tmbrown97
Senior Member
Well, this recent thread got me thinking: http://www.cocoontech.com/index.php?showtopic=10935
I liked the idea of using the resistor to get both buttons out of one zone. So, I'm thinking of a way to do something similar but trying to squeeze 3 button presses out of a single zone using 4-state wiring. If anyone has any experience on this, let me know what you think...
I have a 3-Channel RF Remote w/receiver that matches my car alarm (It comes with 2 remotes, plus I can program up to 3 channels off my car alarm remote to it as well) - I currently use 2 of the 3 channels to control my garage doors. I've always used this so my car alarm remotes can open the garage without carrying a remote in the car - and so I always have a remote on me. It has an internal relay plus 2 voltage outputs, so I've always thrown another automotive relay on the second channel for the second garage door, and left the 3rd channel unused.
I figured I could take the 3rd zone and feed it into the elk quite easily and things would work as they do now - but I got to thinking - since I also want the elk hooked into the garage doors, if I send all three channels into the elk rather than direct control of the garage door, I can also use that information for other purposes - or block it if the panel is in vacation mode, etc, and still get the 3rd channel - all without using anything more than a few extra zones.
So, to do this, I'm guessing I'd wire 2 of the 3 zones on NC, one on NO, and basically follow the diagram in the book? I guess what I'm not sure about yet though is if I can use each of these to trigger different automation events without worrying about alarm conditions, etc. The book talks about tamper states, etc - does that matter? Also - can this 4-state zone be done off a keypad zone or does it have to be off the board (and can it be off an expander, etc)?
I'm sure I'll get more familiar in coming days - I just had an installer run all my wires today for me, so I'm onto the hookup part now - and waiting for a few more last-minute pieces to come in.
I liked the idea of using the resistor to get both buttons out of one zone. So, I'm thinking of a way to do something similar but trying to squeeze 3 button presses out of a single zone using 4-state wiring. If anyone has any experience on this, let me know what you think...
I have a 3-Channel RF Remote w/receiver that matches my car alarm (It comes with 2 remotes, plus I can program up to 3 channels off my car alarm remote to it as well) - I currently use 2 of the 3 channels to control my garage doors. I've always used this so my car alarm remotes can open the garage without carrying a remote in the car - and so I always have a remote on me. It has an internal relay plus 2 voltage outputs, so I've always thrown another automotive relay on the second channel for the second garage door, and left the 3rd channel unused.
I figured I could take the 3rd zone and feed it into the elk quite easily and things would work as they do now - but I got to thinking - since I also want the elk hooked into the garage doors, if I send all three channels into the elk rather than direct control of the garage door, I can also use that information for other purposes - or block it if the panel is in vacation mode, etc, and still get the 3rd channel - all without using anything more than a few extra zones.
So, to do this, I'm guessing I'd wire 2 of the 3 zones on NC, one on NO, and basically follow the diagram in the book? I guess what I'm not sure about yet though is if I can use each of these to trigger different automation events without worrying about alarm conditions, etc. The book talks about tamper states, etc - does that matter? Also - can this 4-state zone be done off a keypad zone or does it have to be off the board (and can it be off an expander, etc)?
I'm sure I'll get more familiar in coming days - I just had an installer run all my wires today for me, so I'm onto the hookup part now - and waiting for a few more last-minute pieces to come in.