If you haven't got an isolator fitted either side of the beam it can cause problems when the panel carries out its checksum.
I am not sure if all panels work the same as far as this is concerned but on some panels its every 24 hours, the loop voltage is dropped and all the devices are looked for and when this happens occasionally the beam detector will energise in alarm unless an isolator is there to limit the current draw. ( it was a long time ago I found this out so some of the explanation might not be absolutely correct but it is important to have isolators each side of any beam detector, even says so in the apollo XP95 literature.)
Greg I can understand isolators either side from the single cable fault/maximum zone area point of view but I've never heard of this 24 hour checksum business ...
I know some panels do a 24 hour calibration of devices... is this what you mean or have I totally lost it ??
Couldnt think of a proper term so used checksum as a descriptive but yes thats what I meant
Greg, the older style Apollo beam detectors used quite a bit of current, particularly on start up and also in alarm. This was also why you could only install a maximum of about 7 of these (with no other devices on the loop) to any loop anyway.
The simple fact is that short-circuit isolators will operate if the current drawn by the devices reaches a critical level. i.e the isolator thinks there might be a short-circuit by the amount of current drawn. If those devices are high-current devices such as beam detectors then it doesn't take many to draw too much current.
To further complicate matters the current drawn by devices is not always constant. If the highest current drawn by each device co-incided at any time then this might be enough to trip the short-circuit isolator. Therefore you might have a system that all seems to be o.k. but you don't realise that the current being drawn is on the edge of operating a short-circuit isolator. All of a sudden an extra couple of mA's is drawn i.e (one device goes into alarm) and that is enough to also operate the isolator!
Apollo eventually advised that a short-circuit isolator be installed either side of their older style beam detectors.
The current Apollo beam detector (been around now for about 8 years) has short-circuit isolators built-in so further short-circuit isolators are no longer required.