Control Room (3); Reception; Dummy High-Level Kb; System Keyboard - Honeywell MAXPRO-Net Commissioning Manual

Crosspoint matrix video switching system
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7.4
DEFINE CCTV KEYBOARDS, CONTINUED
7.4.3

Control Room (3)

KB(3) is defined to be located in the main control room. It is also assumed that the all
security guards have their own operator identity. Therefore this keyboard is defined to
be signed-off and has no default monitor selection. When the security guards sign-on,
their specific access privileges will be assigned to that keyboard position. The keyboard
is assumed to be an HEGS5300 as LCD display support is enabled (camera/monitor
LCD mode).
7.4.4

Reception

KB(4) has been defined to be located at the main reception desk. Generally this
position would have a reduced access to the video cameras available in the system.
This keyboard is defined with a dedicated operator (4), to control system access, and a
dedicated monitor (10), as there would probably be one only located at reception.
Remember these are only examples.
7.4.5

Dummy High-Level KB

KB(5) is defined for use by specific macro sequences under control from an external
computer system. This dummy keyboard identity would be required if the external
system was going to be operating manual camera PTZ control functions. This would
preserve the concurrent control aspect of MAXPRO-Net system without interference to
other system keyboards/operators. For general camera selection and PTZ preset view
recalls a unique keyboard identity would not be required.
7.4.6

System Keyboard

KB(**) is the QWERTY keyboard connected directly to the System Controller. This
keyboard actually has the keyboard identity (33) and can be used to control the system
like other keyboards. It always has access to all monitor channels together with special
test mode control that makes it ideal for system servicing and commissioning. This is
also the keyboard used to program your system in the SETMAX configuration editor.
7.4.7

Alarm Keyboard

Although the alarm keyboard is not defined in the keyboard definition table, it still exists.
When alarm macro sequences are executed the alarm keyboard identity (34) is
assigned. This allows concurrent device selection and control without affecting current
operator priority assignments. Operators would not be pushed of monitors, or lose
priority access of their selected PTZ camera.
Rev. B
WARNING: Please note that this keyboard definition
is incomplete in Figure7.9. The keyboard must be
ENABLED in the definition table for use.
7-14
HMXMC001013
31-Mar-06

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