Hi Folks,
I've been working on a basement apartment for some time now, and I'm to the point of *finally* running some HA/security wiring. I'm looking for some suggestions on zoning the two separate living spaces. It's a split-foyer, so it's basically a rancher stacked atop another rancher, with a common entry-way.
Anyway, I had an friend of mine over this weekend who installs residential security/fire/some HA as a profession. He came to help with some of the trickier wiring/fishing (this guy made it look *easy*!).
In my dwelling, we daisy-chained the upstairs smokes from sunroom->kitchen/living--->spare bed->master bed->panel using 22/4 per his suggestion. I asked about separating each smoke to an individual zone, or zoning them further, but he said that the elk only had 1-2 smoke zones. I see this is true for 2-wire, but it looks like you can use any zone for 4-wires. To be fair I know he's only done one elk install (mostly GE/omnipro) once.
If I were to zone my dwelling, it would be sunroom + kitchen/living, then spare + master bed. With how the wiring is laid out, this can be easily changed in the attic. So from my very basic understanding, I would need to homerun each of these zones, install a EOL at the ends of each, and a line supervisor relay as well?
I have not yet chosen smokes yet BTW.
Now for the bigger question: what to do about the downstairs apartment? If the tenant (stranger, for all intents and purposes) has a fire, then sure I'd want to know. But at the same time, if they burn Thanksgiving Dinner, do I want to have the whole house triggered for nuisances? I'm just looking for opinions here.
My friend suggested that I segregate the basement with networked-smokes that do not communicate back with the ELK. Install one heat detector that does, in case of a real fire. His main problem with tying the *whole house* together was that the tenant would have to be able to reset the smokes from the KP, which I can't expect them to be able to do.
What are your thoughts here? I trust this guy has a good number of years experience, but I know he's more time/effort/price minded.
Thanks for reading,
Jamie
I've been working on a basement apartment for some time now, and I'm to the point of *finally* running some HA/security wiring. I'm looking for some suggestions on zoning the two separate living spaces. It's a split-foyer, so it's basically a rancher stacked atop another rancher, with a common entry-way.
Anyway, I had an friend of mine over this weekend who installs residential security/fire/some HA as a profession. He came to help with some of the trickier wiring/fishing (this guy made it look *easy*!).
In my dwelling, we daisy-chained the upstairs smokes from sunroom->kitchen/living--->spare bed->master bed->panel using 22/4 per his suggestion. I asked about separating each smoke to an individual zone, or zoning them further, but he said that the elk only had 1-2 smoke zones. I see this is true for 2-wire, but it looks like you can use any zone for 4-wires. To be fair I know he's only done one elk install (mostly GE/omnipro) once.
If I were to zone my dwelling, it would be sunroom + kitchen/living, then spare + master bed. With how the wiring is laid out, this can be easily changed in the attic. So from my very basic understanding, I would need to homerun each of these zones, install a EOL at the ends of each, and a line supervisor relay as well?
I have not yet chosen smokes yet BTW.
Now for the bigger question: what to do about the downstairs apartment? If the tenant (stranger, for all intents and purposes) has a fire, then sure I'd want to know. But at the same time, if they burn Thanksgiving Dinner, do I want to have the whole house triggered for nuisances? I'm just looking for opinions here.
My friend suggested that I segregate the basement with networked-smokes that do not communicate back with the ELK. Install one heat detector that does, in case of a real fire. His main problem with tying the *whole house* together was that the tenant would have to be able to reset the smokes from the KP, which I can't expect them to be able to do.
What are your thoughts here? I trust this guy has a good number of years experience, but I know he's more time/effort/price minded.
Thanks for reading,
Jamie