INSTALLATION AND PROGRAMMING GUIDE 1134 Wireless Wiegand Module TABLE OF CONTENTS About the 1134 ............................................ 1 Power Supply ......................................................... 1 Zone Terminals ...................................................... 1 Annunciators .......................................................... 1 LED Indicators ....................................................... 1 LED Survey ............................................................ 2 Form C Relay ......................................................... 2 Programming Connection ................................ 2 Dry/Wet Contact ................................................. 2 PCB Features ...............................................3 Program the 1134 ........................................4 Part 1: Device Setup ............................................ 4 Part 2: Zone Information .................................. 5 Install the 1134 ............................................6 Mount the 1134 ...................................................... 6 Wire the Electronic Lock .................................. 7 Isolation Relay ...................................................... 9 Install the 333 Suppressor ..............................10 Wire the Zone Terminals ...................................11 Connect a Card Reader ....................................13 Program the 1134 Options ....................... 15 Program Start Display ......................................15 Serial Number Display ......................................15 Initialization Option ...........................................15 Initialize Confirm Option .................................16 Activate Zone 2 Bypass ...................................16 Zone 2 Bypass Time ..........................................17 Relock on Zone 2 Change ...............................17 Activate Zone 3 Request to Exit ..................18 Zone 3 REX Strike Time ...................................19 Activate Onboard Speaker .............................19 Custom Card Definitions ........................ 20 Any Card Format ...............................................20 Card Formats ......................................................20 Format Name ......................................................20 Wiegand Code Length .....................................21 Site Code Position and Length ....................22 User Code Position and Length ...................22 Require Site Code .............................................22 Site Code Display ..............................................23 Number of User Code Digits .........................23 No Communication with Panel ....................24 Remove Keypad .................................................25 Public Card Formats ............................... 26 Product Specifications ............................27 Readers and Credentials .........................28 FCC Information ...................................... 30 Industry Canada Information .................. 31 ABOUT THE 1134 The 1134 Wireless Wiegand Module allows you to use the powerful built-in access control capability of DMP panels. DMP panels provide access control, arming, and disarming using proximity, mag-stripe, biometric or other Wiegand-output authentication devices. The 1134 connects and operates wirelessly with DMP panels. A keypad may be plugged directly into the 1134 for local programming. The 1134 includes the following features:
POWER SUPPLY The 1134 operates at 12/24VDC from the power supply supporting a doors magnetic lock or door-strikes. It also provides a 10 Amp Form C relay contact for lock control. ANNUNCIATORS An on-board programmable piezo provides local annunciation at the 1134. You can also connect a variety of switched ground annunciators to the 1134 for remote annunciation. ZONE TERMINALS The 1134 has four onboard zones that can be programmed for a variety of burglary or access control applications. LED INDICATORS The 1134 provides two indicator LEDs. The SURVEY (Red) LED turns on for the same duration as the door strike relay. The WIEGAND
