>> Systems may or may not have tamper circuits wired up which is just a continuous
>> loop of 2 wire colours. The engineering code is required to disable the tamper circuit.
>> This will be different from the user code.
..in many cases, there is a "master" code, and various user codes, discrete from any engineer code. The master code allows a prime householder to change and adjust various options (adding/removing extra user codes, adjusting date/time, checking logs, etc) and also allows reset of a tamper alarm. In my case, it does (and it is required if I have to move such things as PIRs for decorating).
>> The other issue with house alarms is that insurers ask for annual servicing. The annual
>> premium reduction is not a lot and you can bet if you did make a
>> claim they'd be looking at your servicing regime.
...mine is currently borked, awaiting a panel replacement. I've declared such to my Insurance Company as a precaution. My annual premium went up £5.31, and will be reduced again when the (scheduled) replacement is in place.
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