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John Smith December 11th 03 08:59 AM

Burglar alarms
 
Looking for some advice on the most appropriate sensors for a moored
cruiser. I have switches on the door, the hatch and some windows, I have
two infra red motion detectors and a pressure mat.

Are the IR detectors any good on a boat that sways a lot in the wind etc?
Any other options?

Thanks in advance



Jean Dufour December 11th 03 03:07 PM

Burglar alarms
 
IR sensors will detect the heat generated by someone in your boat. It's
ultrasound sensors that would be trigered by the motion of something moving
in your boat. But what if the boat's interior is heated to higher than the
body's temperature on a sunny day? I dunno enough about this to risk a
categoric answer. But I GUESS it would generate a false alarm.

Jean Dufour
Montreal, Qc

John Smith wrote:

Looking for some advice on the most appropriate sensors for a moored
cruiser. I have switches on the door, the hatch and some windows, I have
two infra red motion detectors and a pressure mat.

Are the IR detectors any good on a boat that sways a lot in the wind etc?
Any other options?

Thanks in advance



Jean Dufour December 11th 03 03:07 PM

Burglar alarms
 
IR sensors will detect the heat generated by someone in your boat. It's
ultrasound sensors that would be trigered by the motion of something moving
in your boat. But what if the boat's interior is heated to higher than the
body's temperature on a sunny day? I dunno enough about this to risk a
categoric answer. But I GUESS it would generate a false alarm.

Jean Dufour
Montreal, Qc

John Smith wrote:

Looking for some advice on the most appropriate sensors for a moored
cruiser. I have switches on the door, the hatch and some windows, I have
two infra red motion detectors and a pressure mat.

Are the IR detectors any good on a boat that sways a lot in the wind etc?
Any other options?

Thanks in advance



Haakon Dybdahl December 11th 03 03:45 PM

Burglar alarms
 
I think IR sensors set off an alarm when the "picture" of IR changes. I have
done some testing with home security alarams, and if you really move slowly,
the alarm will not go off.

Haakon

"Jean Dufour" wrote in message
...
IR sensors will detect the heat generated by someone in your boat. It's
ultrasound sensors that would be trigered by the motion of something

moving
in your boat. But what if the boat's interior is heated to higher than the
body's temperature on a sunny day? I dunno enough about this to risk a
categoric answer. But I GUESS it would generate a false alarm.

Jean Dufour
Montreal, Qc

John Smith wrote:

Looking for some advice on the most appropriate sensors for a moored
cruiser. I have switches on the door, the hatch and some windows, I

have
two infra red motion detectors and a pressure mat.

Are the IR detectors any good on a boat that sways a lot in the wind

etc?
Any other options?

Thanks in advance





Haakon Dybdahl December 11th 03 03:45 PM

Burglar alarms
 
I think IR sensors set off an alarm when the "picture" of IR changes. I have
done some testing with home security alarams, and if you really move slowly,
the alarm will not go off.

Haakon

"Jean Dufour" wrote in message
...
IR sensors will detect the heat generated by someone in your boat. It's
ultrasound sensors that would be trigered by the motion of something

moving
in your boat. But what if the boat's interior is heated to higher than the
body's temperature on a sunny day? I dunno enough about this to risk a
categoric answer. But I GUESS it would generate a false alarm.

Jean Dufour
Montreal, Qc

John Smith wrote:

Looking for some advice on the most appropriate sensors for a moored
cruiser. I have switches on the door, the hatch and some windows, I

have
two infra red motion detectors and a pressure mat.

Are the IR detectors any good on a boat that sways a lot in the wind

etc?
Any other options?

Thanks in advance





Meindert Sprang December 11th 03 06:14 PM

Burglar alarms
 
"Jean Dufour" wrote in message
...
IR sensors will detect the heat generated by someone in your boat. It's
ultrasound sensors that would be trigered by the motion of something

moving
in your boat. But what if the boat's interior is heated to higher than the
body's temperature on a sunny day? I dunno enough about this to risk a
categoric answer. But I GUESS it would generate a false alarm.


They don't. IR sensors 'look' into the area in sectors, like A-B-A-B-A-B and
reacts on the difference between A and B. If the environment temperature
changes, both the A and B sectors change, hence no alarm. If someone walks
through the area, A changes, then B, then A again. The alarm trigger is set
to the amount of change and the number of changes. It can be set so
accurately that it wouldn't alarm on a cat or a small dog, but only on a
large enough body, like a human. Because is reacts on changes, it also does
not alarm on a sudden sunshine through a porthole.

Meindert



Meindert Sprang December 11th 03 06:14 PM

Burglar alarms
 
"Jean Dufour" wrote in message
...
IR sensors will detect the heat generated by someone in your boat. It's
ultrasound sensors that would be trigered by the motion of something

moving
in your boat. But what if the boat's interior is heated to higher than the
body's temperature on a sunny day? I dunno enough about this to risk a
categoric answer. But I GUESS it would generate a false alarm.


They don't. IR sensors 'look' into the area in sectors, like A-B-A-B-A-B and
reacts on the difference between A and B. If the environment temperature
changes, both the A and B sectors change, hence no alarm. If someone walks
through the area, A changes, then B, then A again. The alarm trigger is set
to the amount of change and the number of changes. It can be set so
accurately that it wouldn't alarm on a cat or a small dog, but only on a
large enough body, like a human. Because is reacts on changes, it also does
not alarm on a sudden sunshine through a porthole.

Meindert



padeen December 11th 03 07:29 PM

12V IR Detectors?
 
Anyone found a source for 12 volt IR detectors?


"John Smith" wrote in message
...
Looking for some advice on the most appropriate sensors for a moored
cruiser. I have switches on the door, the hatch and some windows, I have
two infra red motion detectors and a pressure mat.

Are the IR detectors any good on a boat that sways a lot in the wind etc?
Any other options?

Thanks in advance





padeen December 11th 03 07:29 PM

12V IR Detectors?
 
Anyone found a source for 12 volt IR detectors?


"John Smith" wrote in message
...
Looking for some advice on the most appropriate sensors for a moored
cruiser. I have switches on the door, the hatch and some windows, I have
two infra red motion detectors and a pressure mat.

Are the IR detectors any good on a boat that sways a lot in the wind etc?
Any other options?

Thanks in advance





Marcus AAkesson December 12th 03 12:06 AM

12V IR Detectors?
 
On Thu, 11 Dec 2003 19:29:21 GMT, "padeen"
wrote:

Anyone found a source for 12 volt IR detectors?


I hope You are joking, as they are all 12V for normal alarm use.
/Marcus

--
Marcus AAkesson
Gothenburg Callsigns: SM6XFN & SB4779
Sweden
Keep the world clean - no HTML in news or mail !



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