(Yellow) LED turns on for one second to indicate receipt of a valid Wiegand input. Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 1 FORM C RELAY The 1134s Form C relay draws up to 35mA of current. Refer to the NC/C/NO (Dry Contact Relay) and the Isolation Relay sections in this document for more information. PROGRAMMING CONNECTION The 1134 provides a keypad programming connection that allows you to use a standard DMP LCD keypad for initial setup. DRY/WET CONTACT Apply power to the door relay (WET setting) or leave it unpowered (DRY setting). LED SURVEY The 1134 provides a Survey LED capability to allow one person to confirm communication with the wireless receiver while the cover is removed. Mount the 1134 away from large metal objects because it may impair performance. Do not mount the 1134 inside a metal enclosure or install in a drop ceiling. 1. With the cover removed, hold the 1134 in the exact desired location. 2. Press the tamper switch to send data to the panel and determine if communication is confirmed or faulty. Confirmed: If communication is confirmed, for each press or release of the tamper switch, the LED blinks immediately on and immediately off. Faulty: If communication is faulty, the LED remains on for about 8seconds or flashes multiple times in quick succession. Relocate the 1134 or receiver until the LED confirms clear communication. 2 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. LED Indicators Keypad Programming Header PCB FEATURES Piezo SURVEY WIEGAND Tamper Reset RESET TAMPER DISABLE DRY WET Y E V R U S LED Survey Button Dry/Wet Contact 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 NO C NC PROG RED WHT GRN BLK LC RA AS Z1 GND Z2 GND Z3 GND Z4 Power Supply Wiegand Inputs Status Indicator Outputs Zones Figure 1: PCB Features Door Relay Terminal Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 3 PROGRAM THE 1134 Refer to the panel programming guide as needed. 1. Reset the panel. 2. At the keypad, enter 6653 (PROG) to access the PROGRAMMER menu. In DEVICE SETUP, press CMD until you get to DEVICE NO: -. PART 1: DEVICE SETUP 1. 2. Enter a DEVICE NO:- and press CMD. 3. Enter a DEVICE NAME and press CMD. 4. (XT30/XT50 only) Select YES when WIRELESS? displays. 5. (XR150/XR550 only) Select DOOR for DEVICE TYPE and press CMD. 6. (XR150/XR550 only) Select WLS at COMM TYPE and press CMD. Note: Panel version 191 or higher software is required. 7. Enter the eight-digit SERIAL#:- and press CMD. Note: Enter the Type 14 serial number found on the 1134 PCB or by connecting a keypad to the header on the 1134. 8. Enter the SUPRVSN TIME and press CMD. 4 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. In ZONE INFORMATION, enter the wireless ZONE NO: and press CMD. PART 2: ZONE INFORMATION 1. 2. Enter the ZONE NAME and press CMD. 3. Select the ZONE TYPE and press CMD. 4. At NEXT ZN?, select NO. 5. Select YES when WIRELESS? displays. 6. Enter the eight-digit SERIAL#:- and press CMD. Note: Enter the Type 08 serial number found on the 1134 PCB or by connecting a keypad to the header on the 1134. 7. Enter the CONTACT number being used. 8. Enter the SUPRVSN TIME and press CMD. 9. At the NEXT ZN? prompt, select YES and continue to program up to three more zones. Note: Zones must be entered sequentially. For example, if you program zone 71, you need to program zone 72 as the next contact. Use the same serial number for each contact. Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 5 INSTALL THE 1134 1 MOUNT THE 1134 The 1134 comes in a high-impact plastic housing that you can mount directly to a wall, backboard, or other flat surface. For easy installation, the back and ends of the 1134 housing have wire entrances. The back also contains multiple mounting holes that allow you to mount the 1134 on a single-gang switch box. DMP recommends mounting the 1134 near the protected door. Remove the PCB from the housing base to install the housing to the wall. See Figure2 for mounting hole locations. 6 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. Figure 2: Mounting Hole Locations Mounting Hole 2 WIRE THE ELECTRONIC LOCK The 1134 provides a Form C (SPDT) relay for controlling locks and other electronically-controlled barriers. The three relay terminals marked NO C NC allow you to connect the device wiring to the relay for module control. Use a power supply to power magnetic locks. See Figure 3. You can power door strikes either from a power supply (DRY contact) or from the 1134 (WET contact). See Figures 4a and 4b for door strike wiring. The Form C relay draws up to 35mA of current and contacts are rated for 10Amps (resistive) at 12/24VDC. When connecting multiple locks to the Form C relay, the total current for all locks cannot exceed 10 Amps. If the total current for all locks exceeds 10 Amps, problems may arise and an isolation relay may be needed. See the Isolation Relay section for information. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 RED WHT GRN BLK LC RA AS Z1 GND Z2 GND Z3 GND Z4 Normally Closed NC NO C 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 RED WHT GRN BLK LC RA AS Z1 GND Z2 GND Z3 GND Z4 Normally Open NO C NC
+Magnetic Door Lock Model 333 Suppressor 12/24 VDC Power Supply Figure 3: Typical Magnetic Lock Wiring
+
