Saturday, March 22, 2014
Thursday, March 20, 2014
Alarm Sensors on a safe
those two gray rectangles on the left side of the safe are the sensors. The one on the left is the actual sensor that feeds open/closed information back to the ELK panel. The one on the right is just a powerful magnet. So, the problem with this is that just putting a strong magnet on top of the left-hand sensor would fool the panel into thinking everything is fine while the safe door is wide open (someone correct me if I'm wrong here).
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
Busy cable trays
Thats a a lot of cable! I sure hope they didnt mix cat5 and cat6 in there. Otherwise they might get Alien Crosstalk!
Posted via Blogaway
Labels:
alien crosstalk,
cable management,
cat5,
cat5e,
cat6
Location:
Stratford, United States
Monday, March 17, 2014
Typical cash wrap
This is a very typical cash wrap environment for retail stores (think Malls, clothing retailers).
One, two, or three POS machines sit atop a counter, and the ancillary technology is stored in the space below.
PagePro IP by Valcom
The PagePro IP is a device that allows paging to Analog PA systems via an IP port. This is becoming increasing important with the proliferation VoIP phone systems.
Basically the way it works is the PagePro IP connects to the Ethernet switch just as any other ethernet device would. On the back of the PagePro IP is an analog audio output which would go to the tip/ring input of your amplifier. (or some other "audio in").
One of the big differences between the way a purely analog paging system works vs. the PagePro IP is that the announcement is collected first, then broadcast only after the announcer hangs up.
Basically the way it works is the PagePro IP connects to the Ethernet switch just as any other ethernet device would. On the back of the PagePro IP is an analog audio output which would go to the tip/ring input of your amplifier. (or some other "audio in").
One of the big differences between the way a purely analog paging system works vs. the PagePro IP is that the announcement is collected first, then broadcast only after the announcer hangs up.
Connections and facotry reset on Aruba ap-135
If you need to connect a management console cable to the Aurba AP135 use a cisco console cable.
The settings will be 9600, 8, N, 1. Recommend Putty - Hypervisor gave me some trouble.
To reset the unit back to factory reset:
1. with your console cable already connected, power up the AP
2. when you see the autoboot countdown, hit enter to stop it
3. if you stopped the autoboot you'll see a prompt that says APBOOT
- type factory_reset, enter
- type purgeenv
- type clear os
- type save (saves your newly restored environment)
- type boot (to reboot).
Saturday, March 15, 2014
Friday, March 14, 2014
changing batteries in APC Smart-UPS 1500 Rack-mount
Changing the batteries in a APC Smart-UPS
(SUA1500RM2U)
(any of the following pictures can be made much larger by clicking on them)
Begin by removing the black face cover (no screws).
Look for the thick, red & black pair of wires with a little lanyard on them. This is to pull and disconnect the battery supply cord.
Pull on the lanyard which will disconnect the batteries.
Slide the battery tray all the way out.
This will be heavy! (about 20-30 LBS)
Disconnect the individual battery connectors. Be careful to keep them in order so they will be placed back on the right spots when you put new batteries in.
Install new batteries and then place tray back into the APC. Plug in the yellow supply cord and power on the unit.
You can find new batteries between $20-30 each (when you include shipping). One of the part number is
SUA1500R2X138 (there may be alternates)
Labels:
1500,
APC,
change batteries,
smart-ups,
SUA1500R2X138,
SUA1500RM2U
Valcom V-9941a volume adjustments
Valcom V-9941A
One Zone Talkback control.
If you take the cover off, there are two volume pots.
The one on the left is for the talk-back volume
The one on the right is the input gain for the TIP/RING input. And therefore can be used as a over-all volume control for the paging (but not the music).
Labels:
adjust volume. amplifier,
paging,
talkback,
V-9941,
Valcom
RJ-48X Wiring for T-1
Click on the picture to make it larger.
Labels:
Crimp-on RJ-45,
RJ-48X,
T-1 jack,
T-1 pinout,
wiring
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
Sony Vaio heat fan clogged
My Sony Vaio (VPCF113FX) had been having trouble with heat. I found it odd that the Fan would be running full throttle while I am still having heat problems (CPU temps above 90 Celsius). Sometimes, it overheated so bad, the whole machine shut down!!
I checked the corner where the heating-sink fins were located and realized that there was no real air-flow.
So, despite my reservations, took the back cover off. In order to get the back cover all you have take out ALL the screws. Plus, removed the CD Tray. If you're not comfortable working on small electronics, I would not recommend attempting this.
