Honeywell EBI XLS MASS NOTIFICATION SYSTEM Configuration, Preset Setup, Operation
Honeywell EBI XLS MASS NOTIFICATION SYSTEM Configuration, Preset Setup, Operation

Honeywell EBI XLS MASS NOTIFICATION SYSTEM Configuration, Preset Setup, Operation

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Honeywell Emergency Notification Manager
WARNING
This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate
radio frequency energy, and if not installed and
used in accordance with the Instructions Manual,
may cause interference with radio communication.
It has been tested and found to comply with the
limits for a Class A computing device pursuant to
Subpart J of Part 15 of FCC Rules, which are
designed to provide reasonable protection against
such interference when operated in a commercial
environment. Operation of this equipment in a
residential area is likely to cause interference, in
which case, users at their own expense will be
required to take whatever measures may be
required
to
correct
unauthorized modification of this equipment may
result in the revocation of the owner's authority to
continue its operation.
FIRE ALARM & EMERGENCY
COMMUNICATION SYSTEM
LIMITATIONS
While a life safety system may lower insurance rates, it is not a
substitute for life and property insurance
An automatic fire alarm system-typically made up of smoke
detectors, heat detectors, manual pull stations, audible
warning devices, and a fire alarm control panel (FACP) with
remote notification capability-can provide early warning of a
developing fire. Such a system, however, does not assure
protection against property damage or loss of life resulting
from a fire.
An emergency communication system-typically made up of
an automatic fire alarm system (as described above) and a life
safety
communication
autonomous control unit (ACU), local operating console
(LOC), voice communication, and other various interoperable
communication methods-can broadcast a mass notification
message. Such a system, however, does not assure
protection against property damage or loss of life resulting
from a fire or life safety event.
The Manufacturer recommends that smoke and/or heat
detectors be located throughout a protected premises
following the recommendations of the current edition of the
EBI XLS MASS NOTIFICATION SYSTEM (MNS)
the
interference.
system
that
may
include
CONFIGURATION, PROGRAMMING AND OPERATION MANUAL
National Fire Protection Association Standard 72 (NFPA 72),
manufacturer's recommendations, State and local codes, and
the recommendations contained in the Guide for Proper Use
of System Smoke Detectors, which is made available at no
charge to all installing dealers. This document can be found at
http://www.systemsensor.com/appguides.. A study by the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (an agency of the
United States government) indicated that smoke detectors
may not go off in as many as 35% of all fires. While fire alarm
systems are designed to provide early warning against fire,
they do not guarantee warning or protection against fire. A fire
alarm system may not provide timely or adequate warning, or
simply may not function, for a variety of reasons:
Smoke detectors may not sense fire where smoke cannot
reach the detectors such as in chimneys, in or behind walls,
Any
on roofs, or on the other side of closed doors. Smoke
detectors also may not sense a fire on another level or floor of
a building. A second-floor detector, for example, may not
sense a first-floor or basement fire.
Particles of combustion or "smoke" from a developing fire
may not reach the sensing chambers of smoke detectors
because:
— Barriers such as closed or partially closed doors,
walls, chimneys, even wet or humid areas may inhibit
particle or smoke flow.
Smoke particles may become "cold," stratify, and not
reach the ceiling or upper walls where detectors are
located.
— Smoke particles may be blown away from detectors by
air outlets, such as air conditioning vents.
— Smoke particles may be drawn into air returns before
reaching the detector.
The amount of "smoke" present may be insufficient to alarm
smoke detectors. Smoke detectors are designed to alarm at
various levels of smoke density. If such density levels are not
created by a developing fire at the location of detectors, the
an
detectors will not go into alarm.
Smoke detectors, even when working properly, have sensing
limitations. Detectors that have photoelectronic sensing
chambers tend to detect smoldering fires better than flaming
fires, which have little visible smoke. Detectors that have
ionizing-type sensing chambers tend to detect fast-flaming
fires better than smoldering fires. Because fires develop in
different ways and are often unpredictable in their growth,
neither type of detector is necessarily best and a given type of
detector may not provide adequate warning of a fire.
39-00008-1

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Summary of Contents for Honeywell EBI XLS MASS NOTIFICATION SYSTEM

