AdaptAlert TX
Protection when you’re at home (Stand-Alone Transmitter in waterproof housing)
- Enables the wireless connection of non-wireless detection devices (such as beams, trip wires, or smoke detectors) supplied by third parties to become wirelessly compatible with WirelessAlert receivers such as VoiceAlert or TextAlert.
What is AdaptAlert TX?
- When one wishes to connect a detection device (that normally needs to be hard-wired) from another manufacturer’s product range into a WirelessAlert solution (viz; a TextAlert or VoiceAlert receiver), AdaptAlert provides the radio ‘bridge’: AdaptAlert TX is a radio transmitter unit that takes the place of wiring.
How it works:
- The AdaptAlert TX contains a 433MHz Transmitter that will send a radio signal to compatible receivers. It is mounted right at (or sometimes inside of) third party detection devices and is physically connected via short wires to the output signals of these devices
Benefits:
- Expands WirelessAlert’s detection capabilities by enabling the products to integrate with any detection devices made by any other company.AdaptAlert’s RF/radio transmitter provides quick and easy installation of any third party device into a WirelessAlert environment.
- Has its own waterproof housing or can be housed inside the housing of an existing detection device.
AdaptAlert TX Quick Facts
- Connect any external monitoring device (beam, door contact, smoke detector) output to TX input & enjoy WirelessAlert simplicity & effectiveness
- Transmits a WirelessAlert security-coded 433mhz radio pulse to any WirelessAlert receiver; VoiceAlert, TextAlert, RX or RT component
- Housed in fully waterproof case
- AlwaysAlert LLB (long life battery) can provide over 5 years of uninterrupted service
- Idea for hard-to-wire security environments
- Transmission range up to 300m - extend this by using WirelessAlert RT unit
- Perfect even in the most outlying environments
VoiceAlert video demonstration
Click on the play button to view the youtube VoiceAlert Video demo. This video demonstrates how the standalone VoiceAlert unit works with its sensors.