apostolakisl
Senior Member
If you put a 500 ohm resistor in series at the panel with each zone, you will end up with the following:
Short 2.8v (A short in the wire out in the home bypassing the 1000 ohm eolr but not the 500 one on the panel)
Secure 5.9v (Zone feeds through both the 500 ohm at the panel and the 1000 ohm eolr)
Open 13.8v (There is no short and the door/window contact is open)
Elk range is
0-3.9 short
4.0-8.8 secure
8.9-13.8 not secure
The numbers from putting a 500 ohm resistor in series will allow you still maintain eol resistor benefits without tearing open your walls to find the resistors.
If you use a 1200 ohm resistor in series at the panel, should a short occur (screw through a wire, bypassing EOLR but not 1200 one at panel), the system will see 5.2v, which it will erroneously register as a secure zone.
You do run the risk of the 5.9v "secure" voltage level being kind of close to 4.0 and it is possible the value may drift for some reason and erroneously report a short. You would need to hook it up and see just how stable it is. In my experience, I have never seen an eolr secure zone differ from the expected 7.4v by more than .2v.
Short 2.8v (A short in the wire out in the home bypassing the 1000 ohm eolr but not the 500 one on the panel)
Secure 5.9v (Zone feeds through both the 500 ohm at the panel and the 1000 ohm eolr)
Open 13.8v (There is no short and the door/window contact is open)
Elk range is
0-3.9 short
4.0-8.8 secure
8.9-13.8 not secure
The numbers from putting a 500 ohm resistor in series will allow you still maintain eol resistor benefits without tearing open your walls to find the resistors.
If you use a 1200 ohm resistor in series at the panel, should a short occur (screw through a wire, bypassing EOLR but not 1200 one at panel), the system will see 5.2v, which it will erroneously register as a secure zone.
You do run the risk of the 5.9v "secure" voltage level being kind of close to 4.0 and it is possible the value may drift for some reason and erroneously report a short. You would need to hook it up and see just how stable it is. In my experience, I have never seen an eolr secure zone differ from the expected 7.4v by more than .2v.