MrHappy Posted March 13, 2023 Posted March 13, 2023 35 minutes ago, norman said: Cracking first post, welcome to the forum... come out fighting ? Quote Mr Veritas God
norman Posted March 13, 2023 Posted March 13, 2023 Swinging, but not in the good sense. Quote Nothing is foolproof to a sufficiently talented fool.
al-yeti Posted March 13, 2023 Posted March 13, 2023 2 hours ago, MB63 said: Dont talk stupid. there are screws to hang the panel on. You don’t know what you are doing. Lol Quote
Biggie45 Posted March 16, 2023 Posted March 16, 2023 Similar issue I have inherited a pyronix system with a low battery in the siren that keeps setting off the panel. I don't have a ladder that can reach the siren to change the battery and it's an old system that does not give notifications it just makes noise! Alarm company won't share the engineers code. I'd considered pulling the fuse and battery out of the main console but the siren will likely go off. What's the best way to shut it all down or at least stop the alarm sounding because of the low battery without changing the battery? Quote
MrHappy Posted March 16, 2023 Posted March 16, 2023 6 hours ago, Biggie45 said: Similar issue I have inherited a pyronix system with a low battery in the siren that keeps setting off the panel. I don't have a ladder that can reach the siren to change the battery and it's an old system that does not give notifications it just makes noise! Alarm company won't share the engineers code. I'd considered pulling the fuse and battery out of the main console but the siren will likely go off. What's the best way to shut it all down or at least stop the alarm sounding because of the low battery without changing the battery? I've a crazy idea, pay an alarm man with ladder to fully disconnect it or repair it ? Or power it down internally & buy / hire a ladder & remove the battery(s) from the external sounder(s) ( the sounders often start making noises with faulty batteries despite the controls being powered down) Quote Mr Veritas God
sixwheeledbeast Posted March 16, 2023 Posted March 16, 2023 DIY homeowners get all het up when they feel entitled to an engineers code... * The programming of a system is owned by the programmer. The code protects the programmer from liability that programming was tampered. * It's part of the regs that an end user shouldn't have access to the programming parts of there own system. You are more than welcome to serve your time as an engineer to learn how to fully program a system. The fact you think an alarm systems important feature is push notifications is concerning. Quote
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