User`s manual

Monitoring Service Program Data
Certain variables may be necessary for the Monitoring Service, if they are to recognize the more complete
types of the recording formats.
In addition, you will need to know about compatibility of your format selection
and the Monitoring Service’s receiver(s). The next two sections deal with the extension codes for the ex-
tended format reporting and the codes for
4/9
reporting. Following that is a table of receiver compatibility.
3/1 and
4/1
Extended, and
4/2,
Reporting Data
NOTES:
1.
If you are sending to a receiver that interprets Extended formats from Radionics panels, it is likely to
expect trouble to be reported as an
“F”
instead of an “8” (consult with the monitoring service to make
sure). You can configure your system to swap the two characters in
Fn#235
(for receiver 1) and
Fn#245
(receiver 2). For this configuration, notify the monitoring service that the “8” will not indicate an alarm.
Swapping the two characters will preserve your ability to provide unique point identification as discussed
in Appendix B.
2.
If you are sending
3/1
extended sumcheck to an Ademco 685, the receiver will have to be in the “print
all” mode and the Low Speed format printout must be the one used for interpretation of the report. The
High Speed format printout will be incorrect on some reports.
Here is information about
3/1
or
4/1
reporting and their “extended” reporting. Three-one format would be
AAA
R
where the “A” are the account information (AAA for
3/1,
AAAA for
4/1
)
and
“R”
is the report (alarm)
code.
For extended reporting, this is followed by the same
“R”
three more times and the extension:
RRR
E
The
4/2
format has the four-digit account code, the Report Code, and the Extension (AAAA
R
E). An expla-
nation of the
“E”
codes follows. The meaning of the
“E”
depends on the report (alarm) code (“R”) meaning.
R
Code = 0 is a Bypass report. (Some receivers may show 0 as an “A.“) These include autoswinger, tempo-
rary, and permanent. The extension code
“E”
is the Category being bypassed, as indicated here:
E will be 0 for Fire, Keyswitch 5 for Interior Tamper B for Emergency
1 for Entry/Exit
6 for Day Zone
C for Environmental
2 for Perimeter 7 for Non-Alarm
D for Trouble Category
3 for Interior
8 for Audible Panic E for Auxiliary 1
4 for 24
Hour/Perim
Tamper 9 for Silent Panic
F for Auxiliary 2
R
Codes 1 through 7 (default settings) indicate the following. The number in parentheses is the Category
number as listed in the
Fn#400
Series.
R
Code = 1
is
Intrusion-including: Entry/Exit(Category
#1),
Perimeter
(2)
24-Hr
(4)
and Day Zone (6).
R
Code = 2 is an Interior Intrusion-Interior
(3)
Interior Tamper (5).
R
Code = 3 is Silent Panic (9).
R
Code = 4 is Audible Panic (8).
R
Code = 5 is Fire (10).
R
Code = 6 is Emergency (11).
R
Code = 7 is Environmental
(12)
Auxiliary1
(14)
Auxiliary2
(15)
Trouble Zone (13).
REMEMBER that these codes are the default, but can be changed by
Fn#
235 and 245. This is discussed
further in Appendix B, as a tool in the programming of point identification for multiple sensors.
3-26 AT&T Security System 8300 Installer’s Manual