T O P I C R E V I E W |
BryanH |
Posted - Nov 18 2010 : 9:26:47 PM Sorry if I am posting in the wrong spot, it's my first day. I have a building that I help look after[commercial building] and the issue is that the fire alarm system that is on the building needs to see 48 volts from the phone system, according to a fire alarm company that I use with a very good rep. The phone company says that 41-45 volts, which is what I have is ok. I will start here as I have more info on this. My question is the board is 7 years old, and has had problems for about 5 or 6 according to someone who has been looking after the building longer than me. Are the older boards sensitive to voltage drop 1-3%? Thanks for the input in advance. |
3 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
BryanH |
Posted - Nov 29 2010 : 7:36:33 PM Pretty sure the board is junk. I think it should be able to handle the phone company minimum of 41-45. Thanks for the info guys. |
KMoffett |
Posted - Nov 29 2010 : 12:07:41 PM Time and environment can have a negative effect on some electronic parts. Electrolytic capacitors, connector contacts, switches, relays... More info ("has had problems" ????), schematics, and photos can help.
Ken |
Aaron Cake |
Posted - Nov 20 2010 : 10:22:12 AM It is hard to say without seeing the circuit. It would be reasonable to assume that the circuit should be able to handle the range of voltages present on the phone line. This ranges from about 6-18V when in use, 40-60V when idle, and 90-130V when ringing. |
|
|