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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#41
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On 09/10/2019 16:50, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , dennis@home wrote: And the CO2 and other stuff when they catch fire :-) Apparently some EU countries have special mobile tanks to dump an entire Tesla car into and flood it, because those Lithium batteries are sods to put out after a vehicle fire. water of course makes it worse. And a full tank of petrol is safe as houses? ;-) Relatively, probably. Even with cars that are well on fire, only a small proportion ever have the petrol tank go. Electric car fires are quite likely to be battery fires in the first place and are then very difficult to deal with. SteveW |
#42
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On 09/10/2019 17:20, Steve Walker wrote:
On 09/10/2019 13:50, Tim+ wrote: dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 12:53, R D S wrote: On 07/10/2019 05:30, Andy Burns wrote: People seem to think this is normal/acceptable ... Yep. A housing estate was built around our small row of terraces about 12 years ago. For whatever reason (Faulty? Windows open? Pets left in? Insensibly placed sensors? Power outages?), I can't remember the last time I went more than a few hours without hearing an alarm wail. Sometimes just for a couple of minutes, sometimes all day/night. Makes me dread summer. If one sounds for more than 20 minutes you can get the council to silence it, and bill the owner for doing so. How will they silence it? Long ladder and a can of squirty foam? Personally I dont think councils would put workers lives at risk (working at height) just to deal with a self limiting nuisance. I could be wrong though. It is a requirement for owners of properties with alarms to register them with the police and nominate two keyholders. Most people probably don't, but report the alarm to the police and request that they contact the keyholders. If it turns out (most likely) that they have not nominated any, reporting a noise nuisance (not as a one off) to the council and pointing out the lack of nominated keyholders may get them to at least contact the owners and make threats of action. Some years ago my Brothers next door neighbours were on holiday and their alarm went off and did not stop. A phone call was made to the council and they said that they could come and stop the alarm but the owner would get a bill. In the end it was decided that I should disable the bell box to save the neighbours (who were a family that everyone on the street got one with) the money and let them fix it when they got back off holiday. -- Adam |
#43
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![]() "Andrew" wrote in message ... On 09/10/2019 09:52, dennis@home wrote: On 08/10/2019 22:34, Rod Speed wrote: 8 Didnt happen here. We had the mains off for 3 hours to replace a couple of power poles which have the 11KV distribution line on the top with the 4 wire 240/415 service below that. That sound stupid, if the 11kV falls down you could get contact with the 240V and give someone a good shock. Round here, where that occurs there is an earthed bare copper wire above the 240/415 lines so that a breaker will blow before the low voltage lines are hit. Not here, but the breaker does trip when that happens anyway. |
#44
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On 08/10/2019 12:59, dennis@home wrote:
On 08/10/2019 11:20, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â* alan_m wrote: My bell box has a rechargeable battery that is also trickle charged in my wired system via the alarm panel. My bell box also has red flashing LEDs so a self contained non-rechargeable battery may not last that long. The tamper circuit in a bell box is often a spring loaded mechanical switch which when the box is removed from the wall is activated. I thought the bell box battery is only there so it will sound if it or the wiring to it is tampered with. Under other circumstances, the panel supplies the ringing volts to it - either from mains or its battery. Self Actuating Bells do not ring whenÂ* voltage is supplied from the panel. The 12v from the panel stops them ringing and charges the battery. When an alarm condition exists the 12V is removed and they bell rings until it comes back or the battery goes flat or if its a modern one a timer expires. There is a difference between SABs and SCBs. A SAB's siren is powered via the control panel and the SCB's siren is powered via it's internal battery. 0V is normally applied to the bell terminal on both to activate the siren. The removal of 12v to either will activate the tamper and the siren will sound due it's internal batteries. Only cheap and nasty DIY alarms need 12V to operate the bell. If you have one then get rid of it as it takes seconds to cut the wires and then there is no external bell. The old fashioned strobes may be powered from the box, mine are, they take too much power for the battery. Its not the same 12V that operates the rest of the box. The main reason for the strobes having a different supply to that of the siren is so that they can continue to flash after the siren has stopped. -- Adam |
#45
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On 09/10/2019 12:33, dennis@home wrote:
On 09/10/2019 10:26, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â* dennis@home wrote: On 08/10/2019 11:20, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â*Â* alan_m wrote: My bell box has a rechargeable battery that is also trickle charged in my wired system via the alarm panel. My bell box also has red flashing LEDs so a self contained non-rechargeable battery may not last that long. The tamper circuit in a bell box is often a spring loaded mechanical switch which when the box is removed from the wall is activated. I thought the bell box battery is only there so it will sound if it or the wiring to it is tampered with. Under other circumstances, the panel supplies the ringing volts to it - either from mains or its battery. Self Actuating Bells do not ring whenÂ* voltage is supplied from the panel. The 12v from the panel stops them ringing and charges the battery. OK. When an alarm condition exists the 12V is removed and they bell rings until it comes back or the battery goes flat or if its a modern one a timer expires. Only cheap and nasty DIY alarms need 12V to operate the bell. If you have one then get rid of it as it takes seconds to cut the wires and then there is no external bell. But if you remove the 12v the sounder sounds? It does on a decent one. No expert on alarm internals since I've only ever followed a wiring diagram. But with your method, it would mean the sounder no longer works if the internal battery is kaput? That's why you can test them. Its how all the bell boxes on banks work so it can't be the worst way. No banks use one that rings when it is powered by 12v in an alarm condition. I have actually installed some for Chubb alarms but it was a long time ago and I quit as I didn't like the training bloke as he was getting things wrong about mains and didn't like