessor. Also, disconnecting the serial cable will
cause a reset state until the cable is re-attached and communications
reinstated.
• Check to see that all wires and cables are firmly affixed to their
respective connectors. Pay particular attention to Lemo connectors,
since the jam nuts on the connectors are prone to be loose.
Electrical Tests
Ionizing Radiation Exposure: When power is applied, this equipment may generate ionizing
radiation. Take precautions that no part of the body passes through the x-ray beam when the
equipment is energized. Avoid scatter radiation during warm-up and testing by maintaining a
safe distance from the x-ray beam. See the Safety and Specification manual for equipment
appropriate distance and other precautions regarding ionizing radiation. All operators must be
properly trained regarding ionizing radiation and take adequate steps to protect against injury.
Electric Shock: This equipment contains high voltages. When the tabletop/panels/ shrouds are
removed, visually confirm that power cord is unplugged and remains unplugged until power is
required to complete the procedure. When servicing while energized, take precautions to prevent
electric shock.
Moving Parts and Pinch Points: Avoid moving parts and pinch points (e.g. belt/pulley, arm/back
rail, green wheels/rail).
Sharp Edges: Take precautions to prevent injury from contact with component edges (e.g.
OMI/OMD wheel, arm slot cover).
Hot Surfaces: Keep hands clear or allow components to cool before servicing. (e.g. stepper
motors, hard drives, power supplies and microprocessors).
Heavy Lifting: Obtain help lifting or moving any object weighing over EHS limits. Ask for
assistance when maneuvering awkward objects (e.g. tabletop).
DPX-NT/MD+ Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010) Page 125 of 141
Wear appropriate PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) while servicing the equipment, e.g. eye
protection and steel-toe/composite-toe shoes.
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• The about tab under the help menu of the Lunar DPX-NT Software
shows which version is presently on the system.
• Double click on the CD ROM Drive with the LUNAR DPX-NT CDROM in
the drive
Note: When new versions of software are released they may not be
loaded in the above manner. BE SURE TO FOLLOW THE
LOADING INSTRUCTIONS THAT ACCOMPANY ALL
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SOFTWARE UPDATES.
3) lead wrap
4) fan bracket
Verify that all necessary parts have been transferred to the new Tube Head
before shipping the defective. LUNAR has received defectives with the lead
Page 128 of 141 DPX-NT/MD+ Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010)
ring, for example, still in them.
Approved Document - LU44246ADW_r3.pdf Page 129 of 142
5.2.1 Shelf Life
Many distributors have asked about the shelf life on the Tube Heads in their
stock. The shelf life of the Tube Head is not accurately known, but we feel at
this time that it is over two years. Perform the following Tube Head
inspections on all replacements before mounting them:
1.Check the shelf for oil spots which would indicate that the Tube Head has a
leak. If oil is discovered, return the Tube Head for warranty replacement.
2.Shake the Tube Head and listen for the sound of an air pocket or bubble
inside. If a bubble is discovered, return the Tube Head for warranty
replacement.
Note: If a Tube Head has been on the shelf for three weeks or more,
perform the warm up procedure described in Procedure
DXAP2001 DPX-NT Source Detector Alignment.
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• Small Screwdriver
• Diagonal Cutters
• 3/8" Wrench
5.3.1 Procedure
1.Shut off the power to the scanner.
2.Take off the table top by removing four screws (two at each end).
3.Remove the head and foot end panels. At the foot end of the scan table
unplug the A/C power cable to the scanner.
5. On your new lower cable bundle, use a diagonal cutters to cut the wire ties
holding the cable together, also unfold and read the LUNAR SERVICE
NOTES attached to the new cable bundle.
DPX-NT/MD+ Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010) Page 129 of 141
track you will notice a 3 conductor gray wire cable tied to the high voltage
cable bundle. This wire carries the transverse optical interrupt signal from the
front carriage (we will refer to this wire as the OMI/OMD cable). To find the
location of the OMI/OMD board and the front carriage follow the OMI/OMD
cable. On your new Cable bundle the OMI/OMD wire is connected through
the bulkhead.
11.To remove the OMI/OMD cable push the x-ray tube head all the way to
the outside of the scanner (patients left side), then notice the clearance
between the front panel and the high voltage cable bundle connecting to the
x-ray tube head and the way the cables are tied down as you will need to
wire tie them back the same way.
12.Now you can cut the (4) large wire ties and the (2) small wire ties that hold
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down the high voltage cable bundle and OMI/OMD cable. Then you can pull
the lower cable bundle back to where it enters the cable track.
13.Next take your small screw driver and pry open (20) of the cable track
plastic retaining clips that hold the cables into the track. These clips pivot at
the back of the cable track and can either be removed or left in the open
position so the cables can be removed.
14.Pull the old cable bundle out of the cable track towards the foot end of the
table.
15.Now install the (3) conductor OMI/OMD cable from the bulkhead to the
OMI/OMD BOARD. To do this you must remove the white 16 pin connector
from the bulkhead labeled bulkhead 2, this connector is a part of the upper
cable bundle and the new OMI/OMD cable will connect into this housing.
