9 Jun 2014
The competitively priced Kentec Sigma A-CP range of conventional fire control panels are designed for small installations, including outdoor shopping areas with less than 24 fire detectors per zone and stand-alone sprinkler rooms.
The Sigma A-CP range, with its optional built-in communicator, is available with 2, 4 or 8 initiating circuits, which can be extensively configured via a simple front panel operated programming method.
The low standby power requirements and cost effective small batteries allow the panel to be mounted in a small discrete enclosure, which is available in standard red or optional grey. A simple programming method using just 3 front panel buttons allows an extensive list of configuration options to be set and reviewed. Single board construction, which allows easy removal of all electronic parts by the removal of just 2 screws and ample provision of cable entry knockouts, simplifies installation. 4 Amp notification appliances power and built in selectable sync protocols provide ample power and control for a wide range of standard notification appliances. The built in RS485 communications bus provides the facility to connect 4 wire annunciators or ancillary relay boards to provide further indication and control options throughout a premises. The optional DACT allows dual line reporting to central stations and provides a 500 event history buffer.
Kentec Electronics Ltd
Website
Email Us
T: 01322 222121
Unit 25 - 27 Fawkes Avenue
Questor
DA1 1JQ
Dartford, Kent
United Kingdom
A highly intelligent Syncro AS control panel from Kentec, a life safety control systems manufacturer, integrated with COSMO PSIM+ software is helping to protect visitors, staff and actors at the historic São Luiz Teatro Municipal in Lisbon, Portugal.
A highly sophisticated Taktis panel from Kentec, a life safety control systems manufacturer, and installed by DPJ Fire and Security Ltd, is helping protect visitors, staff and actors at Maidstone Studios in Kent, one of the UK’s largest independent broadcasting facilities.
Maidstone Studios provides state of the art studios, production offices, dressing rooms, green rooms, wardrobe and make-up space. It is home to some of the nation’s favourite shows including Take Me Out and Later… Live with Jools Holland.
Kentec Electronics Ltd., one of the world’s leading manufacturers of life safety systems, has had its Syncro ASM fire control panels chosen for the refurbishment of fire systems on the Fast Ferry Service that operates between the islands of Trinidad and Tobago.
Kentec Electronics Ltd., is one of the World’s leading
manufacturers of life safety systems, and a leading innovator of
extinguishing control module technology. Since 1985 the company has been
at the forefront of developments in comprehensive systems for
extinguishant control.
Kentec’s market-leading Sigma and Syncro ranges of
extinguishing control panels are specified across the world in
environments where system continuity is critical, and fire prevention
management of the highest reliability is essential, including data
centres, airports and financial centres. Kentec’s Sigma XT is simple,
powerful and highly configurable and compatible with intrinsically safe
barriers, which makes it ideal for use in hazardous areas.
Kentec Electronics Ltd., one of the world’s leading manufacturers of life safety systems, has had its highly acclaimed Taktis® fire detection and alarm technology chosen to help protect an iconic new £4.7 million flexible use community hub development for Scotland’s Dumfries Baptist Church.
Taktis Fire, Kentec’s highly acclaimed fire alarm control panel, is proving to be a real success at two of Cumbria’s leading care homes, central to fire safety systems designed to protect vulnerable residents, members of staff and visitors.
A dazzling new luxury student accommodation development in the heart of historic Durham is the perfect location for Kentec’s highly acclaimed Taktis fire detection and alarm technology. Ernest Place, just 10 minutes away from the city’s vibrant centre and the university’s Durham city location, is a complex of 5 and 6 bed apartments and studios boasting deluxe features such as a gym, sauna and on-site cinema, and delivering a modern student lifestyle that is described as University student living at its finest!
A Kentec fire control panel is helping protect new temporary buildings at Welcome Break’s M3 southbound Fleet Services on the Surrey/Hampshire border, erected following a devastating fire in December 2016 that almost completely destroyed the former services building.
Kentec’s new Taktis fire detection and alarm system combines the very latest in hardware and software to produce a control and indication system that is both powerful and sophisticated, yet simple to understand.
A new life safety system based around Kentec’s market leading control panel technology is protecting a major Barclays Bank installation in Johannesburg, South Africa.
A £60m expansion of Belfast’s leading boutique hotel is being protected by a new and upgraded fire safety system that has Kentec’s sector leading control panel technology at its heart.
Phase one of Ten Square Hotel Belfast’s impressive 50-bedroom extension was completed in December 2016, with work on the whole project set to finish later this year. This first phase expansion has also added the new Linenhall Business Centre with conferencing, function rooms and events space. The hotel development’s second phase will see a 66-bedroom expansion on the other side of the original hotel building into the former Scottish Amicable Building on Donegall Square to include a spa and gym, and will bring the hotel’s bedroom capacity to over 140.
Kentec Stand E125 at Firex International, 20-22 June 2017, Excel London
Kentec Stand E125 at Firex International, 20-22 June 2017, Excel London.
