Part 1
ADVANCED COMMUNICATION IN
TODAY’S WIRELESS ALARM SYSTEMS
Wireless alarm systems are quick to install.
However, the quality of the different systems varies – and so does the
requirements depending on application. Modern wireless alarm systems
work for example with regular data communication.
In a series of articles www.SecurityWorldHotel.com describes how this
security technology works and can be used. We start with the background
to this technology and an overview of the areas where these systems are
used today.
By Svante Nygren
The use of wireless alarm systems and detectors has become
increasingly common in recent years. The first more widespread use of
this wireless technology emerged as early as around 1990. In The United
States these kinds of systems spread quickly, for protection of building
sites, as an example. It took until the end of the century until
installations started to take off in parts of Europe. What happened was
that several large security companies, like Securitas started to sell
wireless alarm system for private homes. Today we can see the results of
this. Sales of home alarms to private individuals comprise almost
entirely of wireless systems.
Focus on
revenues from services
Wireless alarm systems for the domestic market are very easy to install.
A control panel is connected to a telephone line or a GSM phone and a
few wireless detectors are placed in optional places throughout the
home. The customer can in most cases install the system on his own,
although there is some risk of detectors being positioned wrongly.
From a business point of view this is no major concern for the security
company. What’s important is not the installation itself of the alarm
system but to tie the customer to the guarding or monitoring services –
which are renewed year on year. Technical installations are getting more
and more marginal from a revenue point of view and this trend has been
enforced by the introduction of wireless alarm systems. The business
concept is similar to the situation where mobile phone operators offer a
free phone when signing up for a subscription.
Hybrid systems
are gaining momentum
It is however not only in the consumer market that wireless alarm
systems can be found. Also in commercial installations it is
increasingly common to find wireless technology. In fact there are three
or four common types of applications.
Often so called hybrid systems (mixed technology systems) are installed.
This is the fastest growing segment in the commercial market. In this
case a conventional fixed alarm installation is complemented by wireless
technology. One can for example use wireless detectors when an existing
alarm system requires some minor additions, or when there is a need for
movable detectors.
One example is when detectors are needed in locations where it is
difficult to install cable. It can also be a matter of concern for
historic buildings or premises where cabling is not permitted. So far
there are few installations in commercial premises entirely based on
wireless technology. Mixed technologies on the other hand are quite
common. In addition to burglar alarm detectors, there are also some
manufacturers of fire alarms offering wireless technology.
Temporary installations
Alarm systems for construction sites and assault alarms are other
segments of the market where wireless technology has made inroads – and
for good reason.
Workplace alarm systems are used in terms of systems installed on
machinery, on construction sites and in similar applications. Wireless
technology is often the given choice in these situations. It could be a
matter of a couple of sheds used for a few months on one site and then
moved on to the next site, forest machinery at a lumber site where
wireless detectors are connected to alarm transmission via GSM or radio
link – or operator alarms used as a personal emergency stop and
protection for people working in proximity to hazardous machinery.
Assault alarms
The latter application above is of course closely related to assault
alarms, an application where wireless systems today are generally
accepted. The conventional alarm buttons under the table are still in
use in many places, but when staff in high risk environments need to
move around, the trade unions usually demand portable assault alarms. We
will return to this issue more in detail in a coming article.
Wireless technology
controversial
Many alarm installers have had serious doubts about wireless alarm
systems. Most installers have extensive experience in running cable for
wired systems, but little knowledge in how radio based systems work and
how to design such systems. This is why there has been a marked
threshold for the technology. Some installers have resisted the wireless
systems entirely, whilst others have accepted them and started to sell
wireless systems as a complement.
Watch out for the rubbish!
Like with all new technical devices the quality of the equipment and
detectors has varied quite a lot. Due to limited technical experience
some installers have chosen to import cheap systems directly on their
own, predominantly from China and South East Asia. This has resulted in
the market being flooded with different wireless brands where the radio
technology under the surface has varied quite a lot in quality. It is
thus important to watch out. A wireless detector which is too noise
sensitive can soon turn out to be a real bad deal, if it generates false
alarms and eventually needs to be replaced.
