Jim Rojas
Technical Manuals Online!
http://www.tech-man.com
Mike wrote:
> I have a keypad for a programmable digital remote. This is your normal
> keypad to activate/de-activate an alarm. The box says it is from DTI
> Security from California, now out of business :(
>
> The keypad itself has a set of brown and orange wires (one solid, the
> other with tracer), black and red (power obviously), two yellow (for the
> tamper switch), white, blue, green and white with red tracer.
>
> I need to know how to wire it up so that it will open/close a circuit.
> The zone wires are not important.
>
> Mike
> wand...@isys.ca
This Keypad switches voltage when armed so power it up (red+ and Black- 12vdc)
then check from + to all 4 wires, check from - to all four then input code and
check to see which wire has changed state.
That wire will be your control wire to drive a 12vdc relay to get you normally
closed contact.
Shouldnt be too much trouble to trace out which is the red and green led's, use
your "control" wire to drive the led so the it is armed.
Dan
red 10-18vdc 6
black ground 13
white arm 1 9
white red arm 2 8
green zone duress 7
yellow blue panic n/o 10
yellow loopcommon panic and tamper 11
blue tamper n.c 14
blue tamper n.o 12
orange green led + 4
brown green led - 3
orange green arm led + 1
brown/ green arm led - 2
the numbers are the pin numbers pin 5 not used
by the way do you know how to programme the aux code
if master code is 2022
then enter "00" "2022" "00" "1234" if theaux code is going to be 1234
send me mail if you need more info
cheers
Mike wrote:
> I have a keypad for a programmable digital remote. This is your normal
> keypad to activate/de-activate an alarm. The box says it is from DTI
> Security from California, now out of business :(
>
> The keypad itself has a set of brown and orange wires (one solid, the
> other with tracer), black and red (power obviously), two yellow (for the
> tamper switch), white, blue, green and white with red tracer.
>
> I need to know how to wire it up so that it will open/close a circuit.
> The zone wires are not important.
>
> Mike
> wand...@isys.ca