From Offline to Wireless
Combining networking options has never been simpler
- By Karen Keating
- Apr 01, 2011
Why, users ask, must they choose between offline and online
solutions? If online, why must they choose between wired
and wireless? Why must they isolate technologies when they
could choose them all, working under one system with only
one database, to provide a holistic security and safety solution?
After all, users seek to deploy the best of the best and have heard about the
benefits of emergency lockdown, Wi-Fi, network on a card, mesh networks and all
the other new technologies being discussed in the media and at tradeshows.
Users have said they want their electronic locks to integrate seamlessly with
their existing software. In addition, they want lock hardware to be as easy to upgrade
as its software. The lock itself would provide a migration path to future technology
needs, not only protecting the facility but also protecting its investment.
Users could upgrade their locks without ever taking them off the door, saving
installation costs. Let’s look at this issue a little closer.
When Standalone Offline Locks Make Sense
Standalone offline locks are a cost-effective way to upgrade from traditional mechanical
locking devices. They provide more convenient security than traditional
mechanical locking devices, along with:
Audit trail reports that tell you who went where and when;
The options to update users and access rights at the lock using the keypad,
authorized credentials or a handheld programming device;
The ability to program automatic lock and unlock times as well as holiday
schedules; and
The ability to add and delete users easily, track usage and manage data without
installing a facility-wide network.
This gives users more control, allowing them to manage the system more efficiently
than they could with a traditional mechanical system. These computer-managed
locks are ideal in situations where users may want the convenience of a networked status
signal monitoring.
Computer-managed offline locking
systems are cost-effective and easy
to install because they do not require
routing network cables or power wires
when retrofitting an existing facility
with electronic access control. These
standalone, programmable, batterypowered
locks are networked through
software to provide audit-trail capability
and time-based scheduling for restricting
access.
Standalone locks, exit trim and offline
hard-wired controllers, which
manage strikes and magnets, can be
programmed using access control software
from a laptop or PDA. A variety
of credentials, including PIN, magnetic
stripe cards, proximity cards and smart
cards, can be used with this type of system.
New users, access points and access
privileges can be entered into the system
in seconds. Users can upload updates to
each device via a handheld programmer
or programming credential.
Security professionals can become
creative and provide a balanced approach
to access control with such
standalone locking systems. These systems
facilitate simplified, uniform access
control administration. Multiple
openings on a campus or in a building
can be managed with a variety of
standalone locking solutions that share
common access control software, simplifying
management by eliminating redundancies
associated with managing
multiple systems. These battery-powered,
standalone locksets and exit trim
provide code-compliant-free egress and
are easy to retrofit.
The system operator can easily use
the system’s software to control both
users and access points based on time of
day, day of the week, credential needed
and period of time. Reports show audit
trails retrieved, access privileges granted
and time functions established, categorized
by either the user or door.
With a PDA, the administrator can
open and plug the interface into the
locking system right at the door and
upload new access instructions to the
lock while downloading audits of who
has been through the door and when
they went through.
Access rights can even be assigned to
users by credential and time function,
providing the system operator with flexibility
to control the flow of people into,
through and out of a facility. Selectable
functions include time zones, time activation
and expiration, auto-unlock time
scheduling, first-person-in and holiday
scheduling. A variety of reports are
available to help manage a facility more
efficiently, including audit trail data, access
privileges data, and time function
schedules by user or door.
Whatever the credential, administrators
can perform various functions,
including momentary and maintained
access, lockout, one time use, supervised
and even linked access, in which
a code must be used in tandem with a
credential, such as at a bank’s ATM.
Linked access reduces the probability of lost or stolen credentials yielding unauthorized
access. These computer-managed
locking devices can even manage
up to 5,000 users per opening, which is
useful for those facilities with high turnover.
They will also provide audits on
up to the last 5,000 events that occur at
the opening.
When Do You Move to Networked
Wireless Locks?