Below is a picture of the under-side of my Sony Vaio. Followed by a picture of the clogged heat sinks (that black area above the fan). Finally, there's a picture of the cleaned heat sinks fins. I used a toothbrush while simultaneously holding a vacuum next to it. You'll notice you can now see all the copper. (you can click on the pictures to make them very large).
After the cleaning, the temps are closer to 52-70 Celsius and it runs a little faster now too. The air flow now feels similar to a hair dryer running on its lowest setting.
Note: In order to get the fan open and clean the fins, you'll need to unscrew the heat-sink channels (those copper tubes) from the CPU and the GPU. You'll want to have some Heat Sink Grease on hand to re-apply to your processors when you put the heat-sink back on.
I checked the corner where the heating-sink fins were located and realized that there was no real air-flow.
So, despite my reservations, took the back cover off. In order to get the back cover all you have take out ALL the screws. Plus, removed the CD Tray. If you're not comfortable working on small electronics, I would not recommend attempting this.
Below is a picture of the under-side of my Sony Vaio. Followed by a picture of the clogged heat sinks (that black area above the fan). Finally, there's a picture of the cleaned heat sinks fins. I used a toothbrush while simultaneously holding a vacuum next to it. You'll notice you can now see all the copper. (you can click on the pictures to make them very large).
After the cleaning, the temps are closer to 52-70 Celsius and it runs a little faster now too. The air flow now feels similar to a hair dryer running on its lowest setting.
Note: In order to get the fan open and clean the fins, you'll need to unscrew the heat-sink channels (those copper tubes) from the CPU and the GPU. You'll want to have some Heat Sink Grease on hand to re-apply to your processors when you put the heat-sink back on.
Hand-twisted splices put money in my pocket
I'm sure more field technicians (or installers) know the proper way to splice low-voltage wires. Unfortunately, as well-intentioned as they might be, often it's more expedient to just twist-tie the wires and put electrical tape over them.
The down side is that after a few years, the oxidation begins to menace the connection and create static, resistance, or even failure.
This puts money in my pocket as I'm the repair tech who has to find this problem and correct it.
Below, is an example of how a proper splice should look. These are di-electrict, crimp-on splicers (aka: Red heads).
Labels:
corrosion,
di-electric,
hand-twisted,
low voltage,
red heads,
splice,
static
Shoppertrak ST600
This is the control unit that communicates with the camera and the network. The control unit needs network connectivity. As such, it usually resides in the back office close to where the network switches are.
Below is a picture of the camera out on the sales floor. It sits just above the entry threshold. The "camera" is not really a camera in the surveillance sense. It's a pair of lenses that are fixed. They are used to track motion and height.` Its main purpose is to count the number of potential customers that come in the door. It's a little tough to see, but it's that diamond-shaped white box on the ceiling with the two black dots (camera eyes).
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Nightmare data closet
This the data closet of a highly prestigious car dealership. Makes me wonder where else they cut corners.
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Cisco Stack Cables
Cisco switches are often grouped together to form what are called "Stacks". This group of switches is then managable as one switch (and via 1 IP address). Those silver braided cables are the stacking cables that go from one Cisco switch to the next to create a stack. The cables actually make loop to provide redundancy. For example, in a 3-switch stack, a cable goes from sw1 to sw2, then sw2 to sw3, then from sw3 back to sw1.
That way if the cable from sw2 to sw3 were to disconnect (and this happens more that you'd like to know!), there is still a connection going in the other direction.
That way if the cable from sw2 to sw3 were to disconnect (and this happens more that you'd like to know!), there is still a connection going in the other direction.
Labels:
cisco stack,
group of switches,
stack,
Stack cable
Cellular data backup
cellular antenna for backup 3G or 4G data. In small and medium sized business I am seeing more and more of this technique used as a back up data connection. In fact, some smaller retail stores are even using 4G as their ONLY source for broadband!
Most of the time, a Cradlepoint router is used with the cellular connection.
Most of the time, a Cradlepoint router is used with the cellular connection.
Nortel Norstar trunk card part #
Here is a part number for a Nortel Norstar trunk card for compact ICS. This is a NON caller ID trunk card. And, this part number is not the ONLY one which will work in the Norstar ICS.
Honeywell RapidEye - rearview
It is often hard to see the back of the RapidEye (HRE16R12D500) after it is installed. I've posted this as a reference for seeing where the connections are.
Labels:
BNC,
connections,
DVR,
Honeywell,
HRE16R12D500,
Iverify,
Phoenix,
RapidEye
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