Saving Money
        Money Wireless locking opens the door to access control in areas unreachable with a wired system
        
        
			- By Sean Leonard
 - Oct 01, 2011
 
		
        
		Most security professionals know that wireless systems remove
  the expense of running wire to all access points, a project that
  takes too much time and wreaks havoc throughout the facility
  while the job is being done. With no wire to pull or trenches
  to dig, wireless access control takes only 45 minutes per door
  to install, versus eight hours for a wired alternative.
  
J. Lynn Medlin, carpenter/locksmith/paint supervisor at the University of
  North Carolina-Wilmington, said he, like many end users, worried about the costs
  associated with access control. That’s why the university ended up using wireless.
  It implements online access control without taxing the budget.
  
Eliminating Hardwiring
  
Wireless access control, particularly on the university’s existing buildings, eliminates
  any hardwiring of networked card readers, door position switches and
  request-to-exit switches. It reduces costs significantly, speeds up installation and
  maintains building aesthetics by avoiding the need to run wires that couldn’t be
  concealed. In general, implementing wireless access control reduces installation
  time by up to 50 percent, system costs by up to 25 percent or more and disruption
  to the facility during installation.
  
Almost 70 percent of electronic locking systems now incorporate wireless.
  The impetus behind the switchover to wireless over the past five years is not
  rocket science: A technology that used to create problems is now solving problems.
  Today, wireless systems are reliable and easy to install.
  
With wireless savings, security professionals can now extend the reach of their
  card-based systems at a cost that used to include extra materials and increased
  labor. Wireless enables users to expand the legacy access control system for use on
  additional doors as well as on mobile mustering, remote areas, gates and elevators,
  as well as for other unique applications for which wired access control was impractical
  to install or too expensive.
Integrating Mustering Applications
  
With a portable wireless reader, security personnel can leverage the existing card
  system for remote and offsite applications including mustering, attendance, event
  admission and checkpoints.
  
If there is a fire at the facility, a portable reader can determine who has escaped,
  indicating whether anyone is still inside. On a college campus, students could use
  their campus cards to attend a concert. At a school, teachers could check that all
  students are on the bus when going on field trips.
  
Remote Applications Can Be a Card Swipe Away
  
Regardless of how impressive an organization’s access control system is, check out
  the remote doors. Oftentimes, a simple key opens the door; sometimes just a padlock.
  Why? It’s been too costly to connect the remote location to the system. Wire
  and trenching take up way too much budget. 
Most high schools and colleges have
  athletic equipment sheds out at the
  practice field. The equipment inside is
  valuable. Now, with wireless, schools
  can outfit these sheds with the same
  type of locking systems that require
  the same credentials to enter as other
  places on the campus. Whether the
  original system is wired or hardwired is
  irrelevant; the system won’t care if one
  part is wired and the shed is wireless,
  because it reads all doors the same.
Let’s remain in the athletic department.
  Why not have wireless readers
  at the student entrance to the football
  stadium or arena? Then authorized
  students would get in with their student
  cards the same way they could get to a
  concert on the campus—by scanning
  their cards at a portable reader. With
  wireless, guard booths, ancillary offices,
  press boxes and other remote door applications
  can all use the same card access
  control system deployed by the rest
  of the organization.
In the Parking Lot
For outdoor applications such as vehicle
  and pedestrian gate access, wireless
  links will bridge up to 1,000 feet, eliminating
  costly trenching. As such, wireless
  systems are ideal for garages, parking
  lots, airports, utility companies and
  military bases. They are especially costeffective
  for controlling gates around a
  facility. Even more impressive is that
  optional directional or gain antennae
  are available for still longer distances,
  up to 4,000 feet away. With wireless
  access control, people can enter the
  parking lot just as they enter the front
  door—with their credential. No guards
  are needed to keep unauthorized cars
  from entering and no trenches need to
  be dug to provide what can be installed
  with a wireless solution quickly.
Keep Off the Fourth Floor
Elevators are prime candidates for a
  wireless access control system. While
  traveling cables are routinely included
  at the time of installation, they are often
  ill-equipped to transport credential
  data reliably from the cab to the elevator
  controller because the harsh electrical
  environment of the elevator shaft
  often creates data-corrupting noise on
  card reader data lines. This causes inconsistent
performance, which often gets worse over time as cable shielding
decays due to continual movement.
Wireless solutions eliminate the
  need for the data lines in elevators
  up to 1,000 feet. In fact, they provide
  consistent, reliable data transport that
  doesn’t wear out. With traveling cable
  installation costs ranging from $2,600
  to $13,000 or more per cab, wireless alternatives
  can save thousands of dollars
  per elevator.
What about Lockdowns?
  
