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Installation and Designs

  • For all your CCTV, Access Control, Intrusion Detection, Enterphones,  Panic, Monitoring and Structured cabling needs.

24/7 ULC Monitoring:

Guard Response and Guard Services: 

Security System Maintance:  

  • Services provide for routine maintenance on a monthly or quarterly basis, in lieu of a client using their own staff's time or hiring a full time technician to sort out what updates are necessary. Regularly scheduled fixed-cost visits may also lower costs for other services as well since our staff would already be on site, as well as allow for more accurate budgeting throughout the year. These services can be scheduled independently or combined for greater savings.      

24/7 Service:

  • Service is available regardless of time or day.

Structured Cabling: 

  • Building or campus telecommunications cabling infrastructure that consists of a number of standardized smaller elements (hence structured) called subsystems.

    Structured cabling falls into five subsystems:[1][2]Demarcation point is the point where the telephone company network ends and connects with the on-premises wiring at the customer premises.Equipment or Telecommunications Rooms house equipment and wiring consolidation points that serve the users inside the building or campus.Vertical or Riser Cabling connects between the equipment/telecommunications rooms, so named because the rooms are typically on different floors.Horizontal wiring can be IW (inside wiring) or Plenum Cabling and connects telecommunications rooms to individual outlets or work areas on the floor, usually through the wireways, conduits or ceiling spaces of each floor.Work-Area Components connect end-user equipment to outlets of the horizontal cabling system.

    Structured cabling design and installation is governed by a set of standards that specify wiring data centers, offices, and apartment buildings for data or voice communications using various kinds of cable, most commonly category 5e (CAT-5e), category 6 (CAT-6), and modular connectors. These standards define how to lay the cabling in various topologies in order to meet the needs of the customer, typically using a central patch panel (which is normally 19 inch rack-mounted), from where each modular connection can be used as needed. Each outlet is then patched into a network switch (normally also rack-mounted) for network use or into an IP or PBX (private branch exchange) telephone system patch panel.