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FL-PS Series Instruction Manual —

 P/N LS10227-001FL-E:B  3/29/2021

19

Canadian Applications

Installation

2.9  Canadian Applications

Installation shall be in accordance with ULC S524. Wiring methods shall be in accordance with CSA C22.1, Safety Standard for Electri-
cal Installations, Canadian Electrical Code, Part I, Section 32.  

Canadian applications, per ULC, require the following:

Connect the AC ground wire to the Ground Stud located at the top left of the backbox as shown below. Connect the incoming earth 
ground wire to supplied cable #71073 with a wire nut. Position the ring terminal end over the grounding stud. Secure with one of 
the keps nuts. Place the ring terminal from the other supplied ground cable #71073 over the ground stud and secure with the second 
keps nut. Wire the ground cable to the middle position of TB4. Ensure that the ground for incoming AC mains is the first wire 
installed, closest to the backbox. This connection is vital in reducing the panel’s susceptibility to transients generated by lightning 
and electrostatic discharge. Apply AC power to the panel only after the system is completely installed and visually checked. 

Note 

that AC power must be applied to the panel before installing the battery interconnect cable

.

Refer to Section 5.1 for instructions to meet ULC requirements for trouble monitoring of each zone.

NOTE:

Mass Notification is not for use in Canadian applications. 

grounding stud

Grounding Cable

#71073

keps nut

keps nut

Figure 2.13  Earth Ground Connection

Summary of Contents for Fire-Lite FL-PS10

Page 1: ...Power Supplies FL PS6 C FL PS10 C Instruction Manual Document LS10227 001FL E Rev B 3 29 2021 ECN 2939 ...

Page 2: ...t detectors do not sense particles of combustion and alarm only when heat on their sensors increases at a predetermined rate or reaches a predetermined level Rate of rise heat detectors may year by a qualified fire protection specialist Heat detectors are designed to protect property not life IMPORTANT Smoke detectors must be installed in the same room as the control panel and in rooms used by the...

Page 3: ...g reaming or punching of the enclosure When possible make all cable entries from the sides or rear Before making modifications verify that they will not interfere with battery transformer or printed circuit board location Do not tighten screw terminals more than 9 in lbs Over tighten ing may damage threads resulting in reduced terminal contact pressure and difficulty with screw terminal removal Th...

Page 4: ...ng information Product name and version number if applicable Printed manual or online Help Topic Title for online Help Page number for printed manual Brief description of content you think should be improved or corrected Your suggestion for how to correct improve documentation Send email messages to FireSystems TechPubs honeywell com Please note this email address is for documentation feedback onl...

Page 5: ...r Delay 23 Command Input 1 24 Charger Enable Disable 24 AC Loss Door Holder Dropout Timer 24 AC Fail Indication Delay 24 Special Operating Modes 24 3 2 Output Circuit Control DIP Switch Settings 25 3 2 1 Output Circuit Programmable Features Description 25 Command Inputs NAC Circuits 25 Unused Outputs 26 Remote Supply with Resettable and Non resettable Power 26 Door Holder 26 Synchronization Mode M...

Page 6: ...on Using a Control Module 37 B 2 Controlling NACs For Sync Follower Operation Using a Control Module 38 B 3 Controlling NACs Aux Power or Door Holders Using a Control Module 39 B 4 Controlling NACs Aux Power and Door Holders with NAC Sync 40 B 5 Controlling all Three Inputs with One Control Module 41 B 6 AC Trouble Reporting with a Conventional FACP 42 B 7 Canadian Two Stage 43 B 8 Canada Two Stag...

Page 7: ...Authority Having Jurisdiction LAHJ Canadian Electrical Code Part 1 Other Fire Lite Documents Device Compatibility Document Document 15384 SLC Wiring Manual Document 51309 CHG 75 Manual Document 51315 CHG 120F Manual Document 50888 This product has been certified to comply with the requirements in the Standard for Control Units and Accessories for Fire Alarm Sys tems UL 864 10th Edition Operation o...

