HAI_fjh
Active Member
IMHO even if the panel changes and the new panel needs 2.2K ohm resistors, for example. This is not a problem and you don't have to change the resistor in the contact to have it work properly with the new system and still retain the advantages of an EOL resistor.
There are a few articles on how to do this in our knowledge base (kb.homeauto.com).
Basic electricity 101: Resistors in parallel:
Let's say your previous panel required 2.2K ohm resistors and they are inside the contacts. You are replacing it with an Omni that requires a 1K ohm loop. What do you do? The easiest thing is to put a 1.9K ohm or 2K ohm resistor in parallel at the panel. Just put the resistor across the zone +/- terminals right at the panel. Very simple. When the zone (loop) is secure the resistance will be ~1K ohm. If the zone is shorted the resistance goes to 0 ohms and the alarm sounds. If the zone is cut then the resistance goes to 1.9K or 2K ohms and the Omni sees the zone as not ready and the alarm goes off.
The math:
2.2K ohms in parallel with 1.9k ohms = 1.02K ohms
2.2K ohms in parallel with 2k ohms = 1.045K ohms
both of these are close enough to 1K ohm +/_ 5% to work.
The basic rules:
If the existing resistor is less than 1K ohm add another resistor in series to bring the total resistance to 1K ohm.
If the existing resistor is more than 1K ohm add a resistor in parallel so that the total resistance is 1K ohm.
These are common problems that professional installers encounter every day and are easy to solve.
There are a few articles on how to do this in our knowledge base (kb.homeauto.com).
Basic electricity 101: Resistors in parallel:
Let's say your previous panel required 2.2K ohm resistors and they are inside the contacts. You are replacing it with an Omni that requires a 1K ohm loop. What do you do? The easiest thing is to put a 1.9K ohm or 2K ohm resistor in parallel at the panel. Just put the resistor across the zone +/- terminals right at the panel. Very simple. When the zone (loop) is secure the resistance will be ~1K ohm. If the zone is shorted the resistance goes to 0 ohms and the alarm sounds. If the zone is cut then the resistance goes to 1.9K or 2K ohms and the Omni sees the zone as not ready and the alarm goes off.
The math:
2.2K ohms in parallel with 1.9k ohms = 1.02K ohms
2.2K ohms in parallel with 2k ohms = 1.045K ohms
both of these are close enough to 1K ohm +/_ 5% to work.
The basic rules:
If the existing resistor is less than 1K ohm add another resistor in series to bring the total resistance to 1K ohm.
If the existing resistor is more than 1K ohm add a resistor in parallel so that the total resistance is 1K ohm.
These are common problems that professional installers encounter every day and are easy to solve.