miamicanes
Active Member
Last night I attempted to wire up the two keypads for my alarm. The following wire segments were involved:
Here are the wiring details:
m1g:red to start:orange pair
m1g:black to start:brown pair
m1g:green to start:green pair
m1g:white to start:blue pair
start:orange to seg3:orange
start:brown to seg3:orange-white
start:green to seg3:green
start:blue to seg3:green-white
(seg3 blue pair unused for now)
seg3:orange, seg2:orange, and bed:orange
seg3:orange-white, seg2:orange-white, and bed:orange-white
seg3:green and bed:green
bed:green-white and seg2:green
seg3:green-white and bed:blue
bed:blue-white and seg2:green-white
(seg2 blue pair unused for now)
(bed:brown pair unused for now)
bed:orange to kp1:red
bed:orange-white to kp1:black
bed:green and bed:green-white to kp1:green
bed:blue and bed:blue-white to kp1:white
seg2:orange, seg1:orange, and liv:orange
seg2:orange-white, seg1:orange-white, and liv:orange-white
seg2:green to liv:green
liv:green-white to seg1:green
seg2:green-white to liv:blue
liv:blue-white to seg1:green-white
liv:orange to kp2:red
liv:orange-white to kp2:black
liv:green and liv:green-white to kp2:green
liv:blue and liv:blue-white to kp2:white
(kp2 is terminated)
The wires for seg1 are dangling off the end. Eventually I plan to move the M1G from the "seg3" end to the "seg1" end, swap the terminators, and insert a M1XEP inline between liv and kp2 (leaving liv's green-white and blue-white intact, and inserting the M1XEP inline within the orange, orange-white, green, and blue wires of liv).
That said, it didn't quite work.
KP1 seems to work just fine. Terminated, unterminated, with or without kp2 present, nothing seems to bother it.
KP2 is another matter. It's simply not being seen at all. Not "unreliably" or "intermittently". Literally, never.
As a troubleshooting step, I cut the connections between liv:green-white & seg1:green and liv:blue-white & seg1:green-white (the A and B data lines) on the theory that having 50 feet of unused cable dangling beyond the end of kp2's data bus was screwing things up, with or without termination. It didn't make a difference. I tried it with and without termination on kp2 (kp1 was never terminated at this point). I finally severed the connections between kp2:green and liv:green-white & kp2:white and liv:blue-white to eliminate any trace of data lines extending beyond the terminated kp2. No effect.
Interestingly, last night was my second attempt. My first attempt actually ran everything in a literal line, including red and black, and used separate cat5e cables for the runs to and from each keypad; red used the cat5e orange pair, black used the cat5e brown pair. Green ran on cat5:green, and white ran on cat5:green-white. It can be summarized as:
m1g to seg1
seg1 to liv1
liv1 to kp2 and liv2
liv2 to seg2
seg2 to bed
bed to kp1. The wires physically ended at kp1, which was terminated.
What's surprising is that with THAT topology, kp2 didn't work... but kp1 did, which shows that if nothing else, the problem does NOT lie with seg1, seg2, or seg3 themselves since KP1 has always worked regardless of which direction I fed it from (last night its signal came via seg3; the first night, it came via seg1 + seg2). From what I remember, kp2 was detected by enrollment, and the problems I had were due to it having the same address as kp1 (at that time, I didn't know how to give it a different address).
So... for tonight... what should I try first? Replacing the 3-wire taps with some other kind of connector? Or recreating the first night's topology (running everything in a straight line, without trying to be clever and tap the red & black lines to reduce their total run lengths) using the same 3-wire taps?
For a straight-line run (with two whole cat5e cables running to each keypad... one to it, one from it), would I get better results with:
phoneline
range (keypad red) to cat5
range PAIR
phoneline
range-white (keypad black) to cat5:brown PAIR
phoneline:green (keypad green) to cat5:green
phoneline:green-white (keypad white) to cat5:green-white
(brown pair available for some other signal)
or
phoneline
range (keypad red) to cat5
range PAIR
phoneline
range-white (keypad black) to cat5:green-white and cat5:blue-white
phoneline:green (keypad green) to cat5:green
phoneline:green-white (keypad white) to cat5:blue
(brown pair available for some other signal)
Basically, in the first case giving +13.6v and ground their own pairs, and in the second case wrapping ground around the two signal lines on the total guess that it might be the "right" way to do it for shielding purposes.
- m1g: keypad bus on m1g
- start: cat5e cable ~15 feet long running between the M1G and seg3
- seg3: the in-wall phone wiring between my computer room (where the m1g temporarily sits) and master bedroom.
