Your milk whipper Brinker head with flip a green whip a green bulb in how did the middle house building then do the protect then do the higher ones then you do do only to bring ahead and hide do you garage whip your wand have a great time I’ll be bye 0:22 0:25
Well there is 3 bathrooms and I had bought some months ago however it's not possible for them to all be installed due to the location so if it's not possible for all of them I won't do any of them
In the Garage I'd say do the smokie by your projector. As for the house maybe one of the heat detectors in the attic or the pull station by the panel. Also, what would be pretty cool is if you had a monitor module that would put the garage panel into supervisory when the generator is running. I guess one way that would work is taking a relay with a 120-volt coil and when the 120 volts from the generator energizes the relay coil, it would close the relay, tripping the module.
I’d enjoy seeing you continue to kill the main breaker instead of the 3 emergency light breakers for that test. Seems cool when it’s all dark and just the emergency lights.
1:54 What are those cool RGB strips that you use? What brand/model are they and how do they work with your system? Really love the white flash startup sequence of those LEDs! 😊
I talked about that in my video of installing the one in my bedroom. I cannot install them in the house due to the aesthetics of bright green exit signs do not look good in a residential setting.
Watching this one day after my 15th birthday. Still the best content as always! My suggestions for june testing: for the garage: One of the smokes in the main garage room for the house: The heat in the Garage Keep up the good work!
dang you got a nice stereo system? it would be cool to see a video with the projector going as well! i was wearing the headphones and that sub was pumping!
Why don't you have a voice evac system? I think if you were to add it it would make it seem more like a commercial building. I've seen little modules you can add to your panel to make them work and wiring speakers w strobes. I just thought of it because my school has a voice EVAC system
In my entire life in Canada I've only seen half a dozen buildings with Voise evacuation it is not common and definitely not necessary the building is not wired for it and it is extremely expensive and unless you're using custom messages it's pointless in my opinion
It's still the same problem of having to drill a hole into the side of the transfer switch which is difficult when it's inside the wall and it's a total pain in the ass to try and take it out if I could get some sort of really short 90° drillbit that might be my only option
Like the bulbs in the opener? They are just some 60 W equivalent 5000 K LEDs or if you were talking about the man door I have the same as the ones on the ceiling in one spot Govee M1's
@@DJboogie-eh5vs many have said that but it makes it frustrating to have to reset two systems if there is a way where it's non-latching and doesn't make any noise that would be better
@@nics-systems-electric And at 09:49 whenever you close the door on your Fire-Lite MS-9200UDLS, the door squeaking noise kinda sounds like a low frequency sounder due to the same frequency it makes
you always say that EST is bad, but i see so many newly constructed buildings with EST systems so it cant be that bad, right? what makes EST systems bad, especially newer ones?
You see lots installed not necessarily because it's a good product. mostly the products that are installed in the building depends on who the contractor works with. if they have deals with certain companies and often times electrical contractors have a go to company for fire alarm that will install one product only. sometimes depending on your actual area they're only is a few options for install. cost a factor if EST is cheap to install
Hey Nic just my opinion but it makes me a bit nervous with you using drone footage around your house because it kind of shows the area. No address or street but it makes it easier for bad people to try to find that if they really wanted to and you have a lot of expensive equipment.
Anyways here is a brownie recipe 12 ounces unsalted butter (about 3 sticks; 340g) 6 ounces finely chopped dark chocolate, about 72% (about 1 cup; 170g) 16 ounces granulated sugar (about 2 1/4 cups; 450g) 2 ounces light brown sugar (about 1/4 cup, packed; 55g) 1 3/4 teaspoons (4g) Diamond Crystal kosher salt; for table salt, use about half as much by volume or the same weight 6 large eggs, straight from the fridge (about 10 1/2 ounces; 295g) 1/2 ounce vanilla extract (about 1 tablespoon; 15g) 1 teaspoon instant espresso powder, such as Medaglia d’Oro (optional) 4 1/2 ounces all-purpose flour, such as Gold Medal (about 1 cup, spooned; 125g) 4 ounces Dutch-process cocoa powder, such as Cacao Barry Extra Brute (about 1 1/3 cups, spooned; 115g)
@@DJboogie-eh5vs devices are not terrible it's all of the added complexity that comes along with audio with amplifiers and power supplies custom buttons etc.
I Would Request To End The Supervisory Mode I Think Two Separate Fire Alarm Systems Should Both Your Garage Fire Alarm System And House Fire Alarm System Should Both Go Off At The Same Time I Liked That Idea It Would Easier So You Could Just Reset The Fire Alarm Control In Your Main House Instead Of You Going Back To The Garage To Reset The Fire Alarm Control Panel It Would Just Be Easier
Did you not watch the previous video from 7 days ago? Having the systems trigger each other would require nic to run around to reset both systems before the other is finished initializing.
Clearly haven't watched it… monthly testing videos would be over if I had to deal with that too much of a pain. no system should ever be set up that way. I've worked with them in the field it's not fun requires a person at each panel with communication with each other at all time. And resets have to be coordinated.