Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
So now that we've installed everything and we have our key pad,
our 6160 V addressed, the last thing we're going to do is install our
nice Tuxedo Touch, graphic touch screen key pad right here by the front
door. And now, everyone that comes can see this beautiful graphic touch
screen key pad and the home owner's going to have access to his home automation
to turns lights, locks, and thermostats on and off right from this
console here. So we've got our old destiny keypad right here, we've already
removed it. We've got our wires, just like our 6160 V. And we're going
to remove our back plate here. I've already started on the screws.
So we remove these four, back plate comes down. Feed it through these wires
and, same as before, we've got our nice hole that's going to match up
nicely with our Honeywell Tuxedo Touch key pad, we're going to mount it in
this manner so it hides the old hole. Make sure it's level and everything.
First thing we're going to do is cut these wires off. So we've removed the
old key pad and we can now mark our holes. If my assistant would be so
kind... Oh, actually I have my pen. I don't need my assistant right now.
We're going to feed the wires through this hole here and have the back
plate on the wall. If my assistant can grab my level and make sure that we
have this aligned properly, keep it nice and clean.
I've got a nice level there. We're going to mark two holes on top and we're
going to mark one hole on the bottom. That bottom hole, just like from
before, that bottom hole is a little close to the edge of the dry wall, so
we'll drill just below that so that we don't break through this dry wall
and waste our good wall there. So we've got our drill bit. We've got screws
and wall anchors to mount and we're just going to drill our holes here. So
like I said, right below our holes is where we're going to go. Make sure
its big enough to hammer in our wall anchors. Can you get the hammer? And
then we're going to go right below our holes up here, making sure not to
drill into our wire. Matching hole. And now, fit in our three wall anchors.
Thank you. That hole's a little too small. Make it a little bigger. Got my
two. Now they fit in nicely.
And finally, feed our wires through our hole and screw in our screws to fix
the back plate to the wall. Again, you don't want to tighten the first one
all the way, but get it in most of the way. That way you can make any minor
adjustments at the end. Do one more at the top. And then we've got our
bottom hole. They're some play up and down, so we want to make sure we have
room for our bottom. Oops, dropped the screw. This one I'm going