Gadget34 Posted June 29, 2020 Share Posted June 29, 2020 I had an issue today with the alarm sounding when not set. The panel said tamper and a zone number. This relates to the pir on the stairs. I entered the user code which cleared it but then when motion was detected the tamper alarm sounded again. It has now settled but I am worried this could trigger again. Does this sound like a faulty pir? Or should I check anything else first. I have asked a few local companies for prices but thought I would check if this was a common fault. The pir is labelled Saturn also any recommendations for a replacement sensor if this is required. Thanks Mark Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
james.wilson Posted June 29, 2020 Share Posted June 29, 2020 Tamper switch issue probably Quote securitywarehouse Security Supplies from Security Warehouse Trade Members please contact us for your TSI vetted trade discount. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PeterJames Posted July 2, 2020 Share Posted July 2, 2020 either that or a short between tamper and one of the alarm circuits, so maybe cable Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gadget34 Posted December 6, 2020 Author Share Posted December 6, 2020 Thanks for the replies. This has been fine since June and then suddenly started happening again last night. How would I go about checking the wiring? Or would you replace the pir first? The sensor looks ok and the tamper switch seems fine... Any particular sensors that work ok with the scantronic 9930? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MrHappy Posted December 6, 2020 Share Posted December 6, 2020 9930 is a keypad, the controls will either be DP or FSL any DP sensor can have resistors fitted, The tamper will be the controls, cable or the device low Ω's on a multi meter for the cable ect.. Quote Mr Veritas God Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PeterJames Posted December 6, 2020 Share Posted December 6, 2020 OP do you have a multi meter and know how to use it? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gadget34 Posted December 6, 2020 Author Share Posted December 6, 2020 Yea I have a multimeter and can probably figure out which resistance setting etc to put it on. Although the more basic the instructions the better Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
al-yeti Posted December 6, 2020 Share Posted December 6, 2020 3 hours ago, Gadget34 said: Yea I have a multimeter and can probably figure out which resistance setting etc to put it on. Although the more basic the instructions the better Are there resistors in the PIR? Or wires just striaght into the tamper and alarm terminals? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gadget34 Posted December 7, 2020 Author Share Posted December 7, 2020 The PIR has 4 wires in use. The black and red power ones. Then a blue and yellow but these have two resistors around them. Will try and upload a photo. Not sure how you do it on here? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gadget34 Posted December 7, 2020 Author Share Posted December 7, 2020 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
james.wilson Posted December 7, 2020 Share Posted December 7, 2020 Disconnect the circuit at the panel and meter the tamper pair on the sensor. The tamper switch is the red dot. Then short the cables at the pir and measure the resistance at the panel Quote securitywarehouse Security Supplies from Security Warehouse Trade Members please contact us for your TSI vetted trade discount. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gadget34 Posted December 7, 2020 Author Share Posted December 7, 2020 Is this a resistance measurement at the sensor and the same at the panel using a multimeter? When you say tamper pair there is only two wires apart from power. Do you mean these? And by short I assume you mean connecting the blue and yellow wire together at the sensor? Is there any expected readings or should I compare to a sensor that doesn’t cause tamper alarms? Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
james.wilson Posted December 7, 2020 Share Posted December 7, 2020 Put your meter on 200 ohms. Yes short the blue and yellow to check the cable but I'd expect a connection or the tamper switch the reading should be steady and not fluctuate Quote securitywarehouse Security Supplies from Security Warehouse Trade Members please contact us for your TSI vetted trade discount. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gadget34 Posted December 7, 2020 Author Share Posted December 7, 2020 So the first test 1) Disconnect the circuit at the panel and meter the tamper pair on the sensor. I don’t fully understand what to disconnect and which wires to test for this one? 2) Then short the cables at the pir and measure the resistance at the panel. So connect the yellow and blue together at the pir and monitor the blue and yellow at the panel whilst disconnected on the meter to check the cable is ok? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sixwheeledbeast Posted December 7, 2020 Share Posted December 7, 2020 1) Tamper terminals on PIR will be marked meter them and simulate closing the lid. 2) yep. All values should be monitored for a little while and be steady, although no guarantees on finding a very intermittent cable fault, chances point more towards the PIR but need to test these things. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gadget34 Posted December 7, 2020 Author Share Posted December 7, 2020 Ok I have done a couple of tests. 1) I put the meter across the bottom two pins in the sensor which I believe are the tamper ones. With the lid off I didn’t get a reading (no circuit) once I pushed the button it read 0 on the resistance 200k setting. 2) I shorted the cable at the pir and tested this at the control box and got a resistance reading of 0. When disconnected I didn’t get a circuit. 3) I took a reading of the cable disconnected at the panel with the pir sensor fully connected. This was 02.2 on the meter. With the lid off the sensor I didn’t get a reading. I assume this means it could be the pir? Unless it is one of the resisters within the pir? The PIR model is intellisense IS-215T. Is there a recommended replacement to work with the current wiring (4 wires with the resistor) which I believe is called EOL? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