DC Door Strike Model 333 Suppressor 12/24 VDC Power Supply Figure 4a: Dry Door Strike Wiring Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 7 When the jumper on the 1134 is set to WET, the C terminal will pass 12VDC though the Cterminal. No additional power supply is needed. See Figure4b. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 RED WHT GRN BLK LC RA AS Z1 GND Z2 GND Z3 GND Z4 Normally Open NO C NC
+
DC Door Strike Model 333 Suppressor Figure 4b: Wet Door Strike Wiring 8 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. 3 ISOLATION RELAY
(optional) The Form C relay can control a device that draws less than 10 Amps of current. If a device draws more than 10 Amp of current, or the sum of all devices controlled by the Form C relay exceeds 10 Amps, an isolation relay must be used. Refer to Figures 5 and 6 for isolation relay wiring. 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 LC RA AS Z1 GND Z2 GND Z3 GND Z4 Normally Open NO C NC 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 LC RA AS Z1 GND Z2 GND Z3 GND Z4 Normally Open NO C NC 12/24 VDC Power Supply Model 333 Suppressor
+Isolation Relay NO C NC Magnetic Lock
+
12/24 VDC Power Supply Model 333 Suppressor
+Isolation Relay NO C NC DC Door Strike
+
Figure 5: Magnetic Lock with an Isolation Relay Figure 6: Door Strike with an Isolation Relay Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 9 4 INSTALL THE 333 SUPPRESSOR Use the included 333 suppressor with the 1134 to suppress any surges caused by energizing a magnetic lock or door strike. Install the 333 across the 1134 C (common) and NO (normally open) or NC (normally closed) terminals. If the device being controlled by the relay is connected to the NO and C terminals, install the suppressor on the NO and C terminals. Conversely, if the device is connected to the NC and C terminals, install the 333 Suppressor on NC and C terminals. The suppressor wire is non-polarized. Install the suppressor as shown in Figure 7. 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 AS Z1 GND Z2 GND Z3 GND Z4 NO C NC Figure 7: 333 Suppressor Installation on the 1134 10 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. 5 WIRE THE ZONE TERMINALS Terminals 8 through 14 connect grounded zones 1 through 4. These zones have a grounded side and cannot be used for fire-initiating devices. Zones 2 and 3 can also be used for access control with zone 2 providing a bypass feature and zone 3 providing Request to Exit functionality. Use the supplied 311 1K Ohm end-of-line (EOL) resistors on each zone. Refer to the panel programming guide for programming instructions. See the table below and Figure 8 for more information on wiring the zone terminals. ZONE #
RECOMMENDED DEVICE 1 2 3 4 Any burglary device Door Contact REX (PIR or Button) Any burglary device Table 1: 1134 Zone Uses Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 11 Zone 1 1K EOL Zone 2 1K EOL Zone 3 1K EOL Zone 4 1K EOL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 NO C NC RED WHT GRN BLK LC RA AS Z1 GND Z2 GND Z3 GND Z4 Figure 8: 1134 Zone Terminal Wiring 12 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. 6 CONNECT A CARD READER (optional) The 1134 provides direct 12/24VDC, 200mA output to the reader on the RED terminal connection. Figure 9 shows a reader with wire colors RED, WHT, GRN, and BLK connecting to terminals 1, 2, 3, and 4. The green wire carries Data Zero (D0), and the white wire carries Data One (D1). The red wire connects 12/24VDC, 200mA maximum power and the black wire is ground. The wire colors may be different depending on the reader being installed. Refer to the literature provided with the reader for wire coding, wire distance, cable type (such as shielded), and other specifications. Card Reader LED Operation To provide visual indication of a valid card read, the card reader can be wired to illuminate the green LED for the duration of the door strike. Connect the orange or brown wire to LC terminal 5 to have the green LED stay on for the duration of the relay activation. Card Reader Annunciation Connect the yellow wire to RA terminal 6 to have the remote annunciator turn on anytime the panel instructs the 1134 on-board piezo to turn on. Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 13 Card Reader Shield Orange/Brown Yellow Black (GND) Green (Data 0) White (Data 1) Red (12/24VDC) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 NO C NC PROG RED WHT GRN BLK LC RA AS Z1 GND Z2 GND Z3 GND Z4 Figure 9: Card Reader Wiring 14 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. PROGRAM THE 1134 OPTIONS When you program the 1134, you can use a keypad connected to the 1134 programming header and set to address 1. For 12V applications, connect the keypad to the module using a Model 330 4-wire harness. For 24V applications, connect the keypad to the module using a Model 330-24 4-wire programming harness with in-line resistor. Do not connect a keypad using a standard Model 330 harness if using a 24V power supply!
