Auxiliary Power Supplies: Aps6A, Aps10A

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 4

EST Catalog u Power Supplies and Accessories

Auxiliary
Power Supplies
APS6A, APS10A COA 6020

7300-1657:
0229

S3424

Overview • Provides for Genesis and Enhanced Integrity notification ap-


pliance synchronization
The Auxiliary Power Supply (APS) is a UL 864, 9th Edition listed
power supply. It is a 24 Vdc filtered-regulated, and supervised • Supports coded output operation
unit that can easily be configured to provide additional notification • Self-restoring overcurrent protection
appliance circuits (NACs) or auxiliary power for Mass Notification/
Emergency Communication (MNEC), as well as life safety, security, • Multiple signal rates
and access control applications. • Can be cascaded or controlled independently
The APS contains the circuitry to monitor and charge internal • Easy field configuration
or external batteries. Its steel enclosure has room for up to two
24 ampere-hour batteries. For access control-only applications, • On-board diagnostic LEDs identify wiring or internal faults
the APS can support batteries totaling up to 65 ampere-hours in • Standard Edwards keyed lockable steel cabinet with remov-
an external enclosure. The APS has four Class B (convertible to able door
two Class A) NACs. These can be activated in one or two groups
• 110 and 230 Vac models available
from the APS’s unique dual input circuits. The APS has a door-
mounted AC power indicator LED. • Accommodates 18 to 12 AWG wire sizes
The APS also has room for and can power a number of different • Optional tamper switch
modules. These can be Signature AA-30 or AA-50 dual-channel • Dual battery charging rates
audio amplifiers, SIGA-UIO modules and/or SIGA-RELs. A MN-
BKRT3 can also be installed. This bracket can accommodate an • Optional earthquake hardening: OSHPD seismic pre-approval
MN-NETSW1 Ethernet network switch, an MN-FVPN VoIP module for component Importance Factor 1.5
and a MN-COM1S Communications module The APS meets current UL requirements and is listed as under the
The APS is available in 6.5 or 10 ampere models. Each output cir- following standards:
Standard (CCN) Description
cuit is has a capacity of three amperes; total current draw cannot
UL864 9th ed.ition (UOXX)Fire Alarm Systems
exceed the unit’s rating. UL636 (ANET, UEHX7) Holdup Alarm Units and Systems
UL609 (AOTX, AOTX7) Local Burglar Alarm Units and Systems

Features UL294 (ALVY, UEHX7) Access Control Systems


UL365 (APAW, APAW7) Police Station Connected Burglar Alarm Units and Systems
• Allows for reliable filtered and regulated power to be installed UL1076 (APOU, APOU7) Proprietary Burglar Alarm System Units
UL1610 (AMCX) Central Station Alarm Unit
where needed
ULC-S527 (UOXXC) Control Units, Fire Alarm (Canada)
• Cost effective system expansion ULC-S303 (AOTX7) Local Burglar Alarm Units and Systems (Canada)
C22.2 No. 205 Signaling Equipment (Canada)

Page 1 of 4 D ATA S H E E T 85005-0127


Not to be used for installation purposes. Issue 4
Application • One MN-BRKT3 with one MN-NETSW1 Ethernet switch, one MN-
FVPN VoIP module, and one MN-COM1S communication module
The APS provides additional power and circuits for notification ap-
pliances and other 24 Vdc loads. It is listed for indoor dry locations • One SIGA-UIO6 or SIGA-UIO6R module motherboard
and can easily be installed where needed. • Up to two SIGA-UIO2R module motherboards
Fault conditions are indicated on the on-board diagnostic LEDs, • Up to two SIGA-REL releasing modules
opening the BPS input sense circuit and the trouble relay (if • Up to two SIGA MP2L mounting plates modules
programmed). While this provides indication to the host system, The above devices are in addition to the three factory-installed Signa-
the APS can still be activated upon command. A separate AC ture module mounting brackets to the right of the APS circuit board.
Fail contact is available on the APS circuit board, which can be
programmed for trouble or AC Fail. There are seven on-board
diagnostic LEDs: one for each NAC fault, one for battery fault, one
for ground fault, and one for AC power. Engineering Specification
The unique dual-input activation circuits of the APS can be acti- Supply, where needed, Edwards APS Series Auxiliary Power Sup-
vated by any voltage from 6 to 45 VDC (filtered-regulated) or 11 to plies (APS) that are interconnected to and supervised by the main
33 Vdc (full-wave rectified, unfiltered). The first input circuit can be system. The APS shall function as a stand-alone auxiliary power
configured to activate 1-4 of the four possible outputs. The second supply with its own fully-supervised battery compliment. The APS
input circuit can be configured to control circuits 3 and 4. When battery compliment shall be sized to match the requirements of the
outputs are configured for auxiliary operation, these circuits can be main system. The APS shall be capable of supervising and charging
configured to stay on or automatically deactivate 30 seconds after batteries having the capacity of 24 ampere-hours for Mass Notifica-
AC power is lost. This feature makes these circuits ideal for door tion/Emergency Communication (MNEC), life safety and security ap-
holder applications. The APS also has a separate 200 mA 24 Vdc plications, and the capacity of 65 ampere-hours for access control
output that can be used to power internal activation modules. applications.

