Pelco C573M-D, C538M SATs and Alarm Units on the Same Node, Information BOX Alarm Base Addressing

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SATs and ALARM Units on the Same Node

Alarm units and SAT units both utilize the same 9760 Alarm Con- figuration File. The following statements compare and contrast similarities and differences between the two units:

One Alarm unit can handle 64 alarm inputs per unit. One SAT unit can handle 16 alarm inputs per unit.

Alarm units (up to four) may be daisy-chained on a single port. SAT units cannot be daisy-chained.

Alarm units can interface 256 alarms per port.

SAT units can interface 16 alarms per port.

Up to 10 ports may utilize Alarm units, for a total of 10 X 256 or 2560 hard-wired alarms/system.

SAT units may attach to as many ports as are available, how- ever, the combined ALARM-SAT mix cannot exceed 2560 hard- wired alarms.

Alarm units utilize alarm base addressing.*

SAT units do not.

Alarm units are added to the system on a 4 per port basis. SAT units are added on a 1 per port basis.

The important thing to consider between ALARM and SAT units is what they share or have in common, which is the ALARM file. Several ALARM file configurations, based on various equipment configurations, are illustrated in Figure 3-26.

*INFORMATION BOX – Alarm Base Addressing

Fact 1: Alarm base addressing is used with alarm units only.

Fact 2: The number entered in the Alarm Base Number box (for alarm units) corresponds to a number in the physical alarm input column of the Alarm configuration file (See Figure 2-9, Alarm File. Ignore its mentioned use there for SAT SIDE menu pro- gramming).

Definition: The Alarm Base Number defines the starting point from which alarm “counting” begins for alarm base addressing as applied to alarm units. Alarm units utilize alarm base addressing in “bite-size” increments (per port) of 256, spanning a range whose count starts at the value entered into the Alarm Base Number box.

Working Rules:

Rule 1: The Alarm Base Number for the first alarm unit attached to a CC1 port is set to 1. Subsequent alarm units (up to four) are daisy-chained off the first unit on the same port.

Rule 2: If you add another alarm unit (say, number five), you must attach it to a different port. You must also enter a new num- ber to count from in the Alarm Base Number box for the port to which this alarm unit is attached. In this case, that number would be 257. Subsequent alarm units (up to four, total, for this port) would utilize alarm addresses 257-512 (accommodating 8 Alarm units on 2 ports).

Rule 3: The combined total of hardwired SAT-Alarm unit inputs or addresses cannot exceed 2560 per system. The number (2560) was originally derived from the use of four alarm units per port (256 total) within a 10 port limit (256 x 10). At present the number of hardwired inputs allowed is still 2560.

Rule 4: It is best to define alarms for Alarm units before those for SATs, as is done in the first two configuration examples below.

One SAT unit and one ALARM unit on the same node:

One SAT unit and two ALARM units on the same node:

Two SAT units and one ALARM unit on the same node:

Figure 3-26

Various SAT-ALARM Configurations

As stated earlier, SAT alarm definitions do not use nor depend upon alarm base addressing. So the following question might arise: If you had one ALARM unit that used only the first 48 inputs of the Alarm file, could you take unused inputs 49 through 64 and use them as SAT alarm inputs?

The short answer: Yes, you can use any alarm input for the SAT as long as it is not actually configured for use by any other piece of equipment.

The long answer: If you are not pressed for port space, it is not a good thing to do. The obvious problem is that (1) you create an alarm assignment overlap from the 9760-ALM’s point of view. To the 9760 ALARM configuration file, an alarm is an alarm. It doesn’t really care where it originates. For the 9760-ALM unit,

however, that is a different story. That leads to problem (2), which is that there now is one more item of information to track. If more alarm units are daisy-chained to the original port, will anyone re- member the SAT unit? If the front panel switches of the single alarm unit are changed to take advantage of those last 16 un- used inputs, is anyone going to remember that the SAT unit is using those numbers? If possible, do not use alarm-input

numbers already allocated to ALARM unit use, whether they are used or not.

3-10C1510M-A (2/03)

SECTION 3

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Contents D E N D U M Page Page O N T Manual Notes Manual Directory Physical IntroductionCOM Connection Section Physical Installation9760 Side CC1 to Wall Block Video TIE LinesSAT Side Wall Block to SAT SAT SideLocal Monitor Additional SAT ConnectionsLink or Satellite Cameras Video Inputs Table aReceivers AlarmsLocal Keypads AuxsThis page intentionally left blank Section Preliminaries Programmingeliminaries and ConfigurationUnconventional Programming Configurations Programming Diagram TwoInformation BOX Preliminariesogramming and ConfigurationLocal Keyboard Initialization Section Programming and Configuration SAT Menu ProgrammingWord about the Menu Discussion Layout 6C1510M-A 2/03 Programming and Configuration 8C1510M-A 2/03 Remaining lines can be configured as desired 10C1510M-A 2/03 Programming and Configuration 12C1510M-A 2/03 Programming and Configuration 14 C1510M-A 2/03 Programming and Configuration Other SAT Programming Programming PresetsProgramming Patterns Programming Zones Comms File 9760 MGR-SAT ProgrammingLink Cameras File Cameras FileAlarms File 22C1510M-A 2/03 Local SAT Operations Section OperationSelecting Monitors Selecting CamerasOperate a Camera Pattern View a Camera PresetChange Speeds 1.3.6.1 Focus ZoomOperating Sequences 9760-SAT Operations Controlling AuxiliariesSelecting Link Satellite Cameras Controlling Link Cameras Operating SuggestionsLink Camera Availability Local SAT Alarm Response Alarm Operations9760 SYSTEM-SAT Alarm Response 9760 keyboard Two SAT Units on the Same Node SAT and SAT-ALARM Unit ConfigurationsSATs and Alarm Units on the Same Node Information BOX Alarm Base AddressingWorking Rules Section System and Multipliexer Example System ExampleOverview 2C1510M-A 2/03 Basic System Example 4C1510M-A 2/03 Basic System Example 6C1510M-A 2/03 Attach and configure alarm inputs and wiring 8C1510M-A 2/03 Operation of the System Example 090538 16/08/00 Nd01 Alarm 0001 Trigger SAT Alarm Op01 Pr0990538 16/08/00 Nd01 Switcammon Camera 5007 Monitor 001 Op Example Overview Multiplexer ExamplesPart I Mux Control from the 9760 Side Example TWO MUX Control in a 9760-SAT System EnvironmentBasic System Example Part II Mux Control from the SAT Side Appendix I Communication and Connection Tutorial Section AppendicesAppendix II Remote Keypad Connection KBD300s Wired to the Remote Port KBD300 and KBD300V Attached to Remote Port KBD200 Keyboard Functions Appendix III Keypad Definitions and Templates4A 4B Appendix IV Models and Associated Equipment Appendix V Default Menu Reset AssignmentsIV-1 Models IV-2 Associated EquipmentKeyboard Factory Default Menu Settings Appendix VI Connector Pinout Listings of ALL Connectors 10C1510M-A 2/03 Section Miscellaneous Important Safeguards and WarningsSwitching SpecificationsMXB IndexProgramming Warranty Regulatory Notices Warranty and Return InformationISO9001
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C578M, C572M, C539M-A, C543M-A, C579M specifications

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