al-yeti Posted December 7, 2020 Share Posted December 7, 2020 1 hour ago, Gadget34 said: Ok I have done a couple of tests. 1) I put the meter across the bottom two pins in the sensor which I believe are the tamper ones. With the lid off I didn’t get a reading (no circuit) once I pushed the button it read 0 on the resistance 200k setting. 2) I shorted the cable at the pir and tested this at the control box and got a resistance reading of 0. When disconnected I didn’t get a circuit. 3) I took a reading of the cable disconnected at the panel with the pir sensor fully connected. This was 02.2 on the meter. With the lid off the sensor I didn’t get a reading. I assume this means it could be the pir? Unless it is one of the resisters within the pir? The PIR model is intellisense IS-215T. Is there a recommended replacement to work with the current wiring (4 wires with the resistor) which I believe is called EOL? 2.2 what? Did you change the range when you read that or left it on the 200ohm range If you get good reading on the cable , and not correct reading from panel and fault is intermittent? Maybe you didn't put cables back properly , I doubt the resistors can go faulty Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
james.wilson Posted December 8, 2020 Share Posted December 8, 2020 You want to be on 200 ohms not 200k for the short tests Quote securitywarehouse Security Supplies from Security Warehouse Trade Members please contact us for your TSI vetted trade discount. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gadget34 Posted December 8, 2020 Author Share Posted December 8, 2020 All tests were done on 200k. I can’t see the cable being at fault though as I could see the resistance change depending on the state of the pir. Lid off there wasn’t a circuit and then lid on it read 02.2. I believe the resistance would then increase further if someone activated the pir motion. i read this elsewhere which I believe is what I am seeing as I also measured the resistance and the pir alarm wires and these are 0.46 ish which fits with the below? As an example if a 4.7k resistor is used for the alarm contact and a 2.2k resistor is used for the tamper/EOL, In the 'active' condition the panel would see 4.7 plus 2.2 equals roughly 7k ohms. In the 'settled' condition the panel would just see the 2.2 or EOL. In the 'tamper' condition the panel would see zilch IE cut cable-open circuit or direct short tamper as well. What I don’t know is what reading would be at the panel when the pir is in the fault state I.e causing a tamper alarm on motion with the alarm unset. any recommendations for a compatible pir? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
james.wilson Posted December 8, 2020 Share Posted December 8, 2020 agreed but 2000 ohms is a lot. I would expect it to be the pir but if you test the tamper switch at 200 ohms this will confirm, testing set on 200k wont show a high reading. It should be very close to 0.3 ohms (not 0.3 K Ohms) plus whatever size the built in series resistor ir (not the ones in the terminals) you could try adding something to the red dot to adjust the close point if the case is slightly twisted Quote securitywarehouse Security Supplies from Security Warehouse Trade Members please contact us for your TSI vetted trade discount. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
al-yeti Posted December 8, 2020 Share Posted December 8, 2020 1 hour ago, Gadget34 said: All tests were done on 200k. I can’t see the cable being at fault though as I could see the resistance change depending on the state of the pir. Lid off there wasn’t a circuit and then lid on it read 02.2. I believe the resistance would then increase further if someone activated the pir motion. i read this elsewhere which I believe is what I am seeing as I also measured the resistance and the pir alarm wires and these are 0.46 ish which fits with the below? As an example if a 4.7k resistor is used for the alarm contact and a 2.2k resistor is used for the tamper/EOL, In the 'active' condition the panel would see 4.7 plus 2.2 equals roughly 7k ohms. In the 'settled' condition the panel would just see the 2.2 or EOL. In the 'tamper' condition the panel would see zilch IE cut cable-open circuit or direct short tamper as well. What I don’t know is what reading would be at the panel when the pir is in the fault state I.e causing a tamper alarm on motion with the alarm unset. any recommendations for a compatible pir? So your saying the fault now is permanent? If you put it back altogether alarm won't set ? Due to permanent fault on that circuit ? Or you tested incorrectly? Not that our can't be at fault , I would have just swapped the boards over with another circuit by now , or compared it to another circuit the same way depending on lengths Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gadget34 Posted December 8, 2020 Author Share Posted December 8, 2020 The alarm is currently working as normal. James can you confirm where I test the tamper again? Is this at the pir end or the control box end? it will likely work for another 6 months ok now... just annoying when it does eventually cause the false tamper. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
al-yeti Posted December 8, 2020 Share Posted December 8, 2020 41 minutes ago, Gadget34 said: it will likely work for another 6 months ok now... just annoying when it does eventually cause the false tamper. So swap the board with another PIR dude , fault should follow if it's the put, meaning from another room Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gadget34 Posted December 8, 2020 Author Share Posted December 8, 2020 I don’t mind buying a new one for £20/£30. Do you know what model what be compatible? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
al-yeti Posted December 8, 2020 Share Posted December 8, 2020 14 minutes ago, Gadget34 said: I don’t mind buying a new one for £20/£30. Do you know what model what be compatible? Lol , any but if you going to spend £20/30 on a new PIR then forget these ones Is312 is a replacement for what you have But for your budget a quad PIR texecom or optex are better Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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