EasyManua.ls Logo

Crow PowerWave-64 - DEFINE REPORTING FORMATS FOR EACH TELEPHONE NUMBER - P697 E - P702 E

Crow PowerWave-64
88 pages
Print Icon
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
Loading...
Page 50
DEFINE REPORTING FORMATS FOR EACH TELEPHONE NUMBER - P697E - P702E
These addresses define which format the panel will use when dialling each of the six phone numbers.
P697E Reporting Format for Ph # 1 (Default= 1)
1 = Contact ID 8 = 4+2 10pps (Handshake 2300/ Tone 1900)
2 = Domestic Dial 9 = 4+2 20pps (Handshake 1400/ Tone 1800)
3 = Pager 10= 4+2 20pps (Handshake 1400/ Tone 1900)
4 = Speech Dialler 11= 4+2 20pps (Handshake 2300/ Tone 1800)
5 = 4+2 10pps (Handshake 1400/ Tone 1800) 12= 4+2 20pps (Handshake 2300/ Tone 1900)
6 = 4+2 10pps (Handshake 1400/ Tone 1900) 13= 4+2 DTMF
7 = 4+2 10pps (Handshake 2300/ Tone 1800)
Option 1 Contact ID - Use Contact ID format to report alarm and system events to a monitoring companies
receiving equipment.
Option 2 Domestic Alarm Tone - Use "Domestic" format to report alarm events. This format uses
alternating tones to report alarms and can be kissed-off by pressing any digit on a touch tone
phone. This alternating alarm tone continues for 5 seconds followed by a 5 second pause, at
which time the panel is looking for a kiss-off. If a kiss-off is not received another round of alarm
tones will be sent followed by another pause to check for kiss-off. This routine is repeated 4
times, at which point if a kiss-off has not been received, the panel will hang up and dial the next
phone number. Domestic dial will report Zone activations, Manual Fire, Medical & Panic alarms,
Radio Panic alarms, Mains failure, Battery low, Zone & Cabinet tampers, Radio Supervisory
failure and Radio battery low signals. If you don’t wish any of these to report just make the
relevant dialling Scenario “0” (P791E-P806E).
Option 3 Pager - Report alarm events using "Pager" format. This format sends a 12 digit numeric code to a
pager. This format is restricted to reporting the same alarm events as the Domestic Dial format
above. The event report is in the form of a 12 digit message which consists of a unique 4 digit
account code (NOTE: The client account number should not start with a “0”), a space character, a
3 digit event code, another space character then a 3 digit identifier extension. The spaces
between the account code, event code and extension make up the 12 bits of the message.
There is no kiss-off required in Pager Format reporting. The account and event codes are the
Contact ID codes programmed into the system.
As an example, a pager which displays this message;
1 2 3 4_1 3 0_0 0 1
Would have received an alarm message from alarm 1234 (Area A account code), that there is a
burglar activation 130 (contact ID burglar alarm report code), on zone 001 (zone one extension
number)
Option 4 Speech Dialler - Report alarm events by using the canned or customised messages. This format
is similar to the Domestic Dial format in that it reports alarm events via private phone numbers
and is kissed-off by pressing a button on the telephone but there is one important difference. This
format will report the alarm events using pre-recorded voice messages. When the alarm occurs,
like the Domestic Dial format, a 5 second pause follows the voice message in which the panel is
looking to be kissed-off. If not kissed-off the dialler will repeat the message and pause again.
This routine is repeated 4 times at which point, if a kiss-off has not been received the panel will
hang up and dial the next phone number. To kiss-off the panel during the pause period all you do
is press any of the buttons on your touch tone telephone. If a kiss-off is not received from any of
the phone numbers dialled, the panel will make the maximum number of calls allowed for the
scenario and shut down awaiting a new alarm trigger. The same alarms that are sent for Domestic
Dial above are also sent in Speech mode.
Option 5-12 4+2 Pulsed - This option sends a 4+2 signal to a monitoring station. The various options allow for
10 or 20 pulses per second and either a 1800 Hz or 1900 Hz transmit tone. There is also a
selection for the initial Handshake tone from the monitoring receiver to be 1400 Hz or 2300 Hz.
Please refer to the options listed above. This format consists of sending a 4 digit account code
followed by a 2 digit event code. There are many forms of 4+2 in use and the correct choice must
be made in consultation with the individual monitoring stations.
Option 13 4+2 DTMF - This option sends a 4+2 DTMF (Dual Tone Multi-Frequency) signal to a monitoring
station. The alarm transmission consists of a 4 digit account code, a 2 digit event code and a
checksum.

Table of Contents

Related product manuals