HVAC Design Using VANTAGE PDMS - pdf 26

Free download ebook Hướng dẫn thiết kế AVEVA PDMS
1 Read This First
1.1 The scope of this guide
This guide introduces some of the facilities provided by VANTAGE
PDMS for the design and documentation of interconnected Heating,
Ventilation and Air Conditioning (HVAC) ducting networks. It explains
the main concepts underlying PDMS and its supporting applications, and
shows how you can apply these to your own design projects.
The chapters of this guide take the form of a hands-on tutorial exercise
combined with frequent explanation of the underlying concepts. As you
work progressively through the exercise, you will gain practical
experience of the ways in which you can use PDMS while learning about
the powerful facilities it provides.
1.1.1 Intended audience
This guide has been written for engineers familiar with HVAC design
practices, who may or may not have prior knowledge of PDMS.
1.1.2 Assumptions
For you to use this guide, the sample PDMS project, Project SAM, must
be correctly installed on your system, and you must have read/write
access to the project databases.
It is assumed that you know:
• where to find PDMS on your computer system
• you know how to use the Windows operating system installed on your
site.
Contact your systems administrator if you need Giúp in either of these
areas.
Read This First
1.1.3 About the tutorial exercise
All the steps of the exercise are numbered sequentially throughout the
guide. The start and end of each part of the exercise is marked by lines
across the page to separate them from the general information sections,
like this:
1.1.4 Further reading
You can find a list of relevant AVEVA documentation in the appendices
of this guide.
1.2 Text conventions
This guide uses the following text conventions:
Serif for the majority of the text.
Bold to highlight important information, and to introduce
special terminology.
Serif italic to denote internal cross references and citations.
Sans-serif to denote keys on your keyboard.
Sans-serif bold for menu names and options, and for the names of forms.
Typewriter for text within a form, including text that you enter
yourself using the keyboard.
1.3 Terminology
You can switch rapidly between the different parts of the program, so
that the distinctions between them become almost imperceptible, but you
need to recognise what is happening when you select from the different
functions available to you from the various menus.
The following terms are used throughout this guide to describe what
action to carry out:
Enter Type text into the specified dialogue box, then press the
Enter (or Return) key to confirm the entry.


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