Instruction Manual
Table Of Contents
- SECTION 1 General Information
- SECTION 2 InterReach Fusion System Description
- SECTION 3 Fusion Main Hub
- SECTION 4 Fusion Expansion Hub
- SECTION 5 Remote Access Unit
- SECTION 6 Designing a Fusion Solution
- SECTION 7 Installing Fusion
- SECTION 8 Replacing Fusion Components
- SECTION 9 Maintenance, Troubleshooting, and Technical Assistance
- APPENDIX A Cables and Connectors
- A.1 75 Ohm CATV Cable
- A.2 Fiber Optical Cables
- A.3 Coaxial Cable
- A.4 Standard Modem Cable
- A.5 TCP/IP Cross-over Cable
- A.6 DB-25 to DB-9 Null Modem Cable
- APPENDIX B Compliance
- B.1 Fusion System Approval Status
- B.2 Human Exposure to RF
- APPENDIX C Faults, Warnings, Status Tables
- C.1 Fault Messages Reported by Hubs
- C.2 Faults Reported for System CPU
- C.3 Faults for RAUs
- C.4 Warning/Status Messages for Hubs
- C.5 Warning/Status Messages for System CPUs
- C.6 Warning /Status Messages for RAUs
Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-49
D-620TBD-0-20 Rev A CONFIDENTIAL
Connecting Contact Alarms to a Fusion System
Using a Base Station to Monitor Fusion
NOTE: The BTS must be configured, by the carrier, for contact closure monitoring
prior to connecting a Fusion Main Hub to it.
When you connect a BTS to Fusion, the Fusion Main Hub is the output of the alarms
(alarm source) and the BTS is the input (alarm sense), as shown in Figure 7-19. An
interface cable is required between the daisy-chain cable and the BTS. Because BTS
alarm interface pinouts and Fusion-to-BTS distances vary, this cable is often custom
and wired on-site. Refer to Section 3.2.1 for Alarm Contact details (Normally
Closed).
Figure 7-19 Using a BTS to Monitor Fusion
NOTE: For normally open contacts, the fault and warning contacts need to
be wired in parallel with other Main Hubs.
NOTE: LGC Wireless does not recommend using normally open contacts.
BTS
Interface
Cable
Alarm
Sense
Alarm
Source
Alarm
Source
5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable
Fusion Main Hub
(custom made, on-site)