Challenger10 Installation
and Quick Programming
Manual
P/N MAINST-TS1016 • REV 01 • ISS 18FEB13
Page 1: ...Challenger10 Installation and Quick Programming Manual P N MAINST TS1016 REV 01 ISS 18FEB13 ...
Page 2: ...ames used in this document may be trademarks or registered trademarks of the manufacturers or vendors of the respective products Manufacturer Interlogix a division of UTC Fire Security Australia Pty Ltd Level 1 271 273 Wellington Road Mulgrave VIC 3170 Australia Agency compliance Contact information For contact information see www interlogix com au N4131 ...
Page 3: ...nts 2 System configurations 6 Installing the control panel 9 Installation guidelines 9 Installation procedures 10 Connections 11 LED indications 18 Initial programming 20 Disarming the system 20 Accessing the Challenger menu 20 Clearing the memory 24 Basic programming sequence 25 Working with multi area systems 26 Default installer PIN 26 Enabling communications 27 Programming users 31 Firmware up...
Page 4: ...er based in contract tort negligence product liability or otherwise Because some jurisdictions do not allow the exclusion or limitation of liability for consequential or incidental damages the preceding limitation may not apply to you In any event the total liability of Interlogix shall not exceed the purchase price of the product The foregoing limitation will apply to the maximum extent permitted...
Page 5: ... minute period for any single manual call initiation The equipment shall go on hook for a period of not less than 30 seconds between the end of one attempt and the beginning of the next attempt Automatic calls to different numbers are spaced such that there is no less than 5 seconds between the end of one call attempt and the beginning of another This equipment shall not be set up to make automati...
Page 6: ...enger10 system via its text based user interface The Challenger10 Programmers Manual is for system administrators and installers who need to manage the Challenger10 system via its text based user interface in particular the Install menu This manual describes How to install a Challenger panel How to connect other equipment to the Challenger panel Challenger programming required for basic system set...
Page 7: ...Quantity Item 1 Metal enclosure with four spring standoffs fitted 1 Challenger panel board 1 604 to RJ12 lead line 1 5 m 1 Challenger10 Administrators Manual 1 Challenger10 User Manual 1 Challenger10 Installation and Quick Programming Manual 1 16 Volt AC plug pack 1 Tamper switch 1 Tamper switch metal bracket 1 Ring terminal 5 M3 x 14 pan head screws 15 3 way plug on screw terminal connectors 10 2...
Page 8: ...l 12 V supply System earthing The following recommendations are based upon Australian wiring regulations AS NZS 3000 2000 Section 5 Each device s GND link if applicable must be removed Connect the 230 16 VAC plug pack earth conductor to the Challenger panel s earth terminal Figure 5 on page 11 item 3 Do not extend this wire to any device outside of the enclosure Some Challenger devices have an ear...
Page 9: ...ns via Communications Earth Terminal CET may remain unchanged Guidelines for new Challenger10 installations When installing a Challenger10 panel in a new installation follow the wiring requirements of this manual including Where used a device s GND or EARTH link must be removed if fitted Note Challenger10 panels do not have a GND link Where 230 16 VAC plug packs are used connect the earth conducto...
Page 10: ... the device is more than 100 m data cable length from the panel electrical isolation is required more power is needed than can be provided by the LANs When powering a LAN device from an external 12 V power supply Connect the external power supply s terminal to the device s terminal Do not connect the power supply to the LAN Connect the external power supply s terminal to the device terminal Connec...
Page 11: ...ock diagram D D LAN Earth TERM link on Challenger panel first device on LAN D D TERM link off RAS without earth terminal D D TERM link off D D TERM link on Data gathering panel last device on LAN External power supply if needed RAS without earth terminal Power Earth LAN Earth Power Earth 1 1 1 2 3 3 4 5 6 6 ...
Page 12: ... a branched configuration Multi building where the LAN extends to more than one building LAN 1 is required and LAN 2 is optional Each LAN must be independently configured and terminated Straight LAN In a straight configuration Figure 1 on page 5 the Challenger panel is at one end of the LAN cable run and all other devices are connected to the LAN cable The TERM links would be on for the Challenger...
Page 13: ...tential Figure 3 below shows the use of two TS0893 modules to extend the RS 485 LAN across two electrical installations Each TS0893 module has a pair of termination links used to terminate if applicable the LAN segment on each side of the module s isolation barrier Figure 3 RS 485 LAN cabling between two buildings T On TS0844 Challenger panel T Off DGP T Off T On T On termination link fitted T Off...
