Myalarm V-LED1 Manual de usuario

Busca en linea o descarga Manual de usuario para Los Sistemas De Control De Acceso De Seguridad Myalarm V-LED1. Multifunctional Wireless Alarm Manual de usuario

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Issue 194 September 2006
CIRCUIT CELLAR
®
www.circuitcellar.com
will give you a status report when you
call home and enter your security code
.
SYSTEM OVERVIEW
The system’s base unit receives sta-
tus data from the remote wireless sen-
sors and acts on it appropriately. It
lights an LED to alert you when an
error condition exists. You can press a
button for an audio report from the
remote sensors. If you’re away from
home, you can call the phone number
connected to the base unit, enter a
security code, and receive the report.
A garage door module is attached to
the inside of a garage door. It trans-
mits the door’s position to the base
unit. An error message is sent if the
door is open.
A water level detection module peri-
odically transmits water level data to
the base station. It sends an error mes-
sage if the level is above a calibrated
trip point. It uses a flexible clear vinyl
tub
e to detect the water level. You can
place the tube in a sump pump hole,
bathtub, or hot tub in order to prevent
overflows that can cause water damage.
A temperature module periodically
takes the current temperature and
compares it to upper and lower limits
that you set. If the temperature is
beyond either limit, the module trans-
mits an error message to the base sta-
tion; otherwise, it transmits a non-
error message. The reading is also
transmitted to the base station. This
module allows you to monitor heating
and air conditioning systems. You can
Irec
ently designed a multifunctional
wireless alarm system that’s based on
the IEEE 802.15.4 wireless data modem
specification. Implemented with
Freescale Semiconductor’s SimpleMAC
software, the system runs on micro-
controllers in the MC9S08GT family.
A popular cartoon character who
decided to become an inventor was
the inspiration for my design, which I
call the Everything is OK Alarm. One
of his inventions looked like a smoke
alarm that beeped loudly and con-
stantly. Over the loud beeping, he
yells, “This is an Everything is OK
Alarm. It keeps beeping as long as
everything is OK.”
Actually, my alarm is more like a
security alarm system, yet very differ-
ent. How many times have you won-
dered if you closed the garage door
after leaving your house? Have you
ever worried about your heat shutting
off and your water pipes freezing? Or,
maybe you’ve worried during a storm
that your sump pump has quit and
your basement is filling with water.
A traditional security system acti-
vates only when something bad hap-
pens (e.g., a burglar opens a window).
It will not notify you when your front
door isn’t locked. Nor can it monitor
such things as water in your basement
and a particular room’s temperature.
My syste
m can do all of these things
and more. You can keep tabs on every-
thing from the position of your garage
doors to the water level in your hot tub.
The system’s remote wireless sensors
also use it to monitor the temperature
near water pipes.
INSTALLATION & OPERATION
The base unit is installed by con-
necting a phone line to an RJ11 wall
jack. You can plug a telephone into
the ja
ck. Power can be supplied to the
base unit with the wall plug power
supply or a USB cable plugged into a
PC’s USB port. (I used the power sup-
ply that came with the Freescale
Wireless Design Challenge contest kit.)
A speaker is plugged into the speaker
jack. A set of unamplified computer
speakers is sufficient for this purpose
.
Now let’s focus on the processes of
powering up and programming the
system. Programming is necessary at
power-up. The base unit uses a built-
in speech synthesizer to guide you
through the programming process. It
asks for a network number and securi-
ty code for dial-up access to be pro-
grammed with the push buttons on a
Freescale MC13192-EVB. The purpose
of the network number is to allow
more than one system to work with-
out each reacting to the sensor mes-
sages from the others. The base unit
won’t act on messages unless the data
packet is properly formatted and the
network number matches. The net-
work number must be the same for
the base unit and all of the remote
sensors that the base unit monitors.
At this point, the unit will announce
that the system is ready to use.
The unit lights LED4 on the
FEATURE ARTICLE by Carl Smith
Multifunctional Wireless
Alarm
Carl’s multifunctional wireless alarm system can monitor everything from the doors to the
sump pump in your house.The system features an MC13192 SARD board and several wire-
less sensors. When the alarm is activated, simply place a call to your house to obtain a sta-
tus report.
2609016 Smith.qxp 8/4/2006 2:18 PM Page 30
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Indice de contenidos

Pagina 1 - Multifunctional Wireless

30Issue 194 September 2006CIRCUIT CELLAR®www.circuitcellar.comwill give you a status report when youcall home and enter your security code.SYSTEM OVE

Pagina 2 - HARDWARE DESIGN

www.circuitcellar.comCIRCUIT CELLAR®Issue 194 September 2006 31MC13192-EVB when a remote sensorreports an error condition. You canpress S1 for a s

Pagina 3 - Figure 1

32Issue 194 September 2006CIRCUIT CELLAR®www.circuitcellar.comwas a good decision by the designers.In most applications, the module sim-ply would be

Pagina 4 - GARAGE DOOR SENSOR

hardware integration on theMC13192-SARD, the design of thissensor was software only, but this pro-vided an easy starting point to startsoftware develo

Pagina 5 - TEMPERATURE SENSOR

34Issue 194 September 2006CIRCUIT CELLAR®www.circuitcellar.comThe minor exception I mentionedearlier is power management. One ofthe great things abou

Pagina 6 - Made Of?

What Are Yo uMade Of?Show us what you’re made of by entering the MSP430 eZ Design Contest. Pit yourselfagainst other top designers from around the wor

Pagina 7 - Register Today & Save!

via a connection to the TP104 on thesolder side of the MC13192-SARDPCB. Ground is obtained from theJ101 BDM port pin 2. The signal isconnected to the

Pagina 8 - PEACE OF MIND

www.circuitcellar.comCIRCUIT CELLAR®Issue 194 September 2006 37Carl Smith ([email protected])has more than 12 years of experiencein electronic

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