APS NACs can be configured for a 3-3-3 temporal or continuous <<The APS shall be capable of installation for a seismic com-
output. California temporal rate outputs are also available on cer- ponent Importance Factor of 1.5.>>The APS shall provide a
tain models. This makes the APS ideal for applications requiring minimum of four independent, fully supervised Class B circuits
signaling rates that are not available from the main system. that can be field configurable for notification appliance circuits or
auxiliary 24 Vdc power circuits. APS NACs shall be convertible to
In addition to the internally generated signal rates, the APS can also a minimum of two Class A NACs. Each APS output circuit shall
be configured to follow the coded signal rate of the main system be rated at 3 amperes at 24 VDC. Each output circuit shall be
NACs. This allows for the seamless expansion of existing NACs. provided with automatically restoring overcurrent protection. The
APS shall be operable from the main system NAC and/or Edwards
At the top of the steel enclosure, the APS has space and mount-
Signature Series control modules. APS NACs shall be configurable
ing bosses for:
for continuous, 3-3-3 temporal or optionally, California rate. Fault
• Up to two SIGA-AA30 or SIGA-AA50 dual-channel audio am- conditions on the APS shall not impede operation of main sys-
plifiers tem NAC. The APS shall be provided with ground fault detection
circuitry and a separate AC fail relay.

Cabinet Layout
1 1 Enclosure: Houses the electronics and two standby
15
batteries
2 Heat sink: Distributes heat away from the circuit board
13
3 Circuit board: Provides connections for all circuits
4 Tamper switch standoffs: 3-TAMP mounting standoffs
4 5 Jumper JP3: Ground fault enable or disable option
6 AC LED: AC power on
2 3
5 7 Mounting brackets: Option module mounting brackets
6 8 Jumpers JP1 and JP2: Class A or Class B NAC option
9 DIP switches: Two eight-position DIP switches used
for configuration
10 Circuit LEDs: NAC, battery, and ground fault trouble
14 7
LEDs
12
11 Batteries: Up to two 12 V 24 Ah batteries fit in the
enclosure. For larger batteries, use an external battery
10
cabinet (BC-1 or BC-2).
9 8
12 Jumper JP4: Battery charging jumper
13 Option module (SIGA-REL, SIGA-UIO6/6R/2, SIGA-
MP2L) and MN-BRKT3 mounting area
11 14 Remote LED wiring harness connection
15 Remote LED: Indicates AC power is on

Page 2 of 4 D ATA S H E E T 85005-0127


Not to be used for installation purposes. Issue 4
Typical Wiring
NAC Class A wiring NAC Class B wiring
Connect one NAC circuit to one NAC output, either NAC1 or NAC3. Connect a single NAC circuit to one NAC output. Terminate the
Terminate the circuit at the NAC2 or NAC4 terminal screw, respec- circuit with a 15 k Ohm EOL resistor.
tively.

TB1 TB1
Notification appliance circuit (NAC)
Notification UL listed
+

+
NAC1 appliance NAC1
EOL 15 k Ohm
circuit (NAC)
+

+
NAC2 NAC2 Notification appliance circuit (NAC)
Notification UL listed
+

+
NAC3 appliance NAC3
EOL 15 k Ohm
circuit (NAC)
+

+
NAC4 NAC4
200 mA AUX 200 mA AUX
TB5

Input or signaling circuit Input or signaling circuit

TB5
Continuous Continuous
+

+
IN + IN +
Sense 1 COM - Sense 1 COM -
OUT To next signaling device, NAC OUT NAC
To next signaling
IN
+

IN

+
Sense 2 COM booster, or NAC returning device, booster, or NAC
Sense 2 COM
OUT to existing control panel end-of-line resistor
OUT
NO NO
Trouble COM EOL EOL
Trouble COM
NC [3] [3]
AC power fail NC AC power fail
TB2 monitoring TB2 monitoring

NAC wiring notes:


1. A trouble on the APS is sensed on the existing control panel’s NAC circuit causing a NAC trouble on that panel. This
removes the need to separately monitor the trouble contact except for AC power failure (see [3] below).
In an alarm condition, the APS allows NAC current to move downstream to devices connected to the existing control panel’s NAC circuit.
2. Refer to the connected control panel’s documentation for more details on NAC wiring.
[3] The AC power failure panel connection annunciates at the panel but does not report off
premises for a predetermined time period in U.S. fire applications.