being corrected. It was my first proper job before I moved the GEC telecomms. The old fashioned strobes may be powered from the box, mine are, they take too much power for the battery. Its not the same 12V that operates the rest of the box. Thing is the bell box should be situated where it's difficult to get at. Which means changing it or the battery equally difficult? The battery is fine for years. Not all buildings have somewhere difficult to get to. And anyone who feeds it with accessible cabling should be shot. ;-) crowbar, rip box off wall cut wires and one that needs power from the panel goes quiet. Both SABs and SCBs should still ring if ripped from the wall. It would also set of the internal alarm and any other bell boxes. It's also a good bet that it would also set off an alarm signal to a monitoring company. BTW cutting the telephone wires on a proper monitored system also actives the monitoring company. Mind you opening one door without first closing another door on an unset alarm can also set of a silent alarm in some houses BTDTGTTS. The police were there in about 3 minutes. -- Adam |
#46
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ARW wrote:
A SAB's siren is powered via the control panel and the SCB's siren is powered via it's internal battery. 0V is normally applied to the bell terminal on both to activate the siren. The removal of 12v to either will activate the tamper and the siren will sound due it's internal batteries. Given the bell-box is outside and difficult to reach, you'd expect them to be more likely to have a dead battery, but I suppose in that case the sounder wouldn't sound* after a power cut, so I assume most of the ones causing nuisance have a dead internal panel battery? [*] actually there was one last year that sounded like it was being strangled/drowned when it went off, could have been the remnants of the bell-box battery. |
#47
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On Thu, 10 Oct 2019 06:23:35 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: Not here You certainly are not all there, you abnormal trolling senile cretin from Oz! -- Website (from 2007) dedicated to the 85-year-old trolling senile cretin from Oz: https://www.pcreview.co.uk/threads/r...d-faq.2973853/ |
#48
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On 09/10/2019 21:10, Andy Burns wrote:
ARW wrote: A SAB's siren is powered via the control panel and the SCB's siren is powered via it's internal battery. 0V is normally applied to the bell terminal on both to activate the siren. The removal of 12v to either will activate the tamper and the siren will sound due it's internal batteries. Given the bell-box is outside and difficult to reach, you'd expect them to be more likely to have a dead battery, but I suppose in that case the sounder wouldn't sound* after a power cut, so I assume most of the ones causing nuisance have a dead internal panel battery? [*] actually there was one last year that sounded like it was being strangled/drowned when it went off, could have been the remnants of the bell-box battery. Yes, a dead internal battery is almost certainly the problem. But bell boxes seldom use SLAs as their back up power. -- Adam |
#49
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On 09/10/2019 16:50, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , dennis@home wrote: And the CO2 and other stuff when they catch fire :-) Apparently some EU countries have special mobile tanks to dump an entire Tesla car into and flood it, because those Lithium batteries are sods to put out after a vehicle fire. water of course makes it worse. And a full tank of petrol is safe as houses? ;-) Having had a full tank of petrol fall off a car (rust around the tank) I don't think its very dangerous. I left the car with the tank under it still attached by the fuel line to phone the AA. When I got back someone had chucked three fag ends in the petrol on the ground. |
#50
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On 09/10/2019 17:20, Steve Walker wrote:
On 09/10/2019 13:50, Tim+ wrote: dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 12:53, R D S wrote: On 07/10/2019 05:30, Andy Burns wrote: People seem to think this is normal/acceptable ... Yep. A housing estate was built around our small row of terraces about 12 years ago. For whatever reason (Faulty? Windows open? Pets left in? Insensibly placed sensors? Power outages?), I can't remember the last time I went more than a few hours without hearing an alarm wail. Sometimes just for a couple of minutes, sometimes all day/night. Makes me dread summer. If one sounds for more than 20 minutes you can get the council to silence it, and bill the owner for doing so. How will they silence it? Long ladder and a can of squirty foam? Personally I dont think councils would put workers lives at risk (working at height) just to deal with a self limiting nuisance. I could be wrong though. It is a requirement for owners of properties with alarms to register them with the police and nominate two keyholders. Most people probably don't, but report the alarm to the police and request that they contact the keyholders. If it turns out (most likely) that they have not nominated any, reporting a noise nuisance (not as a one off) to the council and pointing out the lack of nominated keyholders may get them to at least contact the owners and make threats of action. SteveW since when? |
#51
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On 09/10/2019 21:42, dennis@home wrote:
On 09/10/2019 17:20, Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 13:50, Tim+ wrote: dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 12:53, R D S wrote: On 07/10/2019 05:30, Andy Burns wrote: People seem to think this is normal/acceptable ... Yep. A housing estate was built around our small row of terraces about 12 years ago. For whatever reason (Faulty? Windows open? Pets left in? Insensibly placed sensors? Power outages?), I can't remember the last time I went more than a few hours without hearing an alarm wail. Sometimes just for a couple of minutes, sometimes all day/night. Makes me dread summer. If one sounds for more than 20 minutes you can get the council to silence it, and bill the owner for doing so. How will they silence it? Long ladder and a can of squirty foam? Personally I dont think councils would put workers lives at risk (working at height) just to deal with a self limiting nuisance. I could be wrong though. It is a requirement for owners of properties with alarms to register them with the police and nominate two keyholders. Most people probably don't, but report the alarm to the police and request that they contact the keyholders. If it turns out (most likely) that they have not nominated any, reporting a noise nuisance (not as a one off) to the council and pointing out the lack of nominated keyholders may get them to at least contact the owners and make threats of action. SteveW since when? It was certainly that way, right back in the mid-90s - I got the form needed back then. In fact, I've quite likely still got a copy somewhere. Apparently, it has changed a bit due to "THE CLEAN NEIGHBOURHOODS AND ENVIRONMENT ACT 2005" which transferred such powers to the council and it is now up to them whether an area is designated as a zone where a (single) keyholder must be named. SteveW |