  • Page 1 Honeywell Emergency Notification Manager EBI XLS MASS NOTIFICATION SYSTEM (MNS) CONFIGURATION, PROGRAMMING AND OPERATION MANUAL National Fire Protection Association Standard 72 (NFPA 72), WARNING manufacturer's recommendations, State and local codes, and the recommendations contained in the Guide for Proper Use...
  • Page 2 HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER The most common cause of life safety system malfunction is Smoke detectors cannot be expected to provide adequate warning of fires caused by arson, children playing with inadequate maintenance. To keep the entire life safety system...
  • Page 3 HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Remove all electronic assemblies prior to any drilling, filing, This system contains static-sensitive components. reaming, or punching of the enclosure. When possible, make Always ground yourself with a proper wrist strap before all cable entries from the sides or rear. Before making...
  • Page 4: Table Of Contents

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Table of Contents GENERAL ..............................5 Overview ..............................5 Mass Notification Features ........................5 Supplemental Documentation........................6 Cautions and Warnings ........................... 6 CONFIGURATIONS ........................... 6 Autonomous Control Unit (ACU) ......................6 Description ............................6 Configurations ............................. 7 Local Operating Console (LOC) ......................
  • Page 5: General

    Overview It also details the mass notification (MN) event priority, and describes the system's operation when MN is part of its The Honeywell Emergency Notification Manager is part of a function. Mass Notification System capable of providing both fire detection and mass notification alerting. Based on risk...
  • Page 6: Supplemental Documentation

    LCD-160 Manual 51850 XLS-DVC Digital Voice 85-0261-12 Honeywell equipment can be combined to meet the UL 2572 Command Manual requirements for ACU, LOC, and CCS command centers. This section describes the product combinations that can be used DAA2 and DAX Digital Audio...
  • Page 7: Configurations

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER can be prioritized in hierarchical levels by adjusting the priority Configurations level of the local microphone input. The ACU supports All Call The following two equipment combinations will meet the when priority allows. MN pages from an ACU must be ALL requirements for ACU functionality when combined with MN CALL pages.
  • Page 8: Central Control Station (Ccs)

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Fig. 3. LOC Configuration 1 CAUTION Addressing is critical to command operations. The DVC-RPU address on the digital audio loop must equal the LCD-160 address on the RDP bus. Fig. 4. LOC Configuration 2 Refer to "PROGRAMMING” on page 11.
  • Page 9: Configurations

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Fire Network Adapters (FNA). An FNA connects a single The XLS-DVC (in CCS mode) provides the audio functions of XLS-NET which contains an XLS-DVC and compatible XLS the CCS. It provides three paging levels - Level 1, Level 2 and control units.
  • Page 10: Inputs

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Fig. 6. XLS140-2 or XLS120 MN Alarm Annunciation Fig. 7. XLS-NCA2 or XLS3000 MN Alarm Annunciation Inputs Monitor Module and Initiating Device Fig. 8. Monitor Module and Input Device A TC809A Monitor Module, TC809B Mini Monitor Module,...
  • Page 11: Outputs

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER PROGRAMMING Microphone Activations for MN MN Microphone activations are initiated at ACU, LOC and CCS stations. Programming determines which button is Overview assigned to mass notification. When a system is configured for both fire and MN protection,...
  • Page 12: Ccs

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Table 3. ACU Programming Steps Table 4. LOC Programming Steps ACU Programming Steps LOC Programming Steps XLS3000*/XLS-NCA2 XLS-DVC Program with MN type IDs. page 18 Select FNA node in the All Call Fig. 16 list under General II tab...
  • Page 13: Subsidiary Equipment

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Table 5. CCS Programming Steps Table 6. Subsidiary Equipment Programming Steps Subsidiary Equipment Programming Steps CCS Programming Steps XLS-DVC XLS-DVC Set the MN Mode** Fig. 15 page 19 Create and program an MN Active Tone. Set the Associated Node Fig.
  • Page 14: Local Control

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER VeriFire Tools: Local Control Leave the Display and Control Center box unchecked in the When the XLS3000 in network display mode, or the XLS- XLS3000 and XLS-NCA2. Do not enable DCC. NCA2, is acting as a subsidiary device (that is, it is not part of Fig.
  • Page 15: Mass Notification Control Settings For The Xls-Dvc

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Panel: Navigate through the PanelSettings menu, pressing Mass Notification Control Settings for the the "More" softkey until "MN PRIORITY OVER FIRE" XLS-DVC appears. Press the softkey next to this selection until the appropriate setting appears, then press "ACCEPT".
  • Page 16 HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Settings: Input Categories are Fire, MN, General, and MN Active Tone: • Mass Notification not used (Default) • When ACU, LOC, CCS, or Subsidiary is selected as a • Mass Notification is a higher priority than fire mode, Level 1 inputs default to the MN category, and Level •...
  • Page 17: Mn Mapping