Trouble relay wiring with four AUX circuits


Dimensions
When all four NAC/AUX circuits are configured as AUX circuits and
DIP switch SW2-6 is ON, a SIGA-CT2 module must be used to
monitor the sense 1 trouble contacts and the trouble relay. D5

TB1 D2 D3
+

NAC1/
AUX1 To auxiliary device D4
+

NAC2/
AUX2
To auxiliary device
+

NAC3/
AUX3
To auxiliary device
+

NAC4/
To auxiliary device
AUX4
200 mA AUX
TB5

Continuous
IN D6
Sense 1 COM D1
OUT
IN
Sense 2 COM
OUT
NO CT2
Trouble COM
NC EOL 47 k Ohm
TB2
Data in from + +
Data out to
previous device or
next device
Signature controller
D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6
26.0 in 5.3 in 15.0 in 12 in 5.3 in 21.0 in
(66 cm) (13.5 cm) (38 cm) (30.5 cm) (13.5 cm) (53.3 cm)

Page 3 of 4 D ATA S H E E T 85005-0127


Not to be used for installation purposes. Issue 4
Specifications
Model 6.5 amp APS 10 amp APS
AC Line Voltage 120VAC or 220-240VAC 50/60Hz 120VAC or 220-240VAC 50/60Hz
390 watts 580 watts
Contact us... Sense voltage (input) 6 to 45 Vdc, 11 to 33 Vrms (FWR and unfiltered DC)
Email: [email protected] Sense current (input) 6 mA @ 24 Vdc, 3 mA @ 12 Vdc, 12 mA @ 45 Vdc
Web: www.est-fire.com Input Current 3mA @ 12Vdc, 6mA @ 24Vdc
(from an existing NAC)
EST is an EDWARDS brand.
Booster Internal 70mA + 35 mA for each circuit set to AUX
1016 Corporate Park Drive
Mebane, NC 27302 Supervisory Current
Booster Internal Alarm 270mA
In Canada, contact Chubb Edwards...
Current
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.chubbedwards.com NAC/AUX output voltage 19.1 to 26.85 Vdc
NAC/AUX output current 3.0 A max. per circuit (10 A or 6.5 A max. total for all NACs)
© 2013 UTC Fire & Security Americas
(10 A or 6.5 A max. total for all AUXs) [2]
Corporation, Inc. All rights reserved.
Specifications subject to change NAC/AUX class Class B or Class A
without notice. Edwards is part of UTC Wire size 18 to 12 AWG (0.75 to 2.5 sq mm)
Climate, Controls & Security, a unit of NAC EOL UL: 15 k Ohm (P/N EOL-15)
United Technologies Corporation.
ULC: Use P/N EOL-P1 and select the 15 k Ohm resistor
Auxiliary output 1 dedicated 200 mA auxiliary output, not supervised by APS,
(continuous) included in total current
Common trouble relay Form C, 1 A, 30 Vdc (resistive)
Battery requirements [1] 6.5 to 24 Ah for fire and up to 65 Ah for security applications
Under 10 Ah, cut JP4. 10 Ah or above, do not cut JP4.
Battery charger current 1.2 A when the battery jumper wire is cut
limit 2.1 A when the battery jumper wire is not cut
Operating environment
Temperature 32 to 120 °F (0 to 49 °C)
Humidity 0 to 93% RH, noncondensing
Ground fault impedance 10 k Ohm
Intended installation Indoor-dry
environment
[1] The maximum battery size the panel can charge is 24 Ah (12V24A or equivalent) for fire and security applications.
[2] The maximum current is 8 amps for auxiliary circuits that operate when the panel is in standby.

Ordering Information
Catalog Number Description Shipping
Wt. lb (kg)
APS6A 6.5 Amp Auxiliary Power Supply
APS6A/230 6.5 Amp Auxiliary Power Supply (220V)
26 (11.8)
APS10A 10 Amp Auxiliary Power Supply
APS10A/230 10 Amp Auxiliary Power Supply (220V)
Notes
1. Requires installation
of separate battery Related Equipment
cabinet. MN-BRKT3 MN-FVP series mounting bracket for APS-(6)(10)A power supplies
2. APS supports batteries BC-1EQ Seismic Kit for BC-1. Order BC-1 separately. See note 3.
greater than 24 Amp
APSEQ Seismic kit for APS6A or APS10 Auxiliary Power Supplies.
hours for access con-
trol applications only. See note 3
3. For earthquake 12V6A5 12 V, 7.2 Amp Hour Battery, two required 3.4 (1.6)
anchorage, including 12V10A 12 V, 10 Amp Hour Battery, two required 9.5 (4.3)
detailed mounting 12V17A 12 V, 18 Amp Hour Battery, two required 13 ( 5.9)
weights and center
of gravity detail, refer
12V24A 12 V, 24 Amp Hour Battery, two required 20 (9.07)
to Seismic Applica- 12V40A 12 V, 40 Amp Hour Battery, two required (see notes 1, 2) 32 (14.5)
tion Guide 3101676. 12V50A 12 V, 50 Amp Hour Battery, two required (see notes 1, 2) 40 (18.14)
Approval of panel 12V65A 12 V, 65 Amp Hour Battery, two required (see notes 1, 2) 49 (22.2)
anchorage to site
structure may require 3-TAMP Tamper switch 1.0 (0.6)
local AHJ, structural or BC-1 Battery Cabinet (up to 2 - 40 Amp Hour Batteries) 58 (26.4)
civil engineer review.
06-27-13

Page 4 of 4 D ATA S H E E T 85005-0127


Not to be used for installation purposes. Issue 4

You might also like