UK CRIME PREVENTION
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Burglar Alarms Explained in Plain English
Not too long
ago our burglar alarm was a dog and very good neighbours. Today we have
very sophisticated systems that few occupiers really understand. Let's take a look at how Circuit Alarms, Basic Motion Detectors, and more Advanced Motion Sensors work. Circuit alarms come in two types: closed circuit and open circuit. The concept is identical: electricity travels through the circuit protecting a door or window. With an open circuit, the current is not completed until the door or window is open, this triggers the alarm. The downside to this intruder alarm system is that all the burglar needs to do is cut the wires; this prevents the circuit from being completed. Whereas a closed circuit intruder alarm, the current is broken when the door or window is opened, thus triggering the alarm. All intruder alarms have a control panel and vary in complexity. They either have a keypad or traditional key to arm and disarm the burglar alarm. It is likely to have 'zones'; each zone represents a protected area. When the intruder alarm is activated, the control panel will sound internally as well as repeater sounding much louder through an external box, which may also flash. The control panel and external box will keep sounding until it is reset with a predetermined code or key. The control panel should be sited in a place where the burglar cannot easily find and interfere with it. Closed circuit burglar alarms are generally used as perimeter protection but be mindful that although the circuit goes around the door or window frame, if a panel is remove from the door, a window is removed without breaking the circuit, the intruder alarm will not be activated. A motion detector offers an excellent back up. You may see these called PIR detectors and are located high up in corners, flashing each time they detect motion, even when the burglar alarm is off. More advanced are passive infrared (PIR) motion sensors that see the heat given off by a person's body. The PIR measures the average room temperature and triggers the alarm when the energy rises rapidly, particularly when a human, whose average body temperature is 98.6 degrees, enters a room with an average of say 80-degrees Don't worry about setting the alarm off when you enter a room, generally there is delay of a few seconds enabling you to reach the control box and disengage the alarm before setting it off. If you have
pets, don't forget to inform your security consult so that special PIR
units can be sited in such a way that allows pets to roam without activating
the system. A good intruder
alarm system would combine both circuit and motion sensor alarms, thus
providing you with two lines of protection against burglars |
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