Back to: Advanced Physical Security Integration (APSI)
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Lesson 5.4: Circuit Wiring & Resistor Logic
Module: 5 – Intrusion Detection & Perimeter Security
Prerequisites: Lesson 5.1 (Alarm Panels)
Estimated Time: 45–60 Minutes
1. Learning Objectives
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
- Construct a Normally Closed (NC) loop with a Series resistor for intrusion sensors.
- Explain why parallel wiring is used for Normally Open (NO) devices (like Fire/Smoke).
- Calculate the total resistance of a Series vs. Parallel circuit to troubleshoot “Open” or “Short” faults.
- Diagram the specific wiring for a “Tamper” switch utilizing Double End-of-Line (DEOL) resistors.
2. The Circuit Logic: Series vs. Parallel
Series Circuit (The Chain)
- Concept: Components are wired one after another. If any link breaks, the whole chain breaks.
- Usage: Burglar Alarms (NC). We want the alarm to trigger if any sensor opens or if the wire is cut.
- Math: R_{total} = R_1 + R_2 + …
Parallel Circuit (The Ladder)
- Concept: Components are wired across the same two rails. Current has multiple paths.
- Usage: Fire Alarms (NO). Devices are normally “Off” (Open). When smoke is detected, the switch closes, shorting the rails to signal the panel.
- Math: 1/R_{total} = 1/R_1 + 1/R_2 + …
3. Intrusion Wiring (Normally Closed with EOL)
- The Standard: Security devices (Door Contacts, Motions) are Normally Closed (NC).
- The Goal: We want the panel to see a specific resistance (e.g., 2.2 ohms) when the door is closed.
- The Wiring:
- Run a 2-conductor wire from the Panel (Zone 1 & COM) to the Sensor.
- At the sensor, connect one wire to the “NC” terminal.
- Connect the Resistor to the “C” (Common) terminal.
- Connect the return wire to the other leg of the Resistor.
- Result:
- Door Closed: Current flows through the resistor. Panel sees 2.2 ohms (Secure).
- Door Open: Switch opens. Current stops. Panel sees Infinite ohms (Alarm).
- Wire Cut: Current stops. Panel sees Infinite ohms (Alarm/Trouble).
- Wire Shorted: Current bypasses the resistor. Panel sees ohms (Tamper).
4. Fire Wiring (Normally Open with EOL)
- The Standard: Conventional Smoke Detectors / Heat Detectors are Normally Open (NO).
- The Wiring:
- Run wires to Detector 1, then to Detector 2, etc. (Daisy Chain).
- The Resistor goes at the very end of the last device, across the terminals.
- Result:
- Normal: The panel pushes current down the line. It passes through all devices (open switches) and hits the resistor at the end. Panel sees 2.2 ohms (Secure).
- Fire: A detector switch closes. It creates a short circuit across the wires before the current gets to the resistor. Panel sees 0 ohms(ALARM).
- Wire Cut: The path to the resistor is broken. Panel sees Infinite ohms (Trouble/Fault).
- Crucial: In Fire logic, a cut wire must NOT trigger an alarm; it must trigger a “Trouble” signal so you know to fix it. This is why we use NO loops.
5. Troubleshooting with a Multimeter
- Scenario: Zone 1 is showing “Open” on the keypad, but the door is physically closed.
- Step 1: Disconnect the wires from the panel (Zone 1 and COM).
- Step 2: Set Multimeter to Ohms.
- Step 3: Measure the wires.
- Result = Infinite: The wire is cut somewhere in the wall, or the sensor is stuck open (broken reed switch).
- Result = 2.2 ohms: The wiring is fine. The Panel Input is likely blown/damaged.
- Result = 0 ohms: Short circuit (Staple through the wire?).
6. Double EOL (DEOL) Logic
- Why: To distinguish between a “Door Alarm” and a “Tamper Alarm” using only 2 wires.
- The Wiring:
- Resistor 1 (Series): 2.2 ohms.
- Resistor 2 (Parallel across the switch): 2.2 ohms.
- The Panel Logic:
- Secure (Door Closed): Loop passes through Resistor 1 only (Resistor 2 is shorted out by the closed switch). Total: 2.2 ohms.
- Alarm (Door Open): Switch opens. Current is forced to go through Resistor 1 AND Resistor 2. Total: 4.4 ohms.
- Tamper (Short): Current bypasses everything (burglar shorted the wires). Total: 0 ohms.
- Trouble (Cut): Infinite ohms.