Damage to the keypad could occur. While the 1134 is in programming mode, it will not be able to communicate with the panel. 1134 PROGRAMMING VER VVV MM/DD/YY PROGRAM START DISPLAY When you connect the keypad to the 1134 module, the version number and release date display. Press CMD to enter the PROGRAMMER menu. SERIAL#:XXXXXXXX SERIAL NUMBER DISPLAY View the serial numbers for the 1134. The 1134 has a Type14 and Type08 serial number. Press CMD to view the second serial number. INITIALIZE ALL?
NO YES INITIALIZATION OPTION These options can set the 1134 module programming memory back to factory defaults. Press any select key or area to enter the Initialization menu. Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 15 ARE YOU SURE?
YES NO ACTIVATE ZONE 2 BYPASS?
NO YES INITIALIZE CONFIRM OPTION After selecting YES to clear the Access Options, the 1134 displays SURE? YES NO for confirmation to clear the memory. This is a safeguard against accidentally erasing the programming. No memory is cleared from the programming until you answer YES to the SURE?
option. Selecting NO leaves communication options unchanged. ACTIVATE ZONE 2 BYPASS Select YES to activate the zone 2 bypass operation. Selecting NO allows standard zone operation on zone 2. The default is NO. If the door being released by the 1134 module is protected (contact installed), a programmable bypass entry/exit timer can be provided by connecting the contact wiring to the 1134 module zone 2. When the on-board Form C relay activates and the user opens the door connected to zone 2, the zone is delayed for the number of seconds programmed in ZONE 2 BYPASS TIME allowing the user to enter/exit during an armed period. If zone 2 does not restore (door closed) within the programmed time, the piezo sounds every other second during the last ten seconds. If zone 2 restores prior to the end of the programmed time, the piezo silences. If the zone does not restore before the programmed time, the 1134 ends the bypass and indicates the open or short zone condition to the panel. 16 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. ZONE 2 BYPASS TIME:
40 ZONE 2 BYPASS TIME Enter the number of seconds to elapse before the bypass timer expires. The range is 20-250 seconds. Press any select key or area to enter the number of seconds. The default is 40seconds. Figure12 shows how the bypass option works. 5 Second Strike 10 seconds before the bypass time expires, the device beeps if the door is still open. 40 Seconds 40-Second Zone 2 Bypass entry/exit timer. End of timer. A zone open/short is indicated if the door remains open. Figure 12: Zone 2 Bypass Timeline using default time RELOCK ON ZONE 2 CHANGE? NO YES RELOCK ON ZONE 2 CHANGE Selecting YES turns the relay off when zone 2 changes state. Selecting NO leaves the relay on when zone 2 changes state. Turning off the relay at Door Closed allows a long strike time to be automatically ended and relocks the door. The default is NO. Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 17 ACTIVATE ZONE 3 REX?
NO YES ACTIVATE ZONE 3 REQUEST TO EXIT Selecting YES activates the zone 3 Request to Exit (REX) option. Selecting NO allows standard zone operation on zone 3. Default setting is NO. Connect a motion sensing device or a mechanical switch to zone 3 to provide REX capability to the system. When zone 3 shorts, the on-board Form C relay activates for the programmed number of seconds. See Zone 3 REX Strike Time. During this time, the user can open the protected door to start the programmed zone 2 bypass entry/exit timer. After the programmed number of seconds, the relay restores the door to its locked state. The 1134 module provides a bypass-only option for REX on zone 3. When zone 3 OPENS from a NORMAL state, only a bypass occurs: the on-board relay does not activate. This bypass-only option uses two methods of REX. The first REX device provides the programmed bypass entry/exit timer. The second REX unlocks the door. 18 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. ZN 3 REX STRIKE TIME:
5 ZONE 3 REX STRIKE TIME Enter the number of REX seconds to elapse. Range is from 5 to 250 seconds. Press any select key or area to enter the number of seconds. The default is 5 seconds. ACTIVATE ONBOARD SPEAKER? NO YES ACTIVATE ONBOARD SPEAKER Select YES to enable the onboard piezo for local annunciation, such as alarm and trouble annunciations. Select NO to turn the speaker off for all operations. This does not affect remote annunciator open collector (RA) operation. The default is NO. Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 19 CUSTOM CARD DEFINITIONS ANY CARD FORMAT NO YES CARD FORMATS FORMAT NO: -