Page 8: ... other power supply faults such as low battery overcharged battery ground fault and bat tery charger trouble will continue and will be monitored by their respective trouble relays 1 2 Features Self contained in a lockable cabinet 24 VDC remote power supply Outputs are completely power limited Class 2 Two FL PS6 or three FL PS10 optically isolated input command circuits compatible with 12 VDC and 2...

Page 9: ...ly energized transfers with loss of power for AC Loss and Trouble 4 0 amps 30 VDC resistive Secondary Power battery Charging Circuit TB15 Supervised non power limited Supports lead acid type batteries only Float Charge Voltage 27 6 VDC Maximum Peak Charge Current 2 47A Maximum Nominal Charge Current 1 5 A Maximum Battery Capacity 33 0 AH with onboard battery charger Minimum Battery Capacity 7 0 AH...

Page 10: ...AC1 Hot Form C Relays Non supervised SW1 Ground Fault Detection slide left to disable slide right to enable TB5 TB6 TB7 Command Inputs Input 1 EOL EOL Input 2 EOL EOL Input 3 EOL EOL TB15 Supervised Battery Battery 24 VDC Non power limited S2 S8 Programming DIP Switches Activate output DIP switch changes by setting S1 positions 9 and 10 appropriately Refer to page 24 for DIP Switch programming set...

Page 11: ...ions Supervision of other power supply faults such as low battery battery charger trouble ground fault and AC loss will continue and may be monitored via their respective trouble relay If an application requires that all outputs activate at the same time only one NAC is required from the FACP For this application the NAC is connected to command input circuit 1 and the DIP switch is set for this op...

Page 12: ...1 Mark and pre drill holes for the top two keyhole mounting bolts 2 Install two upper fasteners in the wall with the screw heads protruding approximately 3 Using the upper keyholes mount the backbox over the two screws 4 Mark the lower two holes remove the backbox from the wall and drill the mounting holes 5 Mount the backbox install the remaining fasteners and tighten all screws CAUTION STATIC SE...

Page 13: ...hes are located on the right side of the ZNAC PS module to properly configure output circuits 1 and 2 for either NAC or Auxiliary Power operation as described below Note that there are no slide switches for the remaining outputs as these outputs do not support Class A power supervision For output 1 set the upper switch to either NAC1 or AUX1 depending on the intended operation For output 2 set the...

Page 14: ...an additional multi point module TB4 TB15 TB2 TB1 OUT6 OUT5 OUT4 OUT3 OUT2 OUT1 NAC1 AUX1 NAC2 AUX2 OUT6 OUT5 OUT4 OUT3 OUT2 OUT1 NAC1 AUX1 NAC2 AUX2 If the SLC device does not match the one in this figure refer to the SLC manual wiring conver sion charts for legacy and newer versions of the modules Figure 2 4 Mounting a Single Module in the FL PS Cabinet Install stacked standoffs 0 5 1 093 M F T1...

Page 15: ...hown below Any conduit knockouts may be used For power limited Class 2 applications use of conduit is optional NO NC C NO NC C TB4 TB15 TB2 TB1 TB13 TB12 TB11 TB10 TB9 TB8 NO NC C TB3 NAC1 AUX1 NAC2 AUX2 Figure 2 6 Power limited Class 2 Wiring Example AC Power Non power limited Output Circuits Power limited Circuits Class 2 Relay Contacts Non power limited Circuit Input Circuits Power limited Circ...

Page 16: ...FACP In this application a master FL PS power supply set for synchronization is connected to an FACP with non synchronized output The following notes apply to Figure 2 8 1 Refer to NFPA 72 Chapter 4 4 Visible Characteristics Public Mode 2 Set Output DIP switches to the desired sync protocol as described below Refer to the Device Compatibility Document for compatible devices TB15 FL PS FACP NAC pro...

Page 17: ...7 2 CHG 75 1 Set S1 position 4 on the FL PS Power Supply to the OFF position to disable the onboard battery charger 2 Connect the battery cables between TB15 and on the FL PS and the CHG 75 charger output circuit TB2 Out and Out as shown in Figure 2 10 Be certain to observe polarity 3 Connect the batteries to the charger 4 Connect the battery interconnect cable only after AC power is applied and b...