The first generation
How does it work? After the introduction the development has passed
several stages. The first generation alarm systems were designed around
very simple, analogue radio systems where signals were sent in plain
text between a transmitter and a receiver. The communication was thus
not encrypted and worked according to a principle some people used to
call “Shout-and-spray”. In other words there was no feed back between
receiver and transmitter. It was not possible to send any
acknowledgements over the radio link – and it was not possible to
supervise the link and to verify that the detector really worked. In
some cases the unit was designed to send an alarm indication several
times in close succession in order to guarantee that the message got
through.
Of course over time people noticed that this was not a good solution. It
was not possible to detect any defects in the installation, temporary
noise could easily disarm the system – and the lack of a proper tamper
protection was of course ominous.
The second generation
This all lead to the development of a second generation of systems where
a clock was added to the receiver or transmitter and made the detectors
(transmitters) send short test pulses at regular intervals. By
programming the system to expect these test pulses at pre-set intervals,
for example once per day or once per half hour, a simple error and
sabotage protection was introduced, which created an alarm if the test
pulse failed to come. But the signals were still sent in plain text,
alternatively in the form of a simple current crypto.
The third generation
In order to overcome these shortcomings some manufacturers started to
develop a third generation of wireless alarm systems. These were
introduced to the market at the turn of the century. Now the step was
suddenly taken from passive reception to full-fledged data
communication. The transmitter as well as the receiver were built as
radio modems, with the possibility to send and receive data. This opened
the possibility to send alarm acknowledgements over the link, perform
advanced function tests and even to upgrade firmware of particularly
advanced alarm detectors directly over the link.
Instead of having to rely on regular test signals the alarm link is open
both ways in these systems. When an alarm is transmitted it will be
repeated until the controller responds with an acknowledgement. The
technology offers in addition the possibility to fairly easily encrypt
the link.
The biggest disadvantage with the third generation wireless alarm
systems is possibly the price. It is approximately three times as
expensive to base an installation on the third generation system with
radio modems compared to the first generation’s simple transmitter and
passive reception.
USA and Europe dominates
Many wireless alarm systems being sold today originate from
manufacturers in Asia, where widespread manufacturing of basic systems
with passive receivers takes place. The development of alarm systems
based on radio modems takes place primarily in the US and in Europe.
Digital technology
more secure
The communication in a typical wireless alarm system takes place over
special alarm frequencies. Normally these require no licence, and are
shared with any other systems in the neighbourhood. When the wireless
alarms were introduced most of the systems used the frequency band
around 433 MHz, but in later years a new band has been introduced around
the frequency of 868 MHz.
On the one hand the reach is better in a system working at 433 MHz, but
it requires a longer antenna and the transmitter requires more energy.
For that reason most manufacturers of today have switched frequency and
build their transmitters for the frequency band of 868MHz. As wireless
alarms get increasingly popular this radio frequency band is getting
crowded.
”The attack time”
In this context it is important to note that it is better to buy an
alarm system which doesn’t require the radio link for longer than
necessary. Some people talk about the so called “attack time” which
means how fast the alarm communication over the radio link is. With long
attack time the risk increases for radio noise or competition from other
systems nearby. It is also important to buy a system working with
digital communication over the alarm link. In the past it happened quite
frequently that analogue signals created positive interference, thus
adding the signal strength of each together, which in unfortunate
circumstances meant that the alarm receiver activated and indicated a
false alarm. With the demand for a digital bit stream in order to
activate an alarm this problem is avoided.
Extended range
with repeaters
Another phenomenon which begins to show up nowadays is the possibility
to connect wireless units in a chain and make them work as repeaters to
each other. In doing so one can overcome previous range limitations.
Depending on design one can say that the alarm link typically can manage
a point-to-point connection of maximum 500 meters.
When connecting the units in a chain one gets closer to the kind of data
communication which exists in the data networks of companies. Here all
traffic gets an address and a fixed (static) routing table is
established which is distributed to the units of the net. The table
tells the radio units how to handle an incoming alarm signal – depending
on the receiver address.
A system of this kind can for example be used for installations in large
department stores, shopping centres, public transport and similar
applications.
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