ANY CARD FORMAT Select YES to allow all card reads to activate the door strike relay. The door strike relay is activated for the length of time programmed in ZN3 REX TIME. No user code information is sent to the panel. Default is NO. CARD FORMATS Select the slot number (1-7) that you would like to program a custom non-DMP card format into. Select 8 if you would like to program a DMP card format. See Public Card Formats for some publicly available card formats that can be used with the 1134. Other private or custom formats may also be compatible. Please contact the credential supplier or manufacturer for the bit structure. FORMAT NAME
*UNUSED*
FORMAT NAME Press any select area to rename the card format. Press CMD to save and advance. 20 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 First Bit Received Position = 0 Site Code Position = 1 Length = 8 User Code Position = 9 Length = 16 Last Bit Received Position = 25 In this example the Wiegand Code Length = 26 bits. Figure 13: Wiegand Data Stream Bit Location WIEGAND CODE LENGTH When using a custom credential, enter the total number of bits to be received in Wiegand code including parity bits. Press any select key or area to enter a number between 1-255 to equal the number of bits. Default is 26 bits. An access card contains data bits for a site code, user code, and start/stop/parity bits. The starting position, location, and code length must be determined and programmed into the keypad. See Figure13. WEIGAND CODE LENGTH:
26 Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 21 SITE CODE POS: 1 LEN: 8 USER CODE POS: 9 LEN: 16 REQUIRE SITE CODE?:
NO YES SITE CODE POSITION AND LENGTH Enter the site code start position and length in the data string. Press select area 2 to clear the site code start position and enter a number between 0-255. Press CMD to save. Default is 1. Press select area 4 to clear the site code length and enter a number between 1-24. Press CMD to save. Default is 8. USER CODE POSITION AND LENGTH Define the user code start bit position and length. Press select area 2 to clear the user code position and enter a number between 0-255. Press CMD to save. Default is 9. Press select area 4 to clear the user code length and enter a number between 16-64. Press CMD to save. The default is the DMP value of 16. REQUIRE SITE CODE Press the top row select key or area under YES to use a site code and press CMD to view the site code entry display. Press NO to advance to NO OF USER CODE DIGITS. Default is NO. In addition to user code verification, door access is only granted when any one site code programmed at the SITE CODE ENTRY option matches the site code received in the Wiegand string. 22 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. SITE CODE 1:
NO OF USER CODE DIGITS: 5 SITE CODE DISPLAY You can program up to eight 8-digit site codes. The site code range is 0-16,777,214. In the keypad display, enter site code 1 and press CMD. The display will ask for site code 2 followed by site code 3 and so on. When you have selected the site code you want to change, press CMD. NUMBER OF USER CODE DIGITS The 1134 module recognizes user codes from 4-12digits long. Press any top row select key or area to enter a user code digit length. This number must match the user code number length being programmed in the panel. Default is 5. All bits are read and converted into a decimal number string. The number string is left padded with 0 if needed for long user code lengths. When selecting 4 the right digit is dropped and the next four sent. Example:
0001234567