Kentec gas extinguishing fire safety panels are playing an important role helping protecting Specsavers’ new £12 million West Midland manufacturing and distribution centre.
A new life safety system based around Kentec’s Syncro XT+ addressable extinguishing control panel technology is being installed in the new 4 billion Kroner (Euro 407m) terminal at Norway’s Bergen Flesland International Airport.
A new life safety system based around Kentec’s Syncro fire alarm control panel technology has been installed at a new biology laboratory facility – part of the Babraham Research Campus Cambridge, considered to be the UK’s leading campus that supports early-stage bioscience enterprise.
An imaginative £5 million renovation scheme that’s breathing new life into the iconic Grade II listed landmark at Saltdean, Brighton, has Kentec fire control panels at the heart of a new safety system.
The leap forward in trouble-free, interactive fire detection panel
development can only be truly appreciated by measuring the advance against the pioneering
work of the past, with an accelerated evolution of smart technology observable
over the latest generation of innovations designed to meet the increasing challenges
of intelligent fire detection systems integration.
Far-sighted manufacturers are constantly working on more stable, more
reliable fire detectors to ensure the fastest possible detection of an incident
while striving to rule out unwanted false alarms.
At the same time fire panel
manufacturers work to monitor and report on these new detection devices and
include software to further ensure false alarms are kept to a minimum but also
making sure operators are alerted as soon as there is a fire or an event that
could affect the performance of the system.
Yet,
as increasingly complex systems are developed for intelligent building
management, it is often forgotten that it’s the on-site operators who will have
to cope with multiple systems whose screen displays can be highly complex, with
the potential for confusion.
To
the uninitiated, during an alarm situation – with bells ringing and lights
flashing – buttons and texts can be baffling.
Even if the installer has trained the local operators there is a chance
of instructions being forgotten and thus the burden of responsibility for the
operator, from having to act unprepared, can be overwhelming . . . an outcome
designers in the pioneering days of interactive panel development strove dedicatedly
to overcome.
Dispelling anxiety
Even
today, this same sense of bafflement can bewilder an operator responding to a
panel ‘alert’. For example, suppose you have
a trouble-free established system that’s has never activated to a live fire
alert. Then, years after installation, a fault notification is received. Typically this state is reported by the buzzing
of the panel displaying a message and initiating
a flashing LED. The inexperienced
operator, unfamiliar with this live fault condition, becomes painfully anxious
that they might act incorrectly and, in consequence, falsely evacuate the
building. Without a menu-driven interface of absolute clarity this predicament
is all too likely.
To
illustrate this point, a senior fire
risk specialist recalls: ‘I have personal
experience of this state of anxiety when some years ago I was phoned by an
operator. When asked to describe what the fire panel was displaying, the caller
froze in a panic and could not articulate; and then, when asked to press a
particular button, pressed the wrong one and turned on all the sounders.’
Advances Towards an Intuitive
Interactive Interface.
Decades past, the best an operator
could expect from a fire panel would be some sort of indication that there was
a fire somewhere in a very large area (conventional systems) while at the same
time no indication might just mean
the wires or pneumatic line had fallen out.
Some readers may have seen lovingly polished wood cabinets with brass
flags to indicate the location of a fire.
When remembering that these precursors were state of the art solutions some
60 or 70 years ago it is altogether humbling to consider how panels will
develop further in future times.
In the progress of notable technological
enhancements Fault Monitoring was a major step forward, allowing panels to
indicate an event if something was wrong. Originally, this was literally just
an indication that something was wrong with no guidance as to what.
It might then take an experienced specialist a lengthy time to troubleshoot
the system and locate the fault or false indication. A natural progression then for panel
designers was to call upon them to build in more accurate monitoring and
indication of faults. The introduction of addressable detectors did allow some
more accurate pin pointing of faults while reducing search times in the event of
a fire as staff was notified of the location.
A major restriction in progressing along this route of clearer
indication was the lack of LCD technology and manufacturers relying on banks of
traditional light bulbs, which typically themselves had a very short working
life.
The development of LEDs
and simple LCDs greatly improved panel indication, but at a price many building
owners were not prepared to pay. Also,
due to LCD limitations messages were often very brief and in a quasi code that
needed trained engineers to interpret. This
complexity demanded simplification to reflect the realities of operator
decision-making and take account of the contingencies of true workplace
conditions.
Kentec Electronics, one of the world's leading independent fire control panel designers and manufacturers, is set to ‘dazzle’ visitors to this year’s International Firex with their extensive EN, UL & FM, Marine, Analogue, Conventional & Extinguishant ranges of Fire Control Panel Solutions.
Create a business listing on the UK's leading security and fire directory
The latest security and fire news, trends and insights
Thanks for using IFSEC Global Directory,
Your enquiry has been sent to the selected companies, they will be in contact shortly.