Reducing Voltage Drop - Method 1:
Double up the supply connections (12V and
0V), which will halve the resistance on each
core and therefore halve the voltage drop.
When using Table 1 to calculate the
expected voltage drop, simply divide the
voltage drop for a single core by two.
Reducing Voltage Drop - Method 2:
Supply the detection devices from the Aux
output on separate cores. This is the
preferred method of reducing voltage drop
as detectors generally operate at lower
voltages (9.5V). When using this method,
the network cable must have at least two
spare cores.
Remote Power Supplies
When you cannot reduce voltage drops by
method 1 or 2, or the demand on the
control unit power supply exceeds its
capacity (see Technical Specifications –
page 31), you should install one or more
remote power supplies. The supply must
have a "floating zero Volt rail" if connected
to the network, otherwise an earth fault will
occur. Cooper Security recommend the
EXP-PSU. When installing a remote power
supply, fit it close to the equipment that it
is powering.
Figure 12 shows the recommended method
of connecting a remote power supply.
Figure
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