Page 18: ... output used for remote sync applications cannot have notification appliances installed on the same circuit 5 Notification appliances cannot be installed on the interconnecting control circuits 6 The total line impedance for interconnected units cannot be such that it creates a voltage drop 3 2 VDC 7 Ground fault supervision is provided via the general trouble relay for domestic and via the dedica...

Page 19: ...ace the ring terminal from the other supplied ground cable 71073 over the ground stud and secure with the second keps nut Wire the ground cable to the middle position of TB4 Ensure that the ground for incoming AC mains is the first wire installed closest to the backbox This connection is vital in reducing the panel s susceptibility to transients generated by lightning and electrostatic discharge A...

Page 20: ...nd enter exit through different knockouts When cascading multiple power supply units continue connecting the negative battery terminals including FACP battery terminal Ground faults must then be detected by the first FL PS in the chain Disable ground fault detection on other FL PSunits by sliding SW1 to the left Ensure ground fault detection is enabled on FL PS1 the first power supply from the FAC...

Page 21: ...rate yellow annunciator point when the input connected to the FL PS ground fault relay is initiated Use one input per FL PS power supply NO NC C NO NC C TB4 TB15 NO NC C TB3 TB2 TB1 TB13 TB12 TB11 TB10 TB9 TB8 NAC1 AUX1 NAC2 AUX2 NO NC C NO NC C TB4 TB15 NO NC C TB3 TB2 TB1 TB13 TB12 TB11 TB10 TB9 TB8 NAC1 AUX1 NAC2 AUX2 ULC S527 listed addressable control panel ULC S527 listed annunciator SLC Fig...

Page 22: ...nts in the Standard for Control Units and Accessories for Fire Alarm Systems UL 864 certain programming features or options must be limited to specific values or not used at all as indicated below Program feature or option Permitted in UL864 2572 and ULC S527 Y N Possible settings Settings permitted in UL 864 UL2572 Settings permitted in ULC S527 Door Holder Dropout Delay Y Refer to AC Loss Door H...

Page 23: ...al battery charger enabled 5 6 These switches determine door holder dropout delay after AC power loss 5 OFF 6 OFF Power does not drop out 5 ON 6 OFF 5 minutes 5 OFF 6 ON 60 seconds 5 ON 6 ON 15 seconds 7 8 These switches determine the AC loss delay timer 7 OFF 8 OFF 30 hours 7 ON 8 OFF 12 hours 7 OFF 8 ON 2 hours 7 ON 8 ON none 9 10 These switches determine the operating mode of the power supply R...

Page 24: ...sitions 7 and 8 are used to select the AC Fail Indication Delay as listed below Refer to AC Trouble Relay on page 31 for operation of internal NAC trouble relay in response to AC loss Special Operating Modes The power supply can be placed in two special operating modes per settings in Table 3 6 They are Change Output Circuit Configura tions and Display Trouble History Upon completion of either of ...

Page 25: ...lence operation OFF ON NAC output will activate when Command Input 3 is activated if available If accidentally programmed on a FL PS6 the system will default to Input 2 ON ON NAC output will activate when ANY Command Input is activated 3 4 5 6 Output Control Setting Operation OFF OFF OFF OFF Unused Unsupervised Outputs will not activate Factory default setting ON OFF OFF OFF Reserved Outputs will ...

Page 26: ...t timing pulses on the NAC power which are created by an FACP with synchronization capability When installed at the end of a NAC wire run this power supply can track follow the strobe synchronization timing pulses on the existing NAC wire run This maintains the overall system flash timing of the additional strobes attached to this power supply Note that strobe synchronization works only with non c...

Page 27: ...0 amp models Do not apply the synchronization signal to this input Input 3 can also be used for the trigger input but is only available on the 10 amp model Do not apply the synchronization signal to this input Use only one input Input 2 or 3 at any one time for the trigger input A trigger signal between 9 32VDC is required for proper operation Set the Global DIP switch S1 position 3 to the OFF pos...