- bed: cat5e cable ~50 feet long, eventually will be chopped down to ~15 feet, but long for now so I can have the keypad next to the M1G itself while debugging) running between the point where seg3 meets seg2 and keypad #1
- kp1: the "default" keypad for the M1G (with temp sensor and orange/green backlight)
- seg2: the in-wall phone wiring between the master bedroom and living room.
- liv: cat5e cable ~25 feet long running between the point where seg2 meets seg1 and keypad #2
- kp2: the surface-mount keypad for the M1G w/blue backlight
- seg1: the in-wall phone wiring between the living room and kitchen/laundry room
Here are the wiring details:
m1g:red to start:orange pair
m1g:black to start:brown pair
m1g:green to start:green pair
m1g:white to start:blue pair
start:orange to seg3:orange
start:brown to seg3:orange-white
start:green to seg3:green
start:blue to seg3:green-white
(seg3 blue pair unused for now)
seg3:orange, seg2:orange, and bed:orange
seg3:orange-white, seg2:orange-white, and bed:orange-white
seg3:green and bed:green
bed:green-white and seg2:green
seg3:green-white and bed:blue
bed:blue-white and seg2:green-white
(seg2 blue pair unused for now)
(bed:brown pair unused for now)
bed:orange to kp1:red
bed:orange-white to kp1:black
bed:green and bed:green-white to kp1:green
bed:blue and bed:blue-white to kp1:white
seg2:orange, seg1:orange, and liv:orange
seg2:orange-white, seg1:orange-white, and liv:orange-white
seg2:green to liv:green
liv:green-white to seg1:green
seg2:green-white to liv:blue
liv:blue-white to seg1:green-white
liv:orange to kp2:red
liv:orange-white to kp2:black
liv:green and liv:green-white to kp2:green
liv:blue and liv:blue-white to kp2:white
(kp2 is terminated)
The wires for seg1 are dangling off the end. Eventually I plan to move the M1G from the "seg3" end to the "seg1" end, swap the terminators, and insert a M1XEP inline between liv and kp2 (leaving liv's green-white and blue-white intact, and inserting the M1XEP inline within the orange, orange-white, green, and blue wires of liv).
That said, it didn't quite work.
KP1 seems to work just fine. Terminated, unterminated, with or without kp2 present, nothing seems to bother it.
KP2 is another matter. It's simply not being seen at all. Not "unreliably" or "intermittently". Literally, never.
As a troubleshooting step, I cut the connections between liv:green-white & seg1:green and liv:blue-white & seg1:green-white (the A and B data lines) on the theory that having 50 feet of unused cable dangling beyond the end of kp2's data bus was screwing things up, with or without termination. It didn't make a difference. I tried it with and without termination on kp2 (kp1 was never terminated at this point). I finally severed the connections between kp2:green and liv:green-white & kp2:white and liv:blue-white to eliminate any trace of data lines extending beyond the terminated kp2. No effect.
Interestingly, last night was my second attempt. My first attempt actually ran everything in a literal line, including red and black, and used separate cat5e cables for the runs to and from each keypad; red used the cat5e orange pair, black used the cat5e brown pair. Green ran on cat5:green, and white ran on cat5:green-white. It can be summarized as:
m1g to seg1
seg1 to liv1
liv1 to kp2 and liv2
liv2 to seg2
seg2 to bed
bed to kp1. The wires physically ended at kp1, which was terminated.
What's surprising is that with THAT topology, kp2 didn't work... but kp1 did, which shows that if nothing else, the problem does NOT lie with seg1, seg2, or seg3 themselves since KP1 has always worked regardless of which direction I fed it from (last night its signal came via seg3; the first night, it came via seg1 + seg2). From what I remember, kp2 was detected by enrollment, and the problems I had were due to it having the same address as kp1 (at that time, I didn't know how to give it a different address).
So... for tonight... what should I try first? Replacing the 3-wire taps with some other kind of connector? Or recreating the first night's topology (running everything in a straight line, without trying to be clever and tap the red & black lines to reduce their total run lengths) using the same 3-wire taps?
For a straight-line run (with two whole cat5e cables running to each keypad... one to it, one from it), would I get better results with:
phoneline


phoneline

phoneline:green (keypad green) to cat5:green
phoneline:green-white (keypad white) to cat5:green-white
(brown pair available for some other signal)
or
phoneline


phoneline

phoneline:green (keypad green) to cat5:green
phoneline:green-white (keypad white) to cat5:blue
(brown pair available for some other signal)
Basically, in the first case giving +13.6v and ground their own pairs, and in the second case wrapping ground around the two signal lines on the total guess that it might be the "right" way to do it for shielding purposes.