In facilities that need increased monitoring
and control, a networked solution
is essential. Networking provides
the ability to instantly change access
rights and schedules on a large number
of doors, monitor and control the
system in real-time, and manage large
user databases from one centralized
computer.
What are you looking for? In most
cases, you will want:
An open-architecture platform that
allows for easy integration into virtually
any access control or other
software system;
Real-time monitoring capability
that can inform you of various conditions,
such as a low battery or a
door held open;
Real-time audit trails that can tell
you who went where and when;
A centralized lockdown feature that
allows you to secure your facility instantly;
and
Configurable fail safe/fail secure and
other capabilities per code.
The business case for deploying
wireless systems for networked openings
is compelling. Installations demonstrate
that a wireless solution can have
a substantially lower installed cost than
an online, hardwired system because
wireless systems use less hardware and
install five to 10 times faster. They also
make it easy to retrofit electronic access
control solutions in facilities and applications
that have previously held back
due to budget constraints or installation
limitations.
In addition to providing access control
at a door in the form of a wireless
lock, organizations can now take
advantage of wireless solutions for elevators,
gates, exit devices and electric
strikes. Importantly, the wireless system
easily integrates into all existing access
control systems, and customers can
continue to use their existing keys or
electronic credentials.
Migrating from Standalone
to Wireless
It used to be that one would remove
the standalone lock and change it out
with a wireless lock, preferably one
with the same footprint. This would
take about an hour or so per door.
Today, it is much easier with modular
locking systems, such as the Schlage
AD-Series locks.
With interchangeable network
modules, you can go from standalone,
offline locking to a networked access
control system by installing a 900 MHz
communication module and upgrading
the firmware. After linking the lock to
a panel interface module, you can initiate
emergency lock/unlock commands
throughout the facility when needed
and change access rights from a central
location.
Furthermore, you can use wireless
on those openings where it has been
traditionally too expensive or cumbersome
to switch over but still use hardwired
networked locks where it is most
cost effective, all under one system and
one database.
“Usually, with WiFi, access control
decisions are downloaded by the
host into the lock five to six times per
day versus five to six times per hour
with 900 MHz solutions, a 10-minute
heartbeat,” said Gary Conley, University
of Virginia’s facilities and systems
engineer in the office of business operations.
“Access control decisions may
also be managed within the locks -- as
is the case with offline locks -- to minimize
communication from the lock to
the host and conserve batteries. However,
such limited connectivity with
the host limits the locks’ ability to receive
urgent commands from the host.
For instance, even with a 900 MHz
platform, a direction to immediately
lock down could be ignored for 10-
plus minutes.
“With the AD-Series, a new Schlage
patent-pending ‘wake up on radio’ feature
works in parallel with the 10-minute
heartbeat. Without waking up the
entire lock, it listens for complementary
commands every one to 10 seconds and
responds. Thus, ten seconds is the longest
it will take to initiate lockdown,”
Conley said.
The 900 MHz band also enables
longer transmission ranges and simplifies
system design. Signals with longer
wavelengths travel a greater distance
and penetrate through and around typical
building construction much better
than signals with shorter wavelengths.
Pathway as Long, Short as Required
When planning the move from the mechanical
world to electronic, networked
or wireless locking systems, remember
that the transition does not have to take
place overnight and that it does not
need to be total.
Adding electronic locking systems to
access points as time and budgets allow
is a sensible migration plan for any organization,
no matter how large or small. A
large facility may have dozens of doors
with varying levels of security needs. A
broom closet may be adequately secured
with a simple offline lock, while surveillance
or computer rooms may demand
high-security locks that are integrated
with access control systems.
No two facilities are alike; choosing
a scalable solution allows users to
accommodate a variety of offline and
networked needs within the same system.
The right lock system for a given
door may be found anywhere along
the electronic migration path.
This article originally appeared in the April 2011 issue of Security Today.