Page 28: ...umentation supplied with the strobe to determine the maximum current draw for each strobe and ensure that the circuit maximum is not exceeded To ensure proper strobe and circuit operation there is also a limit to the number of strobes that can be attached to each circuit Following is a table of the strobes that have been tested with the power supply and the maximum number that can be connected to ...

Page 29: ...F Fault Condition Charging path FETs failure 1 short blink 250ms Repeating LED blink pattern non diagnostic mode and diagnostic mode Fault Condition Charger voltage too low or Charger Diode Fault 2 short blinks 250ms Repeating LED blink pattern non diagnostic mode and diagnostic mode Fault Condition Battery discharged overcharged 3 short blinks 250ms Repeating LED blink pattern non diagnostic mode...

Page 30: ...250ms Repeating LED blink pattern non diagnostic mode and diagnostic mode Fault Condition Power limit condition individual ckt overload 4 short blinks per individual circuit 250ms Repeating LED blink pattern non diagnostic mode and diagnostic mode Fault Condition Power limit condition panel overload 4 short blinks on all output circuits 250ms Operating Mode Fault Power Supply not in Normal Operati...

Page 31: ...rated in Figure 5 1 Note that any faults reported by Command Inputs are not repeated by the trouble relay offering limited trouble reporting Trouble conditions that will cause the normally energized trouble relay to change states regardless of whether the panel is in alarm or standby A battery fail condition at the power supply A battery charger fail on the power supply A ground fault condition on...

Page 32: ...lay Canadian Applications Only The FL PS6 10C power supply has a form C trouble relay located at TB3 The contacts can be monitored by an FACP input circuit or an addressable monitor module similar to the drawing illustrated in Figure 5 1 Ground fault conditions will cause the relay to change states regardless of whether the panel is in alarm or standby ...

Page 33: ...sulation for this branch circuit Use Table 6 1 to determine the total amount of current in AC amperes that must be supplied to the system 6 3 Calculating the System Current Draw 6 3 1 Overview The power supply must be able to power all internal and external devices continuously during a fire alarm condition The secondary power source batteries must be able to power the system during a primary powe...

Page 34: ... the FL PS cabinet and require a separate battery box 6 4 1 NFPA Battery Requirements NFPA 72 Local and Proprietary Fire Alarm Systems require 24 hours of standby power followed by 5 minutes in alarm for normal oper ations 15 minutes for mass notification systems or 30 minutes for Canadian applications Device Type Calculation Column 1 Secondary Non Fire Alarm Current amps Calculation Column 2 Seco...

Page 35: ...ormal system operation A discharged bat tery typically reaches the voltage of 27 6 VDC within 48 hours Sealed lead acid batteries must be replaced within at most 5 years from their date of manufacture Minimal replacement battery capacity appears on the control panel marking label Immediately replace a leak ing or damaged battery Replacement batteries are available from the manufacturer Battery Cap...

Page 36: ...ZNAC PS card Max Load Amps Max Loop Resistance Ohms AWG 12 Solid AWG 14 Solid AWG 16 Solid AWG 18 Solid 0 25 12 804 3320 2087 1310 823 0 50 6 402 1660 1044 655 412 0 75 4 268 1107 696 437 274 1 00 3 201 830 522 327 206 1 25 2 561 664 417 262 165 1 50 2 134 553 348 218 137 1 75 1 829 474 298 187 118 2 00 1 601 415 261 164 103 2 25 1 423 369 232 146 91 2 50 1 280 332 209 131 82 2 75 1 164 302 190 11...

Page 37: ...stor across TB5 Terminals 1 and 4 As an alternative the trouble contacts at TB1 of the power supply can also be used for limited trouble monitoring excluding Selective Silence output faults Refer to Section 5 for more information Refer to Section 3 for instructions on setting the DIP switches Selective Silence output faults are only reported via Command Input 1 not Command Input 2 Wire NACs as sho...

