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Got a customer who has a electric shutter operated via rocker switch concerned if intruder gets in through roof as easy access. They can just open up from inside, could I isolate the inside switch through a relay on the Intruder Set Output, Where do you stand on trapping "intruder" inside seems a very grey area ? 

3 hours ago, Joe Doherty said:

Got a customer who has a electric shutter operated via rocker switch concerned if intruder gets in through roof as easy access. They can just open up from inside, could I isolate the inside switch through a relay on the Intruder Set Output, Where do you stand on trapping "intruder" inside seems a very grey area ? 

Better detection near roof and master blaster

3 hours ago, Joe Doherty said:

Keyswitch on outside, switch on inside it's rented so they don't want to start altering much.

so don't then would be my take

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14 hours ago, Joe Doherty said:

Got a customer who has a electric shutter operated via rocker switch concerned if intruder gets in through roof as easy access. They can just open up from inside, could I isolate the inside switch through a relay on the Intruder Set Output, Where do you stand on trapping "intruder" inside seems a very grey area ? 

Has the roller shutter not got manual chain override?

I cant see a problem with disabling the electrical side of the shutter, give the Police more time to get there.

We have a unit that was done over last year and the insurance company have requested a padlock from floor to shutter and the manual chain to stop the scumbags opening it.

On 14/07/2017 at 21:49, Joe Doherty said:

Where do you stand on trapping "intruder" inside seems a very grey area ? 

 

Intruder has gained access by circumventing a locked door - so if door remains locked, nil problemo.

 

I agree that it could be a grey area if, say, intruder was able to walk into somewhere without the use of tools or equipment then not be able to leave, i.e an open gate into a car sales forecourt that then locked itself.

 

That said it never seemed to be an issue with those pushbutton-to-exit-if-you-haven't-got-a-shotgun bank lobbies that seemed popular circa 2000 but now are usually swept away at refurb time. Nationwide seemed to use them a lot?

So, I've decided to take my work back underground.... to stop it falling into the wrong hands

 

43 minutes ago, datadiffusion said:

 

Intruder has gained access by circumventing a locked door - so if door remains locked, nil problemo.

 

I agree that it could be a grey area if, say, intruder was able to walk into somewhere without the use of tools or equipment then not be able to leave, i.e an open gate into a car sales forecourt that then locked itself.

 

That said it never seemed to be an issue with those pushbutton-to-exit-if-you-haven't-got-a-shotgun bank lobbies that seemed popular circa 2000 but now are usually swept away at refurb time. Nationwide seemed to use them a lot?

Glow in the dark exit, voice box warning of imminent gas release (really a smoke cloak) 

 

He will run fot it , cage otherside

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