#52
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On Wednesday, 9 October 2019 21:00:38 UTC+1, ARW wrote:
On 09/10/2019 12:33, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 10:26, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â* dennis@home wrote: On 08/10/2019 11:20, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â*Â* alan_m wrote: My bell box has a rechargeable battery that is also trickle charged in my wired system via the alarm panel. My bell box also has red flashing LEDs so a self contained non-rechargeable battery may not last that long. The tamper circuit in a bell box is often a spring loaded mechanical switch which when the box is removed from the wall is activated. I thought the bell box battery is only there so it will sound if it or the wiring to it is tampered with. Under other circumstances, the panel supplies the ringing volts to it - either from mains or its battery. Self Actuating Bells do not ring whenÂ* voltage is supplied from the panel. The 12v from the panel stops them ringing and charges the battery. OK. When an alarm condition exists the 12V is removed and they bell rings until it comes back or the battery goes flat or if its a modern one a timer expires. Only cheap and nasty DIY alarms need 12V to operate the bell. If you have one then get rid of it as it takes seconds to cut the wires and then there is no external bell. But if you remove the 12v the sounder sounds? It does on a decent one. No expert on alarm internals since I've only ever followed a wiring diagram. But with your method, it would mean the sounder no longer works if the internal battery is kaput? That's why you can test them. Its how all the bell boxes on banks work so it can't be the worst way. No banks use one that rings when it is powered by 12v in an alarm condition. I have actually installed some for Chubb alarms but it was a long time ago and I quit as I didn't like the training bloke as he was getting things wrong about mains and didn't like being corrected. It was my first proper job before I moved the GEC telecomms. The old fashioned strobes may be powered from the box, mine are, they take too much power for the battery. Its not the same 12V that operates the rest of the box. Thing is the bell box should be situated where it's difficult to get at. |
#53
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On 10/10/2019 07:49, polygonum_on_google wrote:
On Wednesday, 9 October 2019 21:00:38 UTC+1, ARW wrote: On 09/10/2019 12:33, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 10:26, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â* dennis@home wrote: On 08/10/2019 11:20, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â*Â* alan_m wrote: My bell box has a rechargeable battery that is also trickle charged in my wired system via the alarm panel. My bell box also has red flashing LEDs so a self contained non-rechargeable battery may not last that long. The tamper circuit in a bell box is often a spring loaded mechanical switch which when the box is removed from the wall is activated. I thought the bell box battery is only there so it will sound if it or the wiring to it is tampered with. Under other circumstances, the panel supplies the ringing volts to it - either from mains or its battery. Self Actuating Bells do not ring whenÂ* voltage is supplied from the panel. The 12v from the panel stops them ringing and charges the battery. OK. When an alarm condition exists the 12V is removed and they bell rings until it comes back or the battery goes flat or if its a modern one a timer expires. Only cheap and nasty DIY alarms need 12V to operate the bell. If you have one then get rid of it as it takes seconds to cut the wires and then there is no external bell. But if you remove the 12v the sounder sounds? It does on a decent one. No expert on alarm internals since I've only ever followed a wiring diagram. But with your method, it would mean the sounder no longer works if the internal battery is kaput? That's why you can test them. Its how all the bell boxes on banks work so it can't be the worst way. No banks use one that rings when it is powered by 12v in an alarm condition. I have actually installed some for Chubb alarms but it was a long time ago and I quit as I didn't like the training bloke as he was getting things wrong about mains and didn't like being corrected. It was my first proper job before I moved the GEC telecomms. The old fashioned strobes may be powered from the box, mine are, they take too much power for the battery. Its not the same 12V that operates the rest of the box. Thing is the bell box should be situated where it's difficult to get at. Which means changing it or the battery equally difficult? The battery is fine for years. Not all buildings have somewhere difficult to get to. And anyone who feeds it with accessible cabling should be shot. ;-) crowbar, rip box off wall cut wires and one that needs power from the panel goes quiet. Both SABs and SCBs should still ring if ripped from the wall. It would also set of the internal alarm and any other bell boxes. I though high density PU foam was de-rigueur for that these days. It's also a good bet that it would also set off an alarm signal to a monitoring company. BTW cutting the telephone wires on a proper monitored system also actives the monitoring company. Mind you opening one door without first closing another door on an unset alarm can also set of a silent alarm in some houses BTDTGTTS. The police were there in about 3 minutes. How will that work when it becomes snap the fibre? Same way if monitoring sends a ping and doesn't get a response. They try to ring the alarm contact number(s) and if no response (or the duress code is given) a priority police visit. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#54
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In article ,
Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 16:50, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , dennis@home wrote: And the CO2 and other stuff when they catch fire :-) Apparently some EU countries have special mobile tanks to dump an entire Tesla car into and flood it, because those Lithium batteries are sods to put out after a vehicle fire. water of course makes it worse. And a full tank of petrol is safe as houses? ;-) Relatively, probably. Even with cars that are well on fire, only a small proportion ever have the petrol tank go. But on nearly every car crash you see on TV, the whole thing explodes into bits? ;-) Electric car fires are quite likely to be battery fires in the first place and are then very difficult to deal with. Have you figures to support this 'quite likely'? And why would they be more likely to burst into flames than other battery devices? Everything has a risk. Like a diesel spill killing a motor cyclist. -- *Certain frogs can be frozen solid, then thawed, and survive * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#55
