Monitor Analog Alarms
Receive Detailed Reports of Environmental Alarms
In the real world, not every condition can be represented with a digital on/off. Analog alarms connected to common current transducers (sensors) provide visibility of continuously variable conditions like temperature, humidity, and battery voltage. These factors can have critical effects on essential equipment, and during a service-affecting outage, you want all the information you can get.
Analog alarms are essential to effective remote-site monitoring, but many common remote telemetry units don't provide detailed analog visibility. To provide best-qualify visibility of analog inputs, a remote should monitor live analog values and set multiple separate alarm thresholds. When an analog value passes or drops below a predefined threshold, the remote telemetry unit declares a detailed alarm, including the live value of the analog reading.
top
What Do You Want Your Alarm Collection Device To Do?
- Monitor Discrete, Analog, and Ping Alarms
- Report Alarms in the Protocol of Your Choice
- Control Remote Site Equipment
- Filter Nuisance Alarms
- Provide Stand-Alone Monitoring and Automatically Dispatch Repair Personnel
- Provide Alarm Monitoring Capacity That's Exactly Right for Your Sites
- Link Remote Sites to Central Offices Using LAN or Dial-Up
- Mediate Alarm Inputs Between Different Protocols
- Report Alarms Over a T1 Connection
How Are Other Companies Using Alarm Collection Devices?
- EATEL keeps their customers happy with fast network outage response times
- RT Communications Uses the NetGuardian & IAM to Bring Network Monitoring In-House
- New York City Transit's $141 million project to create an ATM/SONET network for the 21st century
- In-house monitoring improves reliability at Triangle Communications Inc.