Page 38: ...rouble monitoring excluding faults reported by Command Input 2 related to Command Input 1 configured for Sync Input mode Refer to Section 5 for more information Refer to Section 3 for instructions on setting the DIP switches Output faults are reported via Command Input 2 with Command Input 1 configured for Sync Input mode operation Refer to the FACP manual for load restrictions and line length lim...

Page 39: ...ions on setting the DIP switches When the FL PS power supply is in an inactive state control module not active a trouble on the NAC circuits mapped to TB5 will result in an open circuit condition on the control module output circuit monitored by an End of Line Resistor across Terminals 1 and 4 Additionally the trouble contacts at TB1 of the power supply can also be used for limited trouble monitor...

Page 40: ... Do not loop wires under screw terminals Break wires to maintain proper supervision An End of Line Resistor must be installed between terminals 1 and 4 for module wiring supervision the ELR value is dependent on the module FACP employed An End of line Resistor on input circuits 1 2 TB5 6 are optional for this particular application Ensure that the CDRM 300 is programmed appropriately at the FACP w...

Page 41: ...ither disable the unused addresses or install ELRs across unused outputs on the CMF 300 6 Refer to Section 3 for instructions on setting the DIP switches Do not loop wires under screw terminals Break wires to maintain proper supervision For a list of compatible devices refer to the Fire Lite Device Compatibility Document 15384 Refer to the SLC Wiring Manual for more information NO NC C NO NC C TB4...

Page 42: ... be in metal conduit within 20 feet of the FACP Refer to Section 3 for instructions on setting the DIP switches Do not loop wires under screw terminals Break wires to maintain proper supervision An End of Line Resistor must be installed between terminals 1 and 4 on the input circuits that require wiring supervision The ELR value is dependent on the FACP employed Refer to panel DACT documentation f...

Page 43: ...ate on Command Input 1 and slave mode NAC follower FL PS Output 2 is programmed depending on the host FACP capabilities FACP NAC2 provides master sync FL PS Output 2 activate on Command Input 2 slave mode NAC follower FACP NAC2 provides steady output FL PS Output 2 activate Command Input 2 master mode select appropriate strobe manufacturer Additional FL PS outputs can be mapped to command inputs a...

Page 44: ...e on Command Input 2 slave mode NAC follower FACP NAC2 provides steady output FL PS output 2 activate Command Input 2 master mode select appropriate strobe manufacturer Jumpers must be installed on terminals T11 T12 T14 and T15 of the CMF 300 6 module Unused control module NAC outputs need ELRs installed or must be disabled FL PS outputs going to CMF 300 6 need ELRs installed Due to the reverse po...

Page 45: ... 39 40 41 42 F factory default 26 faults 31 features 8 filtered power 8 float charge voltage 9 FL PS10 8 FL PS6 8 form C see also relay 8 G ground fault 8 18 20 ground fault detection 8 10 switch SW1 10 I input 24 current 9 settings 25 voltage 9 input circuit 8 activation 8 compatibility 8 see also control 9 installation 12 M master mode 26 module mounting 14 mounting see also installation 12 mult...

Page 46: ...etection 8 10 sync 26 sync mode 24 sync type 16 26 27 synchronization ADA compatible 8 selectable 8 T trouble 31 power supply 8 supervision 31 trouble relay 8 9 31 contact rating 9 trouble supervision 8 W wiring 8 AC power 9 power limited 15 Z ZNAC PS 13 14 see also Class A Converter Module 8 ...

Page 47: ... WITH RESPECT TO THE PRODUCTS TRADEMARKS PROGRAMS AND SERVICES RENDERED BY MANUFACTURER INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION INFRINGEMENT TITLE MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE MANUFACTURER SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY PERSONAL INJURY OR DEATH WHICH MAY ARISE IN THE COURSE OF OR AS A RESULT OF PERSONAL COMMERCIAL OR INDUSTRIAL USES OF ITS PRODUCTS This document constitutes the only war...

Page 48: ...One Fire Lite Place Northford CT 06472 1601 USA USA Phone 203 484 7161 Canada Phone 905 856 8733 www firelite com ...

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