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER MN Mapping lines will show MN default input priorities. Assign the MN MN Mapping determines if a ZF20 MN alarm will suppress fire category to mass notification inputs, the Fire category to fire events at the panel if there is an active MN alarm at another inputs, the MN Active Tone category to the MN Active Tone node and MN is the highest priority.
  • Page 18: Type Ids

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER In the XLS140-2 or X L S 1 2 0 Programming Service of VeriFire Tools, select the Network Mapping screen. Check the appropriate boxes in the Mass Notification mapping Table 8. MN Monitor Type IDs column.
  • Page 19: Special Function Zones

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Special Function Zones Activations will generate mass notification events locally and The MN Special Function Zones in Table 10 below activate over a network. Trouble conditions at these points will when an MN alarm, supervisory, or trouble event occurs.
  • Page 20 HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Fig. 25. Creating an MN Active Tone Sequence In the Audio Message Prog. Service Input programming, Active Tone input will be the priority just above the Fire assign the MN Active Tone Category to the MN Active Tone category of pages.
  • Page 21 HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Fig. 27. Map the MN Active Tone Sequence to a Logic Zone In the PAM Programming Service, add the Logic Zone created in Fig. 27 above to the entire MN Active Tone Input row (Input 32, Sequence 2 in this example).
  • Page 22: Fire Active Tone

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Fire Active Tone When Fire is the highest priority in a system, an XLS-DVC must be programmed in VeriFire Tools to generate a "Fire NOTE: MN or OTHER sequences and pages will not be Active Tone". This programming is required for two reasons: suppressed for fire alarms without the Fire Active Tone, properly prioritized in the PAM.
  • Page 23 HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Example: Fire has the highest priority, and the Fire Category has been assigned to Sequence 6, the Fire Active Tone. It has been assigned a priority of 8, just below the Fire Category inputs and above the MN Category inputs Fig.
  • Page 24: Dvc-Rpu

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER In the PAM Programming Service, add the Logic Zone created in Fig. 31 to all the fire PAM points. Fig. 32. Add the Fire Active Tone logic equation to fire PAM points DVC-RPU SET THE PAGING LEVELS: Select the Paging Levels to enable the ALL CALL buttons in the second column of the DVC-KD.
  • Page 25: Mn Annunciator Programming

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Label: It can be labeled in VeriFire Tools programming to identify it as the source of an MN page, which generates an MN alarm condition. Fig. 34. DVC-RPU Labeling - VeriFire Tools Select the DVC-RPU's DAL address from the pull-down menu. Type a free-form label description in the DAL label field.
  • Page 26: Xls-Dvc General Zones

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER • XLS140-2 and XLS120 XLS3000, XLS-NCA2 MN Activations A dedicated annunciator must be programmed to light when a ZF20 MN Special Function Zone activates, indicating an LOCAL ACTIVATION MN alarm. Use custom annunciator mapping in VeriFire When an MN alarm activates locally, it: Tools to map ZF20 to an LED annunciator.
  • Page 27: Xls-Dvc

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER • Does not activate "General Alarm" or "Alarm Pending" type • Is a latching or tracking event based on Type ID (see Table codes. 9). The control panel will not return to normal operation • Is block acknowledged in scrolling mode, acknowledged until the supervisory condition is corrected and the control one-by-one in non-scrolling mode.
  • Page 28: Performing A System Reset

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER • Activates "General Pending" type code at the XLS3000 The EBI Workstation MN and FIRE Reset operation is • Activates "General Trouble" and "Trouble Pending" type described in installation instruction 95-8548. codes at the XLS3000. MN AND FIRE EVENTS PRESENT IN SYSTEM •...
  • Page 29: Output Event Suppression

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER Outputs: Output Event Suppression • All outputs used for MN must be programmed as non- Event suppression results from automatic panel suppression silenceable. This includes those outputs that are shared as well as programming. Following is a list of factors to keep in between MN and other events, such as Fire.
  • Page 30: Mass Notification Control Operation

    HONEYWELL EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION MANAGER • Special Function Zone ZF20 (MN alarm) must not be An MN page at a DVC-RPU will: mapped to Fire outputs, as outputs mapped to ZF20 will • Give control to its assigned LCD-160, which will maintain not be suppressed.
  • Page 31: Maintenance Procedures

    NFPA and UL standards. The Honeywell Mass Notification System has no user replaceable fuses. For service in the event of trouble, contact your local Automation and Control Solutions office as listed in the phone book, or contact a regional office as shown at the end of this document.

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Emergency notification manager

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