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Annunciator panel
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Annunciator panel : ウィキペディア英語版
Annunciator panel
An annunciator panel, also known in some aircraft as the 'Centralized Warning Panel (CWP), is a group of lights used as a central indicator of status of equipment or systems in an aircraft, industrial process, building or other installation. Usually, the annunciator panel includes a main warning lamp or audible signal to draw the attention of operating personnel to the annunciator panel for abnormal events or conditions.
==Aviation==

In the aircraft industry, annunciator panels are groupings of annunciator lights that indicate status of the aircraft's subsystems. The lights are usually accompanied with a test switch, which when pressed illuminates all the lights to confirm they are in working order. More advanced modern aircraft replaces these with the integrated electronic Engine Indicating and Crew Alerting System or Electronic Centralised Aircraft Monitor.
An aviation annunciator panel will have a test switch to check for burned out lamps. Indicator lights are grouped together by their associated systems into various panels of lights.〔(Photos: British Aerospace BAe-146-200A Aircraft Pictures | Airliners.net )〕
Lamp colours are normally given the following meanings:〔(Warning Systems )〕
* Red: Warning, this systems condition is critical and requires immediate attention (such as an engine fire, hydraulic pump failure)
* Amber: Caution, this system requires timely attention or may do so in the future (ice detected, fuel imbalance)
* Green: Advisory/Indication, a system is in use or ready for operation (such as landing gear down and locked, APU operating)
* White/blue: Advisory/Indication, a system is in use (seatbelt signs on, anti-ice system in-use, landing lights on)
The annunciator panel may display warnings or cautions that are not necessarily indicative of a problem; for example, a Cessna 172 on its after-landing roll will often flicker the "Volts" warning simply due to the idle throttle position and therefore the lower voltage output of the alternator to the aircraft's electrical system.
More complicated aircraft will feature "Master Warning" and "Master Caution" lights/switches. In the event of any red or yellow annunciator being activated, the yellow or red master light, usually located elsewhere in the pilots line of sight will illuminate, in most installations they flash and an audible alert will accompany them. These "masters" will not stop flashing until they have been acknowledged, usually by pressing the light itself and in some cases the audible alert will also continue until this acknowledgement.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Annunciator panel」の詳細全文を読む



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