Hey Cocooners;
I'm hoping I can solicit some design advice as it relates to thermostats. I'm in the process of installing an Elk into our new office for security, door control, smokes, etc. I'd also like to seriously investigate installing thermostats. The office is 12,000sf. It has 8 roof top HVAC units, and I believe a couple of those may be zoned. There may be as many as 12 thermostats. Our HVAC contractors are doing a survey on the systems next week to map out exactly how the current system is setup, zoned, etc.
Anyway, we have a few goals with multi-tenanting in mind:
1) I'd like to be able to negotiate the set points with the tenant and control those. Ideally, the tenant could control the temp +/- 5 degrees, for example, but couldn't control outside of that range. Is this controlled by the Elk or the stats themselves?
2) I'd like to be able to automate the setpoint during off-business hours based on a schedule, with overrides based on armed / disarmed status. This should be controlled by zone, and possibly by area within a zone. In our portion of the building, for instance, the lab area will be zoned seperately. If its a weekend, I might enter the lab (through a seperate perimeter door), but would not likely go into the office area. I'd love it if it would only warm up / cool down the lab area that was being used, unless a door was opened to one of the other areas (all badge controlled).
3) What kind of communication exists between Elk and the tstats in this environment? For instance, does the elk periodically poll the temps on the tstats? If so, is that variable accessible in the rules? So, if a particular area increases above a certain temp, I could fire a notification rule? I know I can run seperate temp sensors, but why do that if we can accurately get that from the tstats...
4) We have tremendous flexibility for running cable in this building. Its a 3 year old building and good drop ceiling access, so we'll be pulling tons of cable anyway. Pulling new cable to centralize the 'brains' will not be an issue.
I've done alot of reading on the forum regarding the HEI, RCS, and Aprilaire tstats, but I'm still not sure what would be best in this environment. Most of the examples seem to involve one or two units. I realize some of the decisions will hinge on what kind of HVAC units we have. I believe they are all single stage heat and cool, but I won't know for sure until late next week.
I've also read the serial expander manual and I understand how they are wired up. From a cabling perspective, I really like the RCS units because the control unit could be centralized. This would allow me to centralize all of those units, then home run a cable to each HVAC unit and to each WDU.
Anyway, I appreciate your time and any advice you are willing to provide.
Thanks!
Vance
I'm hoping I can solicit some design advice as it relates to thermostats. I'm in the process of installing an Elk into our new office for security, door control, smokes, etc. I'd also like to seriously investigate installing thermostats. The office is 12,000sf. It has 8 roof top HVAC units, and I believe a couple of those may be zoned. There may be as many as 12 thermostats. Our HVAC contractors are doing a survey on the systems next week to map out exactly how the current system is setup, zoned, etc.
Anyway, we have a few goals with multi-tenanting in mind:
1) I'd like to be able to negotiate the set points with the tenant and control those. Ideally, the tenant could control the temp +/- 5 degrees, for example, but couldn't control outside of that range. Is this controlled by the Elk or the stats themselves?
2) I'd like to be able to automate the setpoint during off-business hours based on a schedule, with overrides based on armed / disarmed status. This should be controlled by zone, and possibly by area within a zone. In our portion of the building, for instance, the lab area will be zoned seperately. If its a weekend, I might enter the lab (through a seperate perimeter door), but would not likely go into the office area. I'd love it if it would only warm up / cool down the lab area that was being used, unless a door was opened to one of the other areas (all badge controlled).
3) What kind of communication exists between Elk and the tstats in this environment? For instance, does the elk periodically poll the temps on the tstats? If so, is that variable accessible in the rules? So, if a particular area increases above a certain temp, I could fire a notification rule? I know I can run seperate temp sensors, but why do that if we can accurately get that from the tstats...
4) We have tremendous flexibility for running cable in this building. Its a 3 year old building and good drop ceiling access, so we'll be pulling tons of cable anyway. Pulling new cable to centralize the 'brains' will not be an issue.
I've done alot of reading on the forum regarding the HEI, RCS, and Aprilaire tstats, but I'm still not sure what would be best in this environment. Most of the examples seem to involve one or two units. I realize some of the decisions will hinge on what kind of HVAC units we have. I believe they are all single stage heat and cool, but I won't know for sure until late next week.
I've also read the serial expander manual and I understand how they are wired up. From a cabling perspective, I really like the RCS units because the control unit could be centralized. This would allow me to centralize all of those units, then home run a cable to each HVAC unit and to each WDU.
Anyway, I appreciate your time and any advice you are willing to provide.
Thanks!
Vance