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Documentation page: https://vutlan.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/DEN/pages/1711833089/VT530+Access+sensor

Product page: https://vutlan.com/analog-sensors/18-vt530-access-sensor.html

Function and purpose

At installation on doors, windows, etc., the sensor controls the status of the door, window: opened, closed. The sensor consists of two parts: magnet and sensor.

Chain connection is possible. 


The sensor can not be used on its own. It must be used together with Vutlan monitoring systems.


Package content

Package includes

Package content

Description

Quantity

1

Reed switch + Magnet

1 pc each

2

RJ11 / RJ12 (6p4c), Telephone cable 2m

1 pc

3

Mounting bracket

1 pc

4

Screws B4,2*16

1 pcs

5

Bolt М3.5x10

2 pcs

6

Nut М3.5

2 pcs

7

M3.5 washers

2 pcs

8

Sticker

2 pcs

Connecting the sensor

  1. Connect one end of RJ11(6p4c) cable to the monitoring unit into any analog ports (A1...A8) and the other end to the "VT530 / Access sensor".
  2. Access sensor will appear automatically in a System tree.

Chain connection of analog sensors

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Installation inside a rack or cabinet using a bracket

Mounting bracket

A mounting bracket is supplied with the unit.

Installation

Example 1

The magnet needs to be mounted on the door or the window. If the door is open, the switch is Open. If the door is closed, the switch is Closed. You can reverse the logic inside the Web UI interface.

Depending on the construction of the door/window/rack you can use supplied bolts, stickers, or a mounting bracket to mount the sensor and the magnet.


Cable pinouts

"RJ11/RJ12" to "RJ11/RJ12" cable pinouts:

Technical specifications

VT530
Dimensions600×18x18 mm
Weight106 g
Inputs

RJ9 (4p4c)

OutputsRJ11 / RJ12 (6p4c)
Operating temperatureMin. -10° C, Max.80° C
Operating humidityMin. 5% - Max. 95% (Non-Condensing)
MountingMounting bracket, bolts, and stickers included for installation inside IT racks and cabinets
Power consumption60mW
Max. distance m150 m
HS Code8531 10 300
ComponentsManufactured in E.U.

Analog sensors connection

This section includes child pages:

Connecting analog sensors

Connect the analog sensor by a supplied RJ-11 (6P4C) cable to any analog port "A1 .. A8" or "Sensor" port. The determination of the sensor type and connection will occur automatically.

Vutlan analog sensor connection (Analog ports).jpg

If strong electromagnetic interference is present, we recommend using a 3-pair cable CAN FTP for sensor connection!

6P4C RJ11 cable wiring/pinouts

RJ11.png

1- Orange, 2- White Blue, 3- Blue, 4 - White Orange

Colors are true for this telephone cable. Both ends match the colors and pinouts (identical).

Please refer to the RJ connectors comparison table:

Maximum cable length test

ok = tested

x = failed

Model

50m

100m

120m

150m

200m

VT407

AC current converter

ok

recommended

  ok




VT410

DC voltage monitor

ok





VT420

Converter 4-20mA

ok

recommended

ok




VT500

Temperature sensor

ok

ok




VT501

Outdoor temperature sensor

ok

ok




VT510

Humidity sensor

ok

x




VT530

Access sensor


ok




VT540

Vibration sensor


ok




VT550

Wind velocity meter

ok

x




VT560

Smoke detector


ok




VT570

PIR sensor


ok




VT590

Spot water detector


ok




VT591

Water leak sensor


ok




Extending the number of analog sensors

Using CAN extension "VT408 / Sensor extension unit" it is possible to increase the number of analog sensors connected to the monitoring unit up to 80 sensors.

Analog sensors using CAN bus (Vutlan).jpg

Chain connection of analog sensors

This procedure applies to the following sensors, which are supported by the appliance and are connected to the analog ports:

VT530 and VT560 are the only analog sensors that allow non-addressable chain connection.  All the sensors in one chain are seen by the system as one sensor.  One chain can have up to 10 sensors. Example of such connection:

 Additional articles of interest

Sensor configuration

Adding logic schemes

Sensor configuration

Contents

Settings tab

To configure a sensor, go to "Main menu" >> "System tree" and click on the sensor element in the tree. A modal window with sensor properties will pop up. Change the needed settings and click "OK" or "Apply" at the bottom of the "Properties" window.