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In article ,
dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 16:50, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , dennis@home wrote: And the CO2 and other stuff when they catch fire :-) Apparently some EU countries have special mobile tanks to dump an entire Tesla car into and flood it, because those Lithium batteries are sods to put out after a vehicle fire. water of course makes it worse. And a full tank of petrol is safe as houses? ;-) Having had a full tank of petrol fall off a car (rust around the tank) I don't think its very dangerous. I left the car with the tank under it still attached by the fuel line to phone the AA. When I got back someone had chucked three fag ends in the petrol on the ground. Does that come under the heading of every electric vehicle involved in an accident will burst into flames, but petrol cars never do? -- *Your kid may be an honours student, but you're still an idiot. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#56
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On 09/10/2019 23:33, Steve Walker wrote:
On 09/10/2019 21:42, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 17:20, Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 13:50, Tim+ wrote: dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 12:53, R D S wrote: On 07/10/2019 05:30, Andy Burns wrote: People seem to think this is normal/acceptable ... Yep. A housing estate was built around our small row of terraces about 12 years ago. For whatever reason (Faulty? Windows open? Pets left in? Insensibly placed sensors? Power outages?), I can't remember the last time I went more than a few hours without hearing an alarm wail. Sometimes just for a couple of minutes, sometimes all day/night. Makes me dread summer. If one sounds for more than 20 minutes you can get the council to silence it, and bill the owner for doing so. How will they silence it? Long ladder and a can of squirty foam? Personally I dont think councils would put workers lives at risk (working at height) just to deal with a self limiting nuisance. I could be wrong though. It is a requirement for owners of properties with alarms to register them with the police and nominate two keyholders. Most people probably don't, but report the alarm to the police and request that they contact the keyholders. If it turns out (most likely) that they have not nominated any, reporting a noise nuisance (not as a one off) to the council and pointing out the lack of nominated keyholders may get them to at least contact the owners and make threats of action. SteveW since when? It was certainly that way, right back in the mid-90s - I got the form needed back then. In fact, I've quite likely still got a copy somewhere. Apparently, it has changed a bit due to "THE CLEAN NEIGHBOURHOODS AND ENVIRONMENT ACT 2005" which transferred such powers to the council and it is now up to them whether an area is designated as a zone where a (single) keyholder must be named. SteveW I think you will find there is no requirement to register a DIY alarm. There isn't any need to register any alarm that doesn't communicate with the outside world by e.g. phone. There is a requirement to register one that is monitored or auto dials the police. There are also servicing requirements for such a system. |
#57
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On 10/10/2019 07:49, polygonum_on_google wrote:
On Wednesday, 9 October 2019 21:00:38 UTC+1, ARW wrote: On 09/10/2019 12:33, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 10:26, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â* dennis@home wrote: On 08/10/2019 11:20, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â*Â* alan_m wrote: My bell box has a rechargeable battery that is also trickle charged in my wired system via the alarm panel. My bell box also has red flashing LEDs so a self contained non-rechargeable battery may not last that long. The tamper circuit in a bell box is often a spring loaded mechanical switch which when the box is removed from the wall is activated. I thought the bell box battery is only there so it will sound if it or the wiring to it is tampered with. Under other circumstances, the panel supplies the ringing volts to it - either from mains or its battery. Self Actuating Bells do not ring whenÂ* voltage is supplied from the panel. The 12v from the panel stops them ringing and charges the battery. OK. When an alarm condition exists the 12V is removed and they bell rings until it comes back or the battery goes flat or if its a modern one a timer expires. Only cheap and nasty DIY alarms need 12V to operate the bell. If you have one then get rid of it as it takes seconds to cut the wires and then there is no external bell. But if you remove the 12v the sounder sounds? It does on a decent one. No expert on alarm internals since I've only ever followed a wiring diagram. But with your method, it would mean the sounder no longer works if the internal battery is kaput? That's why you can test them. Its how all the bell boxes on banks work so it can't be the worst way. No banks use one that rings when it is powered by 12v in an alarm condition. I have actually installed some for Chubb alarms but it was a long time ago and I quit as I didn't like the training bloke as he was getting things wrong about mains and didn't like being corrected. It was my first proper job before I moved the GEC telecomms. The old fashioned strobes may be powered from the box, mine are, they take too much power for the battery. Its not the same 12V that operates the rest of the box. Thing is the bell box should be situated where it's difficult to get at. Which means changing it or the battery equally difficult? The battery is fine for years. Not all buildings have somewhere difficult to get to. And anyone who feeds it with accessible cabling should be shot. ;-) crowbar, rip box off wall cut wires and one that needs power from the panel goes quiet. Both SABs and SCBs should still ring if ripped from the wall. It would also set of the internal alarm and any other bell boxes. It's also a good bet that it would also set off an alarm signal to a monitoring company. BTW cutting the telephone wires on a proper monitored system also actives the monitoring company. Mind you opening one door without first closing another door on an unset alarm can also set of a silent alarm in some houses BTDTGTTS. The police were there in about 3 minutes. How will that work when it becomes snap the fibre? The same way as the bell boxes work, you need an active signal to hold the alarm off. Its why the damn things go off in a power cut, no power in the panels battery to hold the no alarm condition. |
#58
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On 09/10/2019 21:21, ARW wrote:
On 09/10/2019 21:10, Andy Burns wrote: ARW wrote: A SAB's siren is powered via the control panel and the SCB's siren is powered via it's internal battery. 0V is normally applied to the bell terminal on both to activate the siren. The removal of 12v to either will activate the tamper and the siren will sound due it's internal batteries. Given the bell-box is outside and difficult to reach, you'd expect them to be more likely to have a dead battery, but I suppose in that case the sounder wouldn't sound* after a power cut, so I assume most of the ones causing nuisance have a dead internal panel battery? [*] actually there was one last year that sounded like it was being strangled/drowned when it went off, could have been the remnants of the bell-box battery. Yes, a dead internal battery is almost certainly the problem. But bell boxes seldom use SLAs as their back up power. Usably a very small rechargeable pack. About 6V in mine but less than AA in size. |
#59
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On 10/10/2019 11:14, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 16:50, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , dennis@home wrote: And the CO2 and other stuff when they catch fire :-) Apparently some EU countries have special mobile tanks to dump an entire Tesla car into and flood it, because those Lithium batteries are sods to put out after a vehicle fire. water of course makes it worse. And a full tank of petrol is safe as houses? ;-) Relatively, probably. Even with cars that are well on fire, only a small proportion ever have the petrol tank go. But on nearly every car crash you see on TV, the whole thing explodes into bits? ;-) Electric car fires are quite likely to be battery fires in the first place and are then very difficult to deal with. Have you figures to support this 'quite likely'? And why would they be more likely to burst into flames than other battery devices? Everything has a risk. Like a diesel spill killing a motor cyclist. Diesel spills don't kill motorcyclist, motorcyclists kill themselves in many cases. They appear to think they can take bends at the same speed as a car when in reality they don't have a chance on public roads. Cars stick to the roads far better than motorcycles and its not as dangerous if they over do it. Roads are pretty unpredictable as far as friction is concerned and a small bump will throw a motorcycle off but have virtually zero effect on a car, especially one with working stability control. |
#60
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On 10/10/2019 11:18, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 16:50, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , dennis@home wrote: And the CO2 and other stuff when they catch fire :-) Apparently some EU countries have special mobile tanks to dump an entire Tesla car into and flood it, because those Lithium batteries are sods to put out after a vehicle fire. water of course makes it worse. And a full tank of petrol is safe as houses? ;-) Having had a full tank of petrol fall off a car (rust around the tank) I don't think its very dangerous. I left the car with the tank under it still attached by the fuel line to phone the AA. When I got back someone had chucked three fag ends in the petrol on the ground. Does that come under the heading of every electric vehicle involved in an accident will burst into flames, but petrol cars never do? There has to be an ignition source for petrol and diesel. The battery is an ignition source in its own right. Just puncturing a LiIon battery can make it explode. Even in the US with the cars that were burning after being rear ended it was all of them that burst into flames, just a few out of the hundreds of crashes. Most car fires were cause in the engine compartment by the hydraulic fluid dripping on the exhaust manifold. Petrol just evaporated instantly, the hydraulic fluid stuck to it and got hot enough to ignite. I don't know if modern fluid does the same but there doesn't appear to be as many fires these days despite there being more cars. |
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In article ,
dennis@home wrote: I think you will find there is no requirement to register a DIY alarm. There isn't any need to register any alarm that doesn't communicate with the outside world by e.g. phone. Mine has an STD which dials my mobile phone. Nothing in the instructions saying it has to be registered. -- *Never test the depth of the water with both feet.* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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In article ,
dennis@home wrote: Most car fires were cause in the engine compartment by the hydraulic fluid dripping on the exhaust manifold. Petrol just evaporated instantly, the hydraulic fluid stuck to it and got hot enough to ignite. Have you got data for this hypothesis? -- *Very funny Scotty, now beam down my clothes. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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On 10/10/2019 14:11, dennis@home wrote:
On 09/10/2019 23:33, Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 21:42, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 17:20, Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 13:50, Tim+ wrote: dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 12:53, R D S wrote: On 07/10/2019 05:30, Andy Burns wrote: People seem to think this is normal/acceptable ... Yep. A housing estate was built around our small row of terraces about 12 years ago. For whatever reason (Faulty? Windows open? Pets left in? Insensibly placed sensors? Power outages?), I can't remember the last time I went more than a few hours without hearing an alarm wail. Sometimes just for a couple of minutes, sometimes all day/night. Makes me dread summer. If one sounds for more than 20 minutes you can get the council to silence it, and bill the owner for doing so. How will they silence it? Long ladder and a can of squirty foam? Personally I dont think councils would put workers lives at risk (working at height) just to deal with a self limiting nuisance. I could be wrong though. It is a requirement for owners of properties with alarms to register them with the police and nominate two keyholders. Most people probably don't, but report the alarm to the police and request that they contact the keyholders. If it turns out (most likely) that they have not nominated any, reporting a noise nuisance (not as a one off) to the council and pointing out the lack of nominated keyholders may get them to at least contact the owners and make threats of action. SteveW since when? It was certainly that way, right back in the mid-90s - I got the form needed back then. In fact, I've quite likely still got a copy somewhere. Apparently, it has changed a bit due to "THE CLEAN NEIGHBOURHOODS AND ENVIRONMENT ACT 2005" which transferred such powers to the council and it is now up to them whether an area is designated as a zone where a (single) keyholder must be named. SteveW I think you will find there is no requirement to register a DIY alarm. There isn't any need to register any alarm that doesn't communicate with the outside world by e.g. phone. Yes there is. It is about noise nuisance - as stated in the act that I have noted above. SteveW |
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On 10/10/2019 23:14, Steve Walker wrote:
On 10/10/2019 14:11, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 23:33, Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 21:42, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 17:20, Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 13:50, Tim+ wrote: dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 12:53, R D S wrote: On 07/10/2019 05:30, Andy Burns wrote: People seem to think this is normal/acceptable ... Yep. A housing estate was built around our small row of terraces about 12 years ago. For whatever reason (Faulty? Windows open? Pets left in? Insensibly placed sensors? Power outages?), I can't remember the last time I went more than a few hours without hearing an alarm wail. Sometimes just for a couple of minutes, sometimes all day/night. Makes me dread summer. If one sounds for more than 20 minutes you can get the council to silence it, and bill the owner for doing so. How will they silence it? Long ladder and a can of squirty foam? Personally I dont think councils would put workers lives at risk (working at height) just to deal with a self limiting nuisance. I could be wrong though. It is a requirement for owners of properties with alarms to register them with the police and nominate two keyholders. Most people probably don't, but report the alarm to the police and request that they contact the keyholders. If it turns out (most likely) that they have not nominated any, reporting a noise nuisance (not as a one off) to the council and pointing out the lack of nominated keyholders may get them to at least contact the owners and make threats of action. SteveW since when? It was certainly that way, right back in the mid-90s - I got the form needed back then. In fact, I've quite likely still got a copy somewhere. Apparently, it has changed a bit due to "THE CLEAN NEIGHBOURHOODS AND ENVIRONMENT ACT 2005" which transferred such powers to the council and it is now up to them whether an area is designated as a zone where a (single) keyholder must be named. SteveW I think you will find there is no requirement to register a DIY alarm. There isn't any need to register any alarm that doesn't communicate with the outside world by e.g. phone. Yes there is. It is about noise nuisance - as stated in the act that I have noted above. Do you know anyone that has registered a DIY alarm? -- Adam |
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On 10/10/2019 23:20, ARW wrote:
On 10/10/2019 23:14, Steve Walker wrote: On 10/10/2019 14:11, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 23:33, Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 21:42, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 17:20, Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 13:50, Tim+ wrote: dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 12:53, R D S wrote: On 07/10/2019 05:30, Andy Burns wrote: People seem to think this is normal/acceptable ... Yep. A housing estate was built around our small row of terraces about 12 years ago. For whatever reason (Faulty? Windows open? Pets left in? Insensibly placed sensors? Power outages?), I can't remember the last time I went more than a few hours without hearing an alarm wail. Sometimes just for a couple of minutes, sometimes all day/night. Makes me dread summer. If one sounds for more than 20 minutes you can get the council to silence it, and bill the owner for doing so. How will they silence it? Long ladder and a can of squirty foam? Personally I dont think councils would put workers lives at risk (working at height) just to deal with a self limiting nuisance. I could be wrong though. It is a requirement for owners of properties with alarms to register them with the police and nominate two keyholders. Most people probably don't, but report the alarm to the police and request that they contact the keyholders. If it turns out (most likely) that they have not nominated any, reporting a noise nuisance (not as a one off) to the council and pointing out the lack of nominated keyholders may get them to at least contact the owners and make threats of action. SteveW since when? It was certainly that way, right back in the mid-90s - I got the form needed back then. In fact, I've quite likely still got a copy somewhere. Apparently, it has changed a bit due to "THE CLEAN NEIGHBOURHOODS AND ENVIRONMENT ACT 2005" which transferred such powers to the council and it is now up to them whether an area is designated as a zone where a (single) keyholder must be named. SteveW I think you will find there is no requirement to register a DIY alarm. There isn't any need to register any alarm that doesn't communicate with the outside world by e.g. phone. Yes there is. It is about noise nuisance - as stated in the act that I have noted above. Do you know anyone that has registered a DIY alarm? As I said, it is unlikely that people do. SteveW |
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In article ,
ARW wrote: Yes there is. It is about noise nuisance - as stated in the act that I have noted above. Do you know anyone that has registered a DIY alarm? Doubt they often cause any noise nuusance. Seems to be the ones installed by cowboy 'pros' that give so many false alarms. -- *Xerox and Wurlitzer will merge to market reproductive organs. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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On 10/10/2019 16:45, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , dennis@home wrote: I think you will find there is no requirement to register a DIY alarm. There isn't any need to register any alarm that doesn't communicate with the outside world by e.g. phone. Mine has an STD which dials my mobile phone. Nothing in the instructions saying it has to be registered. just don't set it to dial 999. |
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On 10/10/2019 23:14, Steve Walker wrote:
On 10/10/2019 14:11, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 23:33, Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 21:42, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 17:20, Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 13:50, Tim+ wrote: dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 12:53, R D S wrote: On 07/10/2019 05:30, Andy Burns wrote: People seem to think this is normal/acceptable ... Yep. A housing estate was built around our small row of terraces about 12 years ago. For whatever reason (Faulty? Windows open? Pets left in? Insensibly placed sensors? Power outages?), I can't remember the last time I went more than a few hours without hearing an alarm wail. Sometimes just for a couple of minutes, sometimes all day/night. Makes me dread summer. If one sounds for more than 20 minutes you can get the council to silence it, and bill the owner for doing so. How will they silence it? Long ladder and a can of squirty foam? Personally I dont think councils would put workers lives at risk (working at height) just to deal with a self limiting nuisance. I could be wrong though. It is a requirement for owners of properties with alarms to register them with the police and nominate two keyholders. Most people probably don't, but report the alarm to the police and request that they contact the keyholders. If it turns out (most likely) that they have not nominated any, reporting a noise nuisance (not as a one off) to the council and pointing out the lack of nominated keyholders may get them to at least contact the owners and make threats of action. SteveW since when? It was certainly that way, right back in the mid-90s - I got the form needed back then. In fact, I've quite likely still got a copy somewhere. Apparently, it has changed a bit due to "THE CLEAN NEIGHBOURHOODS AND ENVIRONMENT ACT 2005" which transferred such powers to the council and it is now up to them whether an area is designated as a zone where a (single) keyholder must be named. SteveW I think you will find there is no requirement to register a DIY alarm. There isn't any need to register any alarm that doesn't communicate with the outside world by e.g. phone. Yes there is. It is about noise nuisance - as stated in the act that I have noted above. SteveW There is no such requirement in England or Scotland or Wales, there may be in some parts of Northern Ireland. |