Page 14: ...Board The TS0844 module can be used in either data or power mode as set by a pair of onboard links The TS0844 module expands the number of physical connections that can be made to the panel s power or data output terminals In data mode each TS0844 module provides five sets of LAN out connections and five sets of and auxiliary power output terminals In power mode each TS0844 module provides 10 sets...
Page 15: ...anels are designed assembled and tested to meet the requirements related to safety emission and immunity with respect to environmental electrical and electromagnetic interference as of current relevant standards In addition to the general installation guidelines installers must adhere to any country dependent requirements of local applicable standards Only a qualified electrician or other suitably...
Page 16: ...ty class Avoid loops of wire inside the control panel cabinet and route cables so that they do not lie on top or underneath the printed circuit board The use of cable ties is recommended and improves neatness of the wiring within the box The battery used with this unit must be made of materials of suitable flammability class HB or better Install equipment in a clean environment and where environme...
Page 17: ... for the application and wiring of Challenger equipment Figure 5 Challenger10 board details Figure 5 legend Item Description 1 Connect one end of each LAN cable shield to the ring terminal and fasten with M3 screw to the Challenger panel board s LAN earth terminal 2 Connect the power terminals to a 16 Volt AC plug pack Maximum current drawn by the panel with no peripheral devices connected is appr...
Page 18: ... terminals to the strobe The maximum current draw for the external 8 Ω siren and the strobe is 700 mA The strobe output is relay 2 and is mapped to event flag 2 11 Connect the D and D terminals to the RS 485 data cable for LAN 2 if required If the and terminals are used consider the current draw as part of the auxiliary power output See Auxiliary power terminals on page 14 12 Zone input terminals ...
Page 19: ...5 Figure 6 Connection details for terminal blocks J1 to J5 16 VAC plug pack Notes Use the 16 VAC plug pack supplied with the Challenger panel When installing plug packs do not power the unit until you have terminated all necessary wires and checked that you do not have a short circuit Fused plug packs cannot be replaced under warranty as the fuse operation can only be caused by a direct short circ...
Page 20: ...e Power supply to RS 485 LAN devices on page 4 for details One set of terminals is provided for each LAN if you need more than one connection you can use a TS0844 board to increase the number of terminals see TS0844 Power Distribution Board on page 8 Terminating the RS 485 LANs All Challenger LAN devices including the panel use a 470 Ω LAN termination resistor where required LAN termination resist...
Page 21: ...as a detector or reed switch By default the Challenger system can monitor zone inputs for four states sealed unsealed open circuit and short circuit This is accomplished by using two end of line EOL resistors in each zone input circuit as shown in Figure 7 below Note The Challenger system s EOL resistor value is configurable in system options The default value is 10K and all examples in this manua...
Page 22: ...it or short circuit indicates unsealed To use two state monitoring for all zone inputs Input Tamper Monitoring must be set to No Install menu option 7 System Options Note When the system is used in 2 state configuration inputs can only report sealed and unsealed states This prohibits the use of input types that need to detect short or open states See the Challenger10 Programming Manual for details...
Page 23: ...olate input is used to wire a key switch and an alarm contact to the same input For example a key switch used to isolate a shop s input in a shopping centre where only one input is available for each shop Alarm is generated when input changes from sealed to open or short 10 kΩ normal state of key switch indicates sealed 5 kΩ or 20 kΩ indicates unsealed isolated no alarm generated Open circuit gene...
Page 24: ... either a DB9 or a DB25 serial connector to a management software computer Figure 12 Wiring details for computer connection LED indications Refer to Figure 5 on page 11 L1 item 23 flashes slowly to indicate normal panel operation and flashes quickly during reset mode Clearing the memory via the Challenger panel PCB on page 24 or firmware update Firmware upgrade process on page 32 Tx0 item 19 flash...
Page 25: ...LED should always be active Rx1 item 24 flashes to indicate remote units on LAN 1 are replying to polling Tx2 item 26 flashes to indicate the Challenger panel is polling remote units RASs and DGPs on LAN 2 Tx2 flashes quickly for 1 second each minute when nothing is polled on LAN 2 Rx2 item 26 flashes to indicate remote units on LAN 2 are replying to polling Link active item 17 flashes when Ethern...
Page 26: ... LCD RAS configured as RAS 1 must be connected to LAN 1 Disarming the system A new or defaulted Challenger10 panel is armed and the RAS LED for area 1 illuminates Previous Challenger versions armed all areas The system must be completely disarmed before you can access the Install menu on a system keypad LCD RAS To disarm the system 1 The default message displays on the top line of the RAS This lin...