All sensors include:

Name

The name is given by the system automatically. You can change it to anything you want.

ID

System ID of the element.

Type

Examples: temperature, humidity, vibration.

Class

Examples: analog, CAN, switch, discrete.

Hardware port

The external port number on the device panel to which the sensor is connected (if the sensor is external).

All sensors have threshold controls:

In the picture above, the "Current value" equals 41.0 and is represented by the small triangle. Currently, the triangle is green because it is situated in the "Normal" range. Hence the sensor says that the "Current state" is "Normal". This value is used by the system's "Logic schemes" menu to notify the administrator or take action.

Hysteresis

Sensors have the option of setting the hysteresis state. Hysteresis can be a time, a value or it can be disabled.

If the hysteresis is set in time, the sensor will transmit to a new state with a delay of the specified number of seconds in the corresponding field. The time counting will begin from the moment when the measured value of the sensor has left the current range.
Each state has its field. Which determines the time that the sensor value must continuously hold for the state to change to the specified.

If you set the hysteresis by value, the sensor transition to a new state will occur when the measured value of the sensor exits beyond the current range, adjusted for the specified hysteresis value.

You can calibrate the sensors. Use K and B coefficients. After the calibration, please, save the values in flash memory.

To save sensor properties in the device's flash memory press "  "  then "OK" to confirm. 

Example: Why do we need to use Hysteresis

Let’s say that we have a temperature sensor. Let’s say that we have set up threshold values.

We have set the value 25.5 °C to be a threshold value between Normal/Alarm states.

If the temperature drops just below 25.5 °C You will have a “Normal” state.

If the temperature goes just above 25.5 °C You will have a “Warning” state.

Sometimes the temperature may stay at 25.5 °C and jump up and down by 0.1-0.3 °C. In this case, You will get too many notifications that the sensor is showing a Warning or Normal state.

In this case, we need to use a Hysteresis.

If the type “time” is chosen, the system will wait for a specified time before the State of the sensor is declared.

If type “value” is used, unless the temperature drops by a larger amount than specified, the sensor state will not be declared.

Tuning the sensor value

Sensor readings can be tunned by a linear formula "y = k * x - b"

Example VT407 + HAT-100Q1 / AC current converter:

Metered current for HAT: from 0 to 100A (This means that the range equals 100, k = 100)

The output of VT407 is 0-5V (That means that the range is equal to 5)

"b" = the value that the sensor shows in WebUI when there's no current. Let's say that b = + 0.021

You should use the following formula for HAT: 100/5*(x-y)

The expression formula would be 20*(x-0.021)

Point is used as a decimal separator (3.14)

Charts tab

The charts tab shows the following:

Display chart for

  • last 100 seconds

  • last 100 minutes

  • last 100 hours

  • last 100 days


Refresh data

Start

Poll a sensor

Reset all charts

Reset all

Clears all saved data for the sensor.

Export data

XML or CSV

Exporting data through WebUI does not work for more than a couple of days and is very rough. If you need detailed log data, use the logging of sensor values to the media.
Read more at System Log, Sensors dump files.

Note: Make sure no endpoint security services used in the network are not blocking the download of XML and CSV files.

Reset smoke sensors

If analog sensors like VT560 / Smoke detector/ sensor detects smoke or fire, it will go into “Alarm” mode. Alarm mode can only be switched off manually using the Reset smoke detectors panel or using the onboard sensor Analog sensor power reset is found in the “System tree” >> “Onboard”.

Child pages


Drawings



Copyright:

Vutlan s.r.o. (LLC)

Remote Infrastructure Monitoring and Control

43 ul.Svornosti, 821 06 Bratislava,

Slovak Republic

www.vutlan.com


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