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On 11/10/2019 15:34, dennis@home wrote:
On 10/10/2019 23:14, Steve Walker wrote: On 10/10/2019 14:11, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 23:33, Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 21:42, dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 17:20, Steve Walker wrote: On 09/10/2019 13:50, Tim+ wrote: dennis@home wrote: On 09/10/2019 12:53, R D S wrote: On 07/10/2019 05:30, Andy Burns wrote: People seem to think this is normal/acceptable ... Yep. A housing estate was built around our small row of terraces about 12 years ago. For whatever reason (Faulty? Windows open? Pets left in? Insensibly placed sensors? Power outages?), I can't remember the last time I went more than a few hours without hearing an alarm wail. Sometimes just for a couple of minutes, sometimes all day/night. Makes me dread summer. If one sounds for more than 20 minutes you can get the council to silence it, and bill the owner for doing so. How will they silence it? Long ladder and a can of squirty foam? Personally I dont think councils would put workers lives at risk (working at height) just to deal with a self limiting nuisance. I could be wrong though. It is a requirement for owners of properties with alarms to register them with the police and nominate two keyholders. Most people probably don't, but report the alarm to the police and request that they contact the keyholders. If it turns out (most likely) that they have not nominated any, reporting a noise nuisance (not as a one off) to the council and pointing out the lack of nominated keyholders may get them to at least contact the owners and make threats of action. SteveW since when? It was certainly that way, right back in the mid-90s - I got the form needed back then. In fact, I've quite likely still got a copy somewhere. Apparently, it has changed a bit due to "THE CLEAN NEIGHBOURHOODS AND ENVIRONMENT ACT 2005" which transferred such powers to the council and it is now up to them whether an area is designated as a zone where a (single) keyholder must be named. SteveW I think you will find there is no requirement to register a DIY alarm. There isn't any need to register any alarm that doesn't communicate with the outside world by e.g. phone. Yes there is. It is about noise nuisance - as stated in the act that I have noted above. SteveW There is no such requirement in England or Scotland or Wales, there may be in some parts of Northern Ireland. It was in place when I fitted the alarm in 1993, I still have a copy of the form somewhere, but likely in the loft. Since then the legislation has changed and I have twice quoted the title of the legislation "THE CLEAN NEIGHBOURHOODS AND ENVIRONMENT ACT 2005," which actually reduced the requirement (from two keyholders to one and only in areas designated by councils), but has been in force in both England (since 2006) and Wales (since 2006/2007). SteveW |
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On 11/10/2019 19:28, Steve Walker wrote:
It was in place when I fitted the alarm in 1993, I still have a copy of the form somewhere, but likely in the loft. Since then the legislation has changed and I have twice quoted the title of the legislation "THE CLEAN NEIGHBOURHOODS AND ENVIRONMENT ACT 2005," which actually reduced the requirement (from two keyholders to one and only in areas designated by councils), but has been in force in both England (since 2006) and Wales (since 2006/2007). SteveW Why not read it? That allows councils to designate areas, it does not mean they exist. |
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On 11/10/2019 19:46, dennis@home wrote:
On 11/10/2019 19:28, Steve Walker wrote: It was in place when I fitted the alarm in 1993, I still have a copy of the form somewhere, but likely in the loft. Since then the legislation has changed and I have twice quoted the title of the legislation "THE CLEAN NEIGHBOURHOODS AND ENVIRONMENT ACT 2005," which actually reduced the requirement (from two keyholders to one and only in areas designated by councils), but has been in force in both England (since 2006) and Wales (since 2006/2007). SteveW Why not read it? That allows councils to designate areas, it does not mean they exist. The rules were in place here before that act. People are more annoyed than ever by noise now, so it seems unlikely that no council anywhere has implemented such an area. It is up the the householder to check whether they are in such an area when they install an alarm. SteveW |
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On 10/10/2019 14:11, dennis@home wrote:
There is a requirement to register one that is monitored or auto dials the police. There are also servicing requirements for such a system. I was under the impression that the Police required any alarm that required response from them had to be via a third party monitoring company. -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
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On 11/10/2019 00:15, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
Doubt they often cause any noise nuusance. Seems to be the ones installed by cowboy 'pros' that give so many false alarms. These days most people will just ignore other peoples alarms going off and always assume a false alarm. It may be better just to disable the external sounder/bell and just leave the strobe lights. If someone has broken into your hour unaware that there is an alarm then the internal sounder fitted to the alarm panel/controller is likely to scare them off. Whats more annoying are car alarms. At the junction of the road where I live there is a mini Sainsburys corner shop with. At least once a day someone will park up for that 5 minute visit and the car alarm will go off. I sometimes suspect that its always the same car every day. -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
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On 11/10/2019 21:14, Steve Walker wrote:
The rules were in place here before that act. People are more annoyed than ever by noise now, so it seems unlikely that no council anywhere has implemented such an area. It is up the the householder to check whether they are in such an area when they install an alarm. Have legislation doesn't necessarily reduce or eliminate the noise nuisance. Unless the alternative keyholder is a highly trusted near neighbour the alarm will still go off and probably stop sounding by the time that a designated key holder turns up. This is assuming that a home alarm has been designed and set up for a sounding period of no more than 15 minutes. It also assumes that the alternative key holder knows how to operate an alarm that that may not be familiar to them and that they have been given the correct codes to disable the alarm. It is very unlikely that the Police will turn up to a domestic alarm unless it is being monitored by a third party monitoring company. -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
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![]() "alan_m" wrote in message ... On 11/10/2019 00:15, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: Doubt they often cause any noise nuusance. Seems to be the ones installed by cowboy 'pros' that give so many false alarms. These days most people will just ignore other peoples alarms going off and always assume a false alarm. Thats not true here. All my neighbours apart from the renters take an interest when an alarm goes off and we often talk to each other about it. I am usually the first to respond, but not always. And we did that before some loony quite literally burnt one of the neighbours houses to the ground at 2am one morning. It may be better just to disable the external sounder/bell and just leave the strobe lights. That wouldnt work here, most who can hear the sounder wont be able to see the strobe lights and that likely wouldnt wake anyone. If someone has broken into your hour unaware that there is an alarm then the internal sounder fitted to the alarm panel/controller is likely to scare them off. But so will a strobe and they are much more likely to see that than the neighbours. Whats more annoying are car alarms. We dont get anywhere near as many of those going off. At the junction of the road where I live there is a mini Sainsburys corner shop with. At least once a day someone will park up for that 5 minute visit and the car alarm will go off. I sometimes suspect that its always the same car every day. Never seen that here. I did manage to set my own car alarm off when I managed to slam the door on the seatbelt buckle and that triggered the alarm. And it wasnt at all obvious how to cancel the alarm. Fortunately the manual was in the car and I could look it up, but no one took any notice. That was on the garage sale run and my car is so distinctive that most know its my car and they would have realised that it wasnt a theft. |
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On Mon, 14 Oct 2019 20:30:27 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: These days most people will just ignore other peoples alarms going off and always assume a false alarm. That¢s not NOBODY talked to you, senile Ozzie pest! LOL -- Website (from 2007) dedicated to the 85-year-old trolling senile cretin from Oz: https://www.pcreview.co.uk/threads/r...d-faq.2973853/ |
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On 14/10/2019 08:29, alan_m wrote:
On 10/10/2019 14:11, dennis@home wrote: There is a requirement to register one that is monitored or auto dials the police. There are also servicing requirements for such a system. I was under the impression that the Police required any alarm that required response from them had to be via a third party monitoring company. Yes, but that is a separate matter from noise nuisance. SteveW |
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On 14/10/2019 08:42, alan_m wrote:
On 11/10/2019 00:15, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: Doubt they often cause any noise nuusance. Seems to be the ones installed by cowboy 'pros' that give so many false alarms. These days most people will just ignore other peoples alarms going off and always assume a false alarm.Â* It may be better just to disable the external sounder/bell and just leave the strobe lights. If someone has broken into your hour unaware that there is an alarm then the internal sounder fitted to the alarm panel/controller is likely to scare them off. Here there is one house alarm that goes off frequently and everyone ignores. We all take a look if any other alarm goes off, as most hardly ever do. Whats more annoying are car alarms. At the junction of the road where I live there is a mini Sainsburys corner shop with. At least once a day someone will park up for that 5 minute visit and the car alarm will go off. I sometimes suspect that its always the same car every day. When I still lived at my parents there was a house on the next road, where the driver was incapable of getting into his car without setting the alarm off - every weekday, 1 to 1-1/2 hours before I was due to get up ![]() Our own car alarm went off about once every couple of months and we could not find out why, but we dared not disable it, as the same model car at the house opposite was stolen 3 times (someone wanting to get home after the buses had stopped we presumed, as it was left in the same place each time, undamaged and with nothing missing). On the 4th occasion, the owner had fitted a crook-lock and although the car stayed put, he then had to pay for damage done when they tried to remove it! SteveW |
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On 14/10/2019 08:57, alan_m wrote:
On 11/10/2019 21:14, Steve Walker wrote: The rules were in place here before that act. People are more annoyed than ever by noise now, so it seems unlikely that no council anywhere has implemented such an area. It is up the the householder to check whether they are in such an area when they install an alarm. Have legislation doesn't necessarily reduce or eliminate the noise nuisance. Unless the alternative keyholder is a highly trusted near neighbour the alarm will still go off and probably stop sounding by the time that a designated key holder turns up. Yes, but many alarms re-trigger multiple times, so the nuisance can go on for hours and without a registered keyholder, no-one knows who to contact. This is assuming that a home alarm has been designed and set up for a sounding period of no more than 15 minutes. 20 minutes is the maximum allowed and there are probably few alarms left that don't conform to that. It also assumes that the alternative key holder knows how to operate an alarm that that may not be familiar to them and that they have been given the correct codes to disable the alarm. In our case, my parents, who can be here within 5 minutes, have a key (as they feed our cats when we are away and generally look after things for us), have the same model of alarm and with one of our two codes the same as the code on their alarm. It is very unlikely that the Police will turn up to a domestic alarm unless it is being monitored by a third party monitoring company. They haven't done for years. The value (as long as you have an alarm that doesn't give loads of false alarms) is that neighbours do look. SteveW |
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