Note the position of the wire tie that holds the upper cable bundle in place
and then cut it in order to pull the connector out to install the OMI/OMD cable.
Note the orientation of the existing terminals in this bulkhead connector as
they slide and lock into the connector in one direction only. Where the wires
enter the connector each hole is numerically labeled. Put the green wire into
hole # 11, and the black wire into hole # 9, and the red wire into hole # 1.
problems.
18.Take the new cable bundle and connect it to the bulkhead by routing the
cable bundle the same way as the replace cable bundle, (note the
connectors are labeled bulkhead 1 and bulkhead 2) and fasten the cable
bundle down in the three spots between the cable track and the bulkhead
with wire ties. Lay the new bundle down into the cable track making sure all
the cables lay parallel to each other. Start replacing the clips to the cable
track as far as you can. Continue the process: remove a few clips, extract the
old cable bundle, add in the new cable bundle, and replace the clips.
19.To finish removing the old and installing the new cable bundle in the lower
portion of the cable track you must remove a screw located at the end of the
cable track. To do this use a 1/8" hex wrench and a 3/8" wrench. Once you
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remove the screw you can lift the cable track out of the channel it rides in and
finish prying open the remaining clips. Remove the old cable bundle until it
reaches the cable entrance hole, where all the cables enter the electrical pan
area. Then finish installing the new cable bundle until you reach the cable
entrance hole, finish clipping all the clips and then replace the cable track
hold down screw (do not tighten the screw at this time).
20.Locate where all the wires from the old cable bundle terminate on the
electronics pan. All of the wires are labeled except for the wires that go to the
terminal block. Here is a list of wires that must be disconnected before
removing the cable bundle from the pan area. cSBC(J-5), FOINK(J-17),
FOINK(J-12), FOINK(J-14), FOINK(J-5), FOINK(J-8), PMT/AGS(J-11)(J-11 is
the yellow Lemo connector), the orange Lemo connector (connected to the
H.V. Lemo box), then the last three wires connect to the Terminal block.
Write down the number where the orange, blue and yellow wires go to on the
terminal block and disconnect them with your small screwdriver. Carefully
pull the old cable bundle through the cable entrance hole from the pan area.
The old cable bundle may now be discarded.
21.Carefully feed (one connector at a time) the new cable bundle wires
through the cable entrance hole into the pan area. Connect the wires to their
proper locations.
23.Leave a little slack in the cables from the cable track to the pan area to
allow all of the cables to be routed and wire tied exactly like the original
cables.
24.Reconnect the A/C power cord, put the table top, pad, and end panels
back on the scanner.
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25.Turn on the scan table, computer, monitor and printer. Perform required
tests per section 6.9 of the DPX-NT Service Manual.
• Diagonal Cutters
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5.4.1 Procedure
1. Turn off the power to the scan table.
2. Remove the table top by removing the two screws at each end.
4. Lastly, remove the column cover of the arm held in place by screws.
5. Remove the upper and lower arm covers by removing the (8) screws that
hold it in place.
6.Open the cable track and cut the wire ties at the end of it. Disconnect all the
cables coming from the cable track and remove the cable bundle as far as the
top of the column (through the hole).
Page 132 of 141 DPX-NT/MD+ Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010)
8.Next locate the Laser On light and disconnect it. Remove this cable to the
top of the column cutting any necessary wire ties.
9.Route the new cable to the Laser On light and connect. Replace any wire
ties removed in step 5.
10.From the back of the arm column follow the cables vertically down and cut
all the wire ties holding the upper cable bundle to the other cable assemblies.
11.Carefully pull the upper cable bundle out towards the back of the arm and
down through the holes in the column.
12.Next cut the wire ties that hold the cables down near the bulkhead, these
are located in the lower rear portion of the arm.
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13.Make sure the bulkhead connectors are labeled on both sides of the
bulkhead bracket and then disconnect them.
14.Next remove the two (16) pin Molex housing connectors that are attached
to the upper cable assemblies from the bulkhead bracket. Also disconnect the
LEMO connector from the bulkhead bracket. Pull the housings and the Signal
cable connectors out to work on them.
15.Use the mini Molex pin extractor tool and remove from bulkhead 1 pin16
and pin8. From bulkhead 2 (the lower connector) remove pin15, pin16, pin6,
pin7, and pin8.
16.Now remove the old cable bundle by pulling the cable out through the back
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17.Next route the new cable bundle through the column wire tieing as you go.
18.Route the taped end of the cable through the hole at the bottom of the
column to the bulkhead area (follow the other cables that go to the bulkhead).
19.Carefully remove the masking tape from the cable exposing the mini Molex
pins and the Lemo connector. Note the orientation of the existing terminals in
the bulkhead connectors and the numeric labels at each hole of the
connector.
20.Replace the wires one at a time removing the wires from the old cable and
replace them with the wires from the new cable.
21.Insert the connectors into the bulkhead bracket the same way they were
removed and fasten the upper cable bundle with wire ties as original.
22.From the wire tie just fastened, the cables going into the arm column must
not have any slack in the cables (pull the cables from the column area to
remove any slack). Make sure that none of the cables hit any of the moving
parts in the narrow area where the cables come from the back of the column
out to the bulkhead.
