What about the door controller?
On Mon, Mar 28, 2016 at 9:04 PM, Nate Burke <n...@blastcomm.com> wrote: > I contacted suprema, and they directed me to a local reseller. The Reseller > had no problem selling me just the xpass no questions ask. I think they were > about $350. Very easy to install and setup. > > On 3/28/2016 8:59 PM, Josh Reynolds wrote: >> >> Suprema looks pretty good.. >> >> https://www.supremainc.com/en/AccessControl-TimeandAttendance/Platform/BioStar-2-Mobile >> >> On Mon, Mar 28, 2016 at 8:54 PM, Sterling Jacobson <sterl...@avative.net> >> wrote: >>> >>> Your pretty much back to the windows database solution at this point. >>> >>> You can do this with the cheap Chinese boards in aggregate with their >>> software. >>> >>> It’s not pretty, but it does what you want, multiple controllers, >>> software >>> with users and keys and time/scheduler etc. >>> >>> All for a few hundred bucks per four doors using standard keypads and >>> locks. >>> >>> >>> >>> Otherwise, let us know if you find anything cool! >>> >>> >>> >>> Would be nice to get a better turnkey solution that wasn’t based on 90’s >>> interface and DB paradigm. >>> >>> >>> >>> From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Josh Reynolds >>> Sent: Monday, March 28, 2016 7:51 PM >>> To: af@afmug.com >>> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] door access control >>> >>> >>> >>> My access solution needs to have different access per user / door / time >>> via >>> pin and keyfob, so can't really get something too simple due to various >>> needs, contractors, etc. :/ >>> >>> On Mar 28, 2016 8:47 PM, "Lewis Bergman" <lewis.berg...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> You will all laugh but I just put in a wink and schlage locks. Not >>> exactly >>> a real security system since there is no keypad you can arm or disarm. >>> You >>> can only do that through the app. One of my people doesn't have a new >>> enough >>> smartphone for the app. It allows you to use robots which are simple if >>> then >>> logic. >>> I know it isn't difficult enough for many of you but it is cheap, easy, >>> and >>> pretty. >>> A nice keypad would be a good pi project to round it out though. >>> >>> >>> >>> On Mon, Mar 28, 2016, 7:32 PM Josh Reynolds <j...@kyneticwifi.com> wrote: >>> >>> You have a door strike. The magnetic systems can be no or nc. If you >>> loopback 12v from the keypad back to the doorcontroller, you can often >>> trigger a fault state that releases power to the maglock. ;) >>> >>> On Mar 28, 2016 7:11 PM, "Sterling Jacobson" <sterl...@avative.net> >>> wrote: >>> >>> I’m pretty sure you could also just smash the glass and walk in too J >>> >>> >>> >>> But the door strike on mine does go back to the controller I believe, so >>> you >>> couldn’t just jimmy the keypad wiring. >>> >>> >>> >>> Not really a high security scenario since my idea was to theoretically be >>> able to pay $5 and enter (then walk out with anything you like I guess). >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Josh Reynolds >>> Sent: Monday, March 28, 2016 6:07 PM >>> To: af@afmug.com >>> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] door access control >>> >>> >>> >>> Also, pretty sure the one you have... If I remember right, I could rip >>> the >>> keypad off and touch brown to red to open the door based on the wiring >>> diagram. >>> >>> On Mar 28, 2016 7:03 PM, "Sterling Jacobson" <sterl...@avative.net> >>> wrote: >>> >>> I've had the same problem. >>> >>> The local alarm company wanted like $3-4k for a two door install, lol! >>> >>> Here is what I did so far: >>> >>> I bought a controller board off of eBay that does the standard protocol >>> used >>> by the strike. >>> I bought the strike off ebay too. >>> I bought a keypad controller off eBay. >>> The controller came with a small locking box, and has room for a battery >>> backup and can use PoE. >>> >>> The whole thing cost less than $500 I think. >>> >>> I used Ethernet to connect the box to my switch and to the strike and >>> keypad. >>> >>> The controller has a simple web interface you log on to and then >>> add/remove >>> door codes. >>> >>> I did have to interpret some Chinese manuals to figure out the pinouts >>> for >>> everything, but it works as expected. >>> >>> What I have left to do is map the private IP of the controller to a >>> public >>> IP and firewall it. >>> >>> And then I wanted to write a service/web api to it so I could use a up to >>> date 'normal' API access to add/remove door codes. >>> >>> Let me know if you want more details. >>> >>> -----Original Message----- >>> From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Josh Reynolds >>> Sent: Monday, March 28, 2016 4:53 PM >>> To: af@afmug.com >>> Subject: [AFMUG] door access control >>> >>> I'm dying here. Every single system I can find is shit or costs an arm >>> and a >>> leg, to the point where I'm considering starting a company to make a >>> better >>> system. I just need an embedded, web based, IP access control system. It >>> needs to be able to control the individual door access controllers to >>> electronic striker or maglock to the keypad. POE here is best. If it >>> requires software running on a windows PC then I don't want anything to >>> do >>> with it, even for those of you who are like "put it in a vm"... no. Those >>> resources are reserved for properly functioning operation systems (and >>> LXC >>> containers!). >>> >>> I've got 3 doors at one location, then 2 more doors at 2 other locations. >>> >>> If it has a mobile app, that's even better. >>> >>> I've installed a couple of HID Global and DoorKing systems in the past >>> and >>> nothing about this is hard, but the chinese systems are only made for a >>> single location. >>> >>> Any suggestions? > >