Residential Alarm System - The Basics You Need To Know
By Paul Atredki
Choosing a residential alarm system can seem frustrating, but installing an alarm system is vital for making your family and home safe. If you want to buy a residential alarm system, to protect your family and goods, here are some tips.
First, know what needs to be protected, your home, particular rooms, valuable possessions, garages, sheds, etc. Look at areas with easy access, weak doors and windows or flat roofs could make it easier for intruders to get in. Once you look at these risks, you can choose a security company and install your residential alarm system.
Look at local security companies first. There should be local companies with good reputations for service and quality. The Better Business Bureau or the police can tell you if the company has had any complaints. Also, make sure they have state and local licenses.
Picking your residential alarm system should include a fire alarm, not just a burglar alarm. A residential alarm system has two parts: the components as well as the monitoring of the system, which the security company usually handles. Burglar alarms usually include:
Motion detectors- infrared beams can detect any motion in or out of your house.
Panic buttons- these can be pushed when someone breaks in.
Stress sensors- these are activated when someone steps on them.
Glass breakage sensors- place them on windows to detect breaking glass.
Door and window contacts- these magnetic contacts have electric current between them, and will be activated if opened.
Fire alarms have smoke and heat detectors. Heat detectors come in both fixed temperature or rate-of-rise varieties. They will activate when the detector's fixed temperature is reached. The smoke detector will notice smoke before the fire actually takes off. Smoke detectors come in ionization or photo electronic varieties. Photo electronic detectors are popular because they detect the more common slow, smoldering fires.
Residential alarm systems generally have sensors on doors and windows, with indoor sounders and a keypad. You need the keypad because that is how you control the monitoring. The keypad will usually have a button for emergencies.
If you want to do it yourself, there are wireless alarm systems that can be hooked up in a day. You can make a choice based on any budget, depending on what you want to spend for the safety of your home and family.
Now if you’re looking for more information on all of this, the best thing for you to do at this point would be to search around the net a bit more, there is a lot of free info to be found here which will help you out further.
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