Page 27: ...tion 20 Door Floor Groups Option 21 Holidays To access the User menu Use the following steps to access the Challenger User menu when the Code prompt is displayed on the bottom line of the RAS 1 Press MENU To Access Menu Enter Code Code 2 Enter 4346 default Installer code and then press ENTER 0 Exit ENTER Down Up 0 Exit Menu 3 You can now select the programming option you need from the User menu To...
Page 28: ... or disarming and provide access control such as unlocking a door for a user You may need to change the RAS s default area LED assignments RAS 1 is programmed as an LCD RAS to be polled and is assigned Alarm Group 2 Master RAS 4 DGP Database Program any data gathering panels DGPs used to send information to the control panel and to provide added access control functionality 5 Alarm Groups Program ...
Page 29: ...ault programming 16 Map Relays Link relays outputs to event flags and or time zones The default values for relay mapping are Relay 2 panel strobe output is mapped to event flag 2 Relays 16 32 48 64 and so on panel siren driver are mapped to event flag 1 The sixteenth relay assigned to each DGP DGP siren drivers is mapped to event flag 1 17 Arm Disarm via Tz Define arm disarm timer programs Areas b...
Page 30: ...ng inputs or event flags based on the conditions of one to four macro inputs event flags or relays 36 Area Groups Area groups include one or more areas that can be more easily managed for example armed or disarmed simultaneously Each area in an area group must be configured to allow certain users as specified by the user s alarm group to have permissions for arming disarming alarm reset and for ti...
Page 31: ... 4 Default the system See Clearing the memory on page 24 4 Disarm the system and access the Install menu again as described above 5 Program the date and time via User menu option 15 Time and Date 6 Change the default installer PIN See Changing the default installer PIN on page 26 5 If the system will contain more than areas 1 to 16 then modify Area Group 1 using Install menu option 36 Area Groups ...
Page 32: ... the first user See Programming users on page 31 Working with multi area systems Challenger10 can have up to 99 areas New or defaulted Challenger panels can arm and disarm only areas 1 to 16 This functionality is accomplished via Area Group 1 which contains areas 1 to 16 Area Group 1 is used in the following Alarm Groups Alarm Group 2 Master RAS or Door Alarm Group 3 Master Code Installer Alarm Gr...
Page 33: ...s the RAS programming required to prepare for communications between the Challenger panel and a Titan management software computer Refer to the documentation provided with the management software for additional details if required Notes for New Zealand application Refer to Regulatory requirements for New Zealand on page iii If reporting via the Challenger panel s onboard modem the Communications o...
Page 34: ...dited The default paths are provided as a shortcut to setting up the panel Each communications path must be assigned a format Table 3 below lists the relationship between formats and hardware Table 3 Communications formats by device type Formats Devices Dialler STU RS 232 IP USB CID Modem Yes No No No Computer Polled Yes Yes Yes Yes Computer Event No No Yes No SecureSteam IP Receiver No No Yes No ...
Page 35: ...ht also need to change the account code and the computer password default is 0000000000 5 Press 0 ENTER as needed to exit from the Communications menu 6 In Titan select Ports from the Admin menu 7 In the port record select USB and then enter a port number and description Save the record 8 Connect the Challenger panel s USB port at J18 Figure 5 on page 11 item 18 to a USB port on the computer via a...
Page 36: ...de and the computer password default is 0000000000 8 When returned to the Path menu select option 6 Path IP Address 9 Press ENTER to step through the options and program the following settings in particular program the Titan computer s IP address Use the default values if applicable for the Send and Listen IP Port numbers default is 3001 and UDP IP 10 Press 0 ENTER as needed to exit from the Commu...
Page 37: ... one administrator who will be able to program additional users See Challenger10 Administrators Manual for details The default values for User 50 the master code are Name TECOM Master PIN 4346 Alarm Group 3 contains areas 1 to 16 as defined by Area Group 1 Door Group 1 Floor Group 1 Note You may need to add areas to Area Group 1 See Working with multi area systems on page 26 ...
Page 38: ...ircuit board PCB A USB cable Type A Male to Type B Mini Male to connect the Windows computer to the Challenger panel s PCB Firmware upgrade file Getting ready You will need to backup or record any custom programming that you want to use after upgrading the firmware Upload the Challenger panel s database to the management software computer After updating the firmware you will need to reprogram the ...
Page 39: ...hen you run it will tell you if the device is ready otherwise you can t select a file 10 Click Select File and then browse to the location of the firmware upgrade file on your computer Select the file and then click Open 11 Click Program File to update the panel firmware The process will take several minutes The percentage completion displays at the bottom of the window When finished a Programming...