How to change the battery in a Pyronix Enforcer door contact.
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- Опубліковано 4 бер 2021
- Here I show you how to change the battery in a Pyronix radio door contact.
If you need batteries, click on the following link amzn.to/3N6PSEM OR amzn.to/3L4bWgE want to say thanks, then please buy me a coffee www.buymeacoffee.com/toni_peters
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Brilliant guide. You deserve a coffee☕
Thanks! i am Mr Customer as you say so I find it really helpful and easy to follow.
My pleasure. "Engineers" often forget there are two sides to everything.
Thanks Toni...great video , but am in the only one who keeps looking at your red nail polish 😂🙏
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Thx searched for this video when the alarm randomly started beeping in the dead of night, nearly shat my pants. Turns out it was low battery
Thanks for your very concise and very useful video, Toni. Can you tell me how often the sensor battery should be changed and whether you get a warning on the mains control box to identify the sensor when it needs changing? Cheers.
The batteries should last roughly 3 years, but it depends how often the device activates, so a device in a shed for example should last longer than a PIR in a lounge. But it is suggested to change the battery every 2 years. Since you will be changing one battery, you may as well change ALL of the batteries. If you don't change a battery the panel display will say that a device has a low battery.
@@tonipeters4543 Thanks for taking the time to reply, Toni. I can see the logic in changing them all at the same time as it’s probably easier to keep track of things.
@@tonipeters4543 I had a sensor stop polling without any low battery warning. A new battery fixed it. The installer had fitted fairly old (date of manufacture) batteries, I replaced with Duracell.
@@petert3343 It is not unusual for a battery to go too flat too quick and so it does not work.
@@petert3343 I also found that the date on some of the PIR batteries (Presumably the 'best use by' date) was so old, they must have been out of date when the system was installed! Now I install all my own Panasonic batteries and have reminder in two years.
I have a v10 enforcer alarm. when opening back door we get one beep on main board. i have tried changing battery but still does not stop beep any suggestions
Hi Toni, my PIR has gotten tampered with and now can’t clear the fault on the screen. I tried using the battery change method but it didn’t work, any suggestions would be most welcomed.
If you have a tamper make sure the lid is on and secure. The devices also have a back tamper, you don't say how the PIR was tampered, if it was pulled off the wall, the back tamper is still activated, the usual fix is to replace the PIR case.
When the alarm sounds which code is it? I have my own code which I use day in day out but do I need to enter an engineers code? (Not sure what that would be however) thanks
00:41 01:21
Why not place the Enforcer unit into maintenance mode and then change all the battries. It wont sound the alarm. Once done exit maintenance mode and done.
It does not have a "maintenance mode" If you mean "engineer's mode" how is "Mr Customer" going to know what the engineer code is? If the owner knows what the engineer code is, they would not be watching this video. This video is meant for "Mr Customer" who has a pyronix enforcer panel and a contract with an alarm company, but who does not want to pay the alarm company to change the batteries. (Alarm companies make around 300% profit on these batteries.)
It says in the manual the default is 1111 , worth a try. That's what mine was set to anyway.
@@tonipeters4543 I insisted on knowing the code when it was installed.
Omit the input 1st
Not every panel is programmed to have any/all devices omitable, and if they could be omited it is more hassle and grief to do, when all that has to be done is enter the code.
I could have said go into engineers mode, then change the batteries, but this video is to show the easy way of changing a battery.