MyJanine wrote: if you're referring to lock mode while it's in my PC slot. Right?
Correct. Lock/write protect mode while in the PC slot to prevent your Operating system from sneaking a little file on the SD card
BUT
you have a PR S1 machine and it doesn't really care if there's an extra file on it and it won't spit the card out like the ResMed S9 machines do. It's not the end of the world with the PR S1 machines if you forget and don't write protect your card.
Here's the deal about DMEs and those SD cards and your machine. DMEs don't care if you have access to the data or not. They would actually prefer that you didn't (in most instances). They probably are just wanting to verify compliance hours of usage.
Having a SD card in the PR S1 machine doesn't lose much data...you could leave the SD card out for a week and the only data you lose is the flow rate graph line (called wave form in Encore). The PR S1 stores pretty much all the data except wave form for around a month. So even if they had your card (and you didn't have a card in the machine) not all is lost during that time frame. One little data point is lost. And since most DMEs only care about hours of use (which is stored on the machine for a year) they could care less if you had a replacement SD card because for the most part the data that they would want to see is stored on the machine anyway.
Get a spare SD card that you machine will take and either copy the contents of your existing card to that blank card and send the new card to DME or keep it and use it and send the old card to DME.
Just remember with your machine it actually stores a good bit of data on its internal memory and it will put everything it stores on to a new blank SD card. The only thing lost is wave form/flow rate graph line.
This is why it isn't such a big deal if we leave the SD card in the computer over night.
Now it's a different story for S9 users. Their machines store very little data on its internal memory and they lose all the graphs if they don't have the SD card in the S9 all night.
I may have to RISE but I refuse to SHINE.