-
Posts
11,515 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
172
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Downloads
Gallery
Blogs
Everything posted by PeterJames
-
Info on Viper circuit false alarm.
PeterJames replied to vykingman's topic in Detector Queries (Public)
Could be many things, so a bit more info is required. If its not wired eol then it may be a cable fault, it may also still be a cable fault if the power is dropping. When was it last serviced? How old is the standby battery? -
Hi and welcome
-
Ive known numpties to put their hands up, to stuff not knowing it cant be used against them, more so now there is less legal aid
-
okay then a judge falling for it
-
Sometimes its the way a person walks, moves around that people can id from. The kids that smashed my window came back a few days later and pulled a cable from one of the cameras, this time they were wearing hoodies on but they were wearing all the same clothes they were wearing the day they smashed the window. So we already had the ID pictures you could tell it was them without doubt. In a court of law you could that it was someone pretending to be them but I cant see any jury falling for that one.
-
I didnt know him but the Police did. That time I had Mega-Pixel cams all the other times they were analogue, but the cameras were positioned correctly. Aimed at getting faces and not tops of heads like many systems I have seen. I forgot to add the cameras on the shop also got two really good images of a couple of burglars that broke into a house up the end of the road. In fact we captured the whole thing only the house was too far away to get the number plates of the car.
-
?
-
I must have been lucky with mine then, three times Ive caught people who have "accidentally" damaged my car but not said anything. I caught the kids that tried to break into my shop, and I identified the kids that went around my village stealing from cars, because they came onto my driveway. The only thing I can say is in all those occasions the people committing the crimes had not planned the crime to begin with. I would say its lower than 90% overall but yes CCTV is quite easy to overcome if planned. Oh and those cheap safes are worth leaving around in plain sight with nothing in, twice now I have heard of customers who have had break ins and all they took was the safe that was empty. It would seem that once the burglar has found what he thinks is your valuables he gets out.
-
They were not aimed at anyone, topics often go off topic, nerds tend to chat
-
Thats right, it has been updated I had not realised
-
Or tell the insurance co its installed to BS4737
-
All depends on the risk of course, if you are known for dealing in used bank notes with random serial numbers you would need a proper alarm, if you only just have a pot to urinate in then the Yale bell box will do just fine. Anything in-between those two requires more or less kit. It never ceases to amaze me that people are must have the latest iphone regardless of cost but dont want to spend any money on protecting the contents of their home. The enquiries we get after the event, people have lost their irreplaceable jewellery left to them by their dear old granny, and their wide screen TV, and someone has left them a small brown package in the middle of there new lounge cream deep pile, for the sake of saving a few hundred £. I even had one customer that had to move because his missus refused to go back. The misery of a burglary versus the money it costs for a proper alarm, it just never makes sense to me.
-
Advanced technology alarm systems
PeterJames replied to Jamie Martin's topic in Members Lounge (Public)
-
Advanced technology alarm systems
PeterJames replied to Jamie Martin's topic in Members Lounge (Public)
Really, I think your original post was a deliberate attempt to pose as a genuine customer, yet according to your website you sell very similar security and you are based in Australia. I think you have been caught out and now clutching at straws. This is a security forum, its run by professional security experts, we already know more about you than you do. -
Advanced technology alarm systems
PeterJames replied to Jamie Martin's topic in Members Lounge (Public)
Eh pot kettle black. you started it with the bollox about how good Verisure is but your own email is linked to a website that has its own security company. This is a forum not a site for advertising your wears. But your little plan has backfired, anyone reading this topic will read it exactly as it is, and see straight through your recommendation and know exactly how Verisure operate. The irony is if you had come here and been honest you could have posted verisures details without any detriment -
Advanced technology alarm systems
PeterJames replied to Jamie Martin's topic in Members Lounge (Public)
And the fact that your email address is linked to an Australian company that supplies security systems exactly the same as Verisure would be nothing to do with your recommendation? -
Advanced technology alarm systems
PeterJames replied to Jamie Martin's topic in Members Lounge (Public)
I think you will find most professional companies offer everything Verisure can and more, and for a national company they have no accreditation, which in this day and age its the equivalent putting your money with Northern Rock -
20p a day sounds reasonable to me
-
Your not going to save much on £72 per annum?
-
Swerve solar powered, and for that matter anything in B&Q, they do have a wide range of goods some good and some rubbish but most of the electronic security they sell can be found on ebay for half the price (not that I would suggest you buy your security from ebay either. ) There are wireless systems that have bellboxes that just require power, so the wire only needs to be run to the nearest power source and not all the way back to the control panel. I am not sure which brands do this as I do not sell many of the smaller systems so I am less familiar, but I am sure someone will here know.
-
Unfortunately, you have fallen for the buy cheap buy twice. When you were in B&Q did you notice that they were not using the cheap tat they sell to protect their premises? I would advise that you take it back as it is less than a year old but as batteries are a consumable I think they could that you must have used all the battery power.
-
Recommend New Alarm System - Wireless 2016
PeterJames replied to alanfox's topic in Introduce Yourself
The vulnerability is the communication between the devices and the control panel. One way wireless has been around for years and I am not aware of any incidences where one way has been compromised because of the way it works. Two way is better for sure in the same way that a 3ltr engine is better than a 900cc one. Just to add if your insurance company is insisting on a burglar alarm, then you should not be considering DIY in the firts place but two way would be the choice of most professional installers -
Recommend New Alarm System - Wireless 2016
PeterJames replied to alanfox's topic in Introduce Yourself
Two way does not do the above as the detectors only become live when the panel is armed or in walk test -
He's Berkshire
-
Recommend New Alarm System - Wireless 2016
PeterJames replied to alanfox's topic in Introduce Yourself
With two way the detectors know when the panel is armed/disarmed so uses less battery power. The polling information between device and control is also better. Probably the most important bit is the fact that with one way there is a delay in detection operation after it has operated, this is to save battery power, the detector sees you move it reports it to the panel then it shuts down for 30 seconds, so in theory when you arm the system some of your detectors will not work for up to thirty seconds after the system is armed. Two way is more superior to one way but it will still work, and to say that is no good at all is like saying I have to get rid of my LCD TV and buy a LED one because LED uses less electricity, and the picture quality is better. So long as you can still watch ceebeebies does it really matter that much?