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andy™

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Posts posted by andy™

  1. it is specialist (well, straight forward when you know what you are doing), its also one of the main things i do. the amount of dodgy installs i go is excessive. a large amount of gates i go to that are broken are also dangerous and its a good thing they have broken. find plenty photocells that have been bypassed, occasionally none at all. there is also far too many gates fitted with no edges. especially larger ones which would be way in excess of the max forces allowed. plenty where control panel is set wrong, motor force to 100% etc. no-one seems to care (or know in many cases) that they are classed as machinery and are covered by statute law and not guidelines like alarm & wiring regs etc

  2. 19 hours ago, Mattmasters said:

    Hi, 

     

    i know now it's not purely security but I am struggling to find any automatic gate engineers, does anyone know of a forum similar to this for automatic gates or does anyone know anybody that needs extra work for automatic gates? We only have bits and pieces but my so called engineer seems more interested in his new female friend than work..

     

    tha ks in advance..

     

     

    sussex is a bit far from me, post any questions and ill help with what i can (its mostly the wiring side i do and fabrication for modifications. for new installs i usually work with a few fabrication companies who do the mechanical side)

     

    also, im sure youre aware they have their own regs (12635, 12445, 12453 & various others), and if you leave a gate in a dangerous condition and something was to happen...

  3. which is why i recommend monitored and explain the differences between the various options to the customer and let them make a decision on what they want fitted (after all, its their property). all the extras are nice to have but cost more which is sometimes above what the customer is willing to spend

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  4. admittedly i dont install / maintain that many compared to some of you, but of all those i have installed ive never had any problems or been called back to any faults with them. maybe im just lucky, which is rare for me. as much as id rather install a monitored alarm for someone, not everyone wants one and sometimes its a basic dialler that gets fitted. or bells only

     

    customers may not always have an idea what they want but id rather give them choices rather than telling what they are having

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  5. 21 hours ago, datadiffusion said:

     

    It was a while ago but I'm pretty sure everything was totally enclosed - didn't venture past the door. I don't know much about distribution (although am a qualified spark) but we are only talking a 4" square room here.

    No doubt it was only fully enclosed being it dated from the 30s and nowadays it would be either totally exposed like the newer kit around the area or in a plastic shed.

     

     

    depends on the age i guess. newer ones are probably more enclosed, older stuff is fairly open. rarely ever get to see the inside of them, but this was from a recent trip inside one. plenty bits you dont want to touch

     

    P1150825%20-%20Copy_zpshs6bst9g.jpg

     

    and then there are private, fully enclosed ones like this. 11kv transformer is on the other side of the wall with 230/400v tails going straight into this

     

    P3166725_zpssuoztg8t.jpg

     

  6. 1 hour ago, Gabs said:

     

    I guess that is true. I'd like to be an engineer for a company like Northern Power Grid, installing alarm in substations, no worry of wires there. 

     

    I think they may do :D 

     

    make sure you get the 230/400v end of the transformer for its supply, the 11kv side lets the smoke out

  7. 38 minutes ago, james.wilson said:

    Showing armed state does not comply under the regs mate

     

    maybe not, but an R8 has a LED on the RKP showing if its unset or not

     

    id be looking more at why they want a remote control instead of using the RKP to arm / disarm the system.

     

    if they really need to see if its armed / disarmed from outside, one alternative would be to fit an alarm like a texecom elite with IP module and use their app to see its status

  8. 1 minute ago, sixwheeledbeast said:

    It's possible if partly blocked to trigger fire condition.

    possibility. we were moving around on top of a cherry picker fixing some cables to the girder so may have partially blocked it. didnt help that after we were allowed back in, it didnt get bypassed  so after a few minutes of getting back to where we were, it was back down and out the building again... CEO wasnt very happy

  9. no idea how they are supposed to work, not something i do. all i know was fire alarm sounded, we came down and then workshop manager told us the fire alarm was there and he had forgotten to disable it when we started work

  10. 6 hours ago, james.wilson said:

    But if its large and serviced id like a beam but never done it.

     

    and if you do have beam sensors, tell the sparky up the top pulling in cables before he moves in front and ends up evacuating the building... twice...

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