Strata Apartment Security Wiring Diagram
Strata security wiring combining cameras, intercom and access. This page shows the typical equipment relationship, cable direction and planning issues to check before installation.
Wiring diagram
When this diagram is useful
Use this page when you need to explain how the major parts of the system connect, estimate cable runs, identify missing accessories, or prepare a handover sketch for a technician. It is especially useful before buying equipment, because it helps separate the recorder, controller, power, data and field-device parts of the job.
Cable and equipment checklist
- Confirm the device model, power requirement and terminal names before terminating cables.
- Label both ends of every cable with a clear room, device and port reference.
- Allow spare ports, spare conductors and extra cabinet space for future expansion.
- Separate data, control, lock power and mains cabling as required by local rules.
- Test continuity and network link before final fit-off.
Planning steps
Start with the physical locations: cameras, panels, readers, monitors, locks, power supplies, cabinets and routers.
Map the route from each field device back to the cabinet or controller. Check distance, conduit, weather exposure and service access.
Decide whether the device is PoE, 12V DC, 24V, battery backed, relay controlled or connected through a bus.
Record port numbers, IP addresses, zone names, reader addresses and any relay logic once the system is commissioned.
Common mistakes to avoid
The most common problems are assuming every device can be powered the same way, exceeding cable distance limits, forgetting lock power supplies, under-sizing the PoE budget, missing network uplinks, and leaving cables unlabelled. For commercial systems, also plan maintenance access and future expansion.
FAQs
Is this a compliant installation drawing?
No. It is a concept diagram for education and planning. A compliant drawing must reflect the actual site, equipment, cable type, standards and licensing requirements.
Can I modify this diagram for my site?
Yes, as a planning reference. Add your actual cable labels, device models, circuit numbers and cabinet locations.
Should I use Cat6 for everything?
No. Cat6 is common for IP networks and PoE devices, but alarms, locks, RS-485, power circuits and intercom buses may require different cable types.
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