Lockdowns have everything to do with
  the deployment of wireless technology.
  Usually, with Wi-Fi, 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. 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
  (non-online) 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 more than 10 minutes.
  
However, a new “wake up on radio”
  feature on Schlage’s AD Series
  locks works in tandem with the
  10-minute heartbeat. Without waking
  up the entire lock, it listens for
  complementary commands every one
  to 10 seconds and responds. Thus, 10
  seconds is the longest it will take to
  initiate lockdown.
  
More than One Wireless for
  Access and Intrusion
  
The term “wireless” does not necessarily
  indicate the same system in every
  case. For access control and intrusion
  systems, there are two major types of
  wireless. The first involves installing
  900 MHz communication to a panel interface
  module (PIM) and onto a hardwired
  source network. The second is 2.4
  GHz/802.11 Wi-Fi, in which communication
  goes from the lock or sensor to
  a Wi-Fi antenna and onto a network.
  
Signal propagation and strength
  through building walls is stronger for
  900 MHz signals than it is the shorter
  wavelengths of 2.4 GHz signals. Typically,
  if a 2.4 GHz system is installed
  in a building, additional Wi-Fi antennas
  will likely be needed to support an
  equal number of wireless locks or sensors
  over a given floor plan. In Wi-Fi
  systems, this can mean additional installation
  costs by ensuring antennas
  have closer proximity to the locks to
  achieve reliable operation. In addition,
  independent Wi-Fi locks require unique
  IP addresses. Thus, there is greater involvement
  with the IT department and
  extra internal fees for each IP address.
  With 900 MHz solutions, a single IP
  address manages 16 or more doors.
  
Pros and cons. The 900 MHz solutions
  provide greater range between the
  network antenna and the lock/sensor.
  They also offer more secure communication
  between the lock/sensor and the
  network, which is why they are typically preferred for access control and intrusion systems. These systems are limited to
  the Americas and Australia and provide lower data rates. Of course, the data rate
  for access control or intrusion is minimal when compared with the Internet usage
  on a 2.4 GHz wireless network.
  
Wi-Fi is a global solution with higher data rates. However, it has a smaller
  range than a 900 MHz solution, and obstacles dissipate waves. Also, Wi-Fi is becoming
  increasingly crowded, which can negatively affect system reliability.
  
Battery life considerations/lockdown time. Wi-Fi communication is designed for
  transmitting large data files, such as e-mail and video on PCs. It uses more power
  than 900 MHz. Wi-Fi video applications typically do not use batteries. However,
  batteries are often used with access control and intrusion systems, whose control
  data is small but, nonetheless, requires significant power to communicate. The 900
  MHz solution provides up to two years of battery life (with four AA batteries and
  a 10-minute heartbeat).
With the 900 MHz solution, the entire access control system knows when someone
  is at the door. The lock captures information such as requests to exit, door position,
  and card data and sends it to the host immediately in real time. The access
  control management system makes a decision to unlock the door or not. Because
  Wi-Fi cannot afford to use all that power, decisions are made solely at the door.
  Any updates, such as the change or termination of a person’s access rights, may
  not reach that door before the ex-employee does.
  
Wireless is What the Doctor Ordered
  
Whatever the industry, wireless is becoming the prescription for getting more doors
  covered and extending the present access control system. For instance, Sandhills
  Regional Medical Center, owned by Health Management Associates, has been
  serving the citizens of Hamlet, N.C., since 1915. Until recently, security has been
  a lock-and-key affair. Thomas Roddy, the medical center’s assistant administrator, said the staff determined in 2008
  that the medical center needed greater
  security, and so they called in Kevin
  Lamonds, system technician for Seven
  Oaks Doors and Hardware of Oakboro,
  N.C., which services customers
  throughout North and South Carolina.
  
"The hospital required something
  that was not too invasive and could be
  easily installed,” Lamonds said. “In addition
  to providing a system that was
  easy to administrate, we also faced the
  many installation restrictions one has in
  medical buildings, including limitations
  on where you can drill and lay wire.
  
“It’s so easy to use wireless in such
  an application,” he said. “Not only
  were the readers installed quickly, we
  saved the medical center all the labor
  costs associated with a typical wired installation.”
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        This article originally appeared in the October 2011 issue of Security Today.