DPX-NT/MD+ Service Manual (Rev. 3 - 2010) Page 133 of 141
24.Turn on the power to the scan table. Run Required tests as prescribed in
section 6.9 of the DPX-NT service manual.
5.5.1 Procedure
1.Switch off the power to the scanner.
2. Remove the tabletop, head and foot end panels. At the foot end of the scan
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4.Take the black tape off the high voltage cable bundle at each end of the
sleeving (open any cable track clips that are in the way as in step 8) as well as
any wire ties holding the bundle in place. Next, slide the sleeving away from
the tube head and remove the tape beneath the sleeving. Note the positions
of each cable before removing the tape. The cables must be returned to these
positions.
5.Disconnect the military-style connector and the ground wire (if one exists)
from the tube head and slide the cable out of the black sleeving toward the
cable track.
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6.Unplug J3 and J5 on the XORB board. Also, trace the ground wire (if one
exists) from the control cable and disconnect it from the power supply. Cut the
wire ties holding the control cable to the pan.
7.Pry open the plastic retaining clips that hold the cables into the cable track.
These clips pivot at the back of the cable track and can either be removed or
left in the open position to remove the cables. The screw located at the end of
the cable track near the pan must also be removed. Once this screw is
removed the cable track can be lifted out of the channel it rides in and the
remaining clips can be opened. Mark the position of the cable track screw on
the frame to return the track to its original position.
8.Remove the old control cable. Note the position of all the cables in the cable
track. They will need to be returned to the same position during this
procedure.
10.Once the cable is through the sleeving, connect it to the tube head and
connect the ground wire (see figures 1 and 2). Position the cables next to the
high voltage cable bracket as in figure 1. The collimator control cable should
come out of the cable bundle between the two high voltage cables toward the
back of the scanner. Tape the cables together for several inches with three
layers of electrical tape starting as close to the bracket as possible. Continue
to spiral the tape around the cables as it was originally and finish by taping
three layers for several inches near the bulkhead. Tape the sleeving near the
bulkhead as it was originally. Pull the sleeving tight along the bundle and tape
near the tube head. Wire tie the cables to the tube head high voltage cable
bracket.
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11.Lay the control cable in the cable track in the same position as the original
one. Start replacing wire ties between the bulkhead and the tube head. Before
tightening the wire ties assure that there is proper clearance and no stress is
applied at any of the connectors or wires through the entire range of motion.
Tighten the center cable ties first (two large wire ties put together and located
at the center of the high voltage cable trough). Be sure the high voltage cable
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bundle does not hit the front panel when the tube head is all the way toward
the front of the scanner. Make sure the high voltage cables do not hang into
the cut out space on the high voltage cable trough. Tighten the three wire ties
near the bulkhead.
12.Replace the clips to the cable track and reattach the track to the scanner
frame.
13.Move the arm to the foot end of the scan table. Check that the lower cable
bundle and the high voltage cable bundle have some slack where the cables
enter the cable track near the bulkhead. Check that the cable track has at
least 1/8" clearance of the frame. To adjust this, slide the track in its trough,
then tighten the screw that holds the track in place. Move the arm up and
down the table to verify that the cable track moves properly.
14.Reconnect the A/C power cord, and replace the table top and end panels.
3.) If Number of Successes = 100, the result is PASS. If any other result occurs (i.e.
error(s)) the result is FAIL. If result is FAIL, the cause of error must be found and cycle test
must be rerun until the result is PASS.
Home Verification
Perform the following tests to ensure that the LEDs and positioning and emergency stop
switches are operational:
1. Power On (Green) LED Test - Ensure table is plugged in and power switch is switched
on.
x PASS = Power On LED is on.
2. Position Switch Test - Tools/Diagnostics/Scanner Motion. Go to Motion Commands tab,
click Enable Joystick.
x PASS = Switches and motors are operational by pressing switches on front panel
to move arm in all directions.
3. X-Ray On (Yellow) Test - Tools/Diagnostics/Scanner X-ray. Click Ramp (in X-ray
Source box).
x PASS = X-Ray On LED is on and the X-Ray Tube Head Fans are ON.
4. Shutter Open (Yellow) Test - Click Open Shutter.
x PASS = Shutter Open LED is on.
Voltage/Continuity Verification
Ground Verification
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7943 – Verify by visual inspection that the 2 ground cables on one end and the 4
ground cables on the other end are connected.
x 1 end to bulkhead (spade connection)
x 1 end to rear carriage (screw connection)
x 2 ends to pan near HVPS (nut connection)
x 2 ends to pan near CSBC (nut connection)
7930 – Verify by visual inspection that the 1 ground cable on each end is
connected.
x 1 end to bulkhead (spade connection)
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Reference Section 2.13.2 Starting the Daily QA (secondary calibration) from this manual
Spine Phantom
Reference the enCORE Operator's Manual for the Aluminum Spine Phantom Scanning
Procedure. Average the results from the 3 analyzed scans, and verify that the mean is
within 2% of the expected value for the phantom.
State: RELEASE - Document is released and under formal Change Control. Changes are subject to the ECR/ECO Process.
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