# decoded 10 digits 1234567 5 digits 4 digits 34567 3456 Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 23 NO COMM WITH PNL OFF SITE ANY ON NO COMM WITH PNL LAST NO COMMUNICATION WITH PANEL Define the relay action when communication with the panel has not occurred for 5seconds. Default is OFF. Press any select key or area to change the default relay action:
Press the first select key or area to choose OFF (Relay Always Off) The relay and Wiegand LED do not turn on when any Wiegand string is received. OFF does not affect any REX operation. If communication is lost during a door strike, the relay remains on for the door strike duration but turns off at the end of the door strike timer. Press the second select key or area to choose SITE (Accept Site Code) Door access is granted when the Wiegand site code string received matches any site code programmed at SITE CODE DISPLAY. Refer to REQUIRE SITE CODE for more information. Press the third select key or area to choose ANY (Any Wiegand Read) Access is granted when any Wiegand string is received. Press the fourth select key or area to choose ON (Relay Always On) The relay is always on. Press CMD to display the next action. Press the first select key or area to choose LAST (Keep Last State) The relay remains in the same state and does not change when communication is lost. 24 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. REMOVE KEYPAD REMOVE KEYPAD The REMOVE KEYPAD option continually displays with no time out while the keypad remains connected to the 1134 module after programming is finished. After five seconds, the 1134 module piezo continually sounds if the keypad remains connected and programming is finished. Remove the keypad harness to disconnect the keypad from the 1134 module and silence the alarm. Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 25 PUBLIC CARD FORMATS WIEGAND CODE LENGTH 26 37 SITE CODE POSITION 1 1 SITE CODE LENGTH 8 16 USER CODE POSITION 9 17 USER CODE LENGTH 16 19 USER CODE DIGITS 5 6 37 39 35 48 0 1 2 2 0 17 12 22 1 18 14 24 35 20 20 23 12 7 6 7 CARD FORMAT H10301 26 BIT H10302 37 BIT W/FAC H10304 37 BIT W/O FAC FARPOINTE 39 BIT CORPORATE 1000 35 BIT CORPORATE 1000 48 BIT 26 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. PRODUCT SPECIFICATIONS Primary Power Current Draw Standby Peak Reader Current Zones Dimensions Weight 8.5VDC to 28.5VDC 220mA (includes 200mA for proximity reader) 230mA (includes 200mA for proximity reader) up to 200mA 5VDC, 2mA max 4.5W x 2.75H x 1.75Din 11.43W x 7H x 4.45Dcm 8oz
.23kg Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 27 READERS AND CREDENTIALS 125 KHZ PROXIMITY READERS 125 KHZ PROXIMITY CREDENTIALS P-300 P-500 P-640 MP-5365 MX-5375 PP-6005B PP-5355 PR-5455 TL-5395 CASCADE PROXIMITY READER ALPS PROXIMITY READER PATAGONIA PROXIMITY READER WITH KEYPAD MINIPROX PROXIMITY READER MAXIPROX PROXIMITY READER PROXPOINT PLUS PROXIMITY READER PROXPRO PROXIMITY READER WITH KEYPAD PROXPRO II PROXIMITY READER THINLINE II PROXIMITY READER PSC-1 PSK-3 PSM-2P 1306 1326 1346 1351 1386 STANDARD LIGHT PROXIMITY CARD PROXIMITY KEY RING TAG ISO IMAGEABLE PROXIMITY CARD PROX PATCH PROXCARD II CARD PROXKEY III ACCESS DEVICE PROXPASS ISOPROX II CARD 28 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. 13.56 MHZ SMARTCARD READERS 13.56 MHZ SMARTCARD CREDENTIALS DELTA3 DELTA5 DELTA5.3 DELTA6.4 FARPOINTE SMARTCARD READER FARPOINTE SMARTCARD READER FARPOINTE SMARTCARD READER FARPOINTE SMARTCARD READER DC1-1 DM1-3 DE2 DK1-3 FARPOINTE CLAMSHELL SMARTCARD FARPOINTE IMAGEABLE SMARTCARD FARPOINTE MIFARE DESFIRE EV1 SMARTCARD FARPOINTE KEY FOB SMARTCARD Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 29 FCC INFORMATION This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions:
1. This device may not cause harmful interference, and 2. This device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. Changes or modifications made by the user and not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the users authority to operate the equipment. Note: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. 30 1134 Installation and Programming Guide | Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. INDUSTRY CANADA INFORMATION This device complies with Industry Canada Licence-exempt RSS standard(s). Operation is subject to the following two conditions:
1. This device may not cause interference, and 2. This device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device. Le prsent appareil est conforme aux CNR dIndustrie Canada applicables aux appareils radio exempts de licence. Lexploitation est autorise aux deux conditions suivantes:
1. lappareil ne doit pas produire de brouillage, et 2. lutilisateur de lappareil doit accepter tout brouillage radiolectrique subi, mme si le brouillage est susceptible den compromettre le fonctionnement. Digital Monitoring Products, Inc. | 1134 Installation and Programming Guide 31 LT-1889 19124 2019 Digital Monitoring Products, Inc.