All im saying is it isn't likely that you will lose protocol if you have not already lost the whole loop card. i.e. the liklihood of losing the protocol alone is small.
Have to agree.
I've been in the business over 20 years and i can't recall losing a loop simply because it had lost the means to communicate - maybe we just never came across the right panels...!
Personally I think a lot of the discovery features are just "gimmicky" and an excuse to charge more money..... When they first brought them out the heads had a lot of problems, and more recently a job just over two years old (installed by Siemens funny enough!) in a computer room we look after, aproximately 50 or so heads, there is a pile of 10 detectors left on the panel that have been swapped out so far....
Dave:
This is one opinion among many, the discovery features is a bit advanced than the XP95 ones, and the majority of analogue addressable panels are designed to support the XP95 protocol but not necessary the extended one of discovery, even the protocol's basis is the same...etc
However, my guess is that the timers of analogue adderssable systems compatible to XP95 and discovery are not the same, which means; if analogue addressable system is designed to support XP95, its data transfer in each conversation wouldn't be completed to swap over the comunication, if using Discovery...,and threrefore this may cause some data to be lost...ect
Therefore If analogue addessable systems are designed to support Discovery extended protocol that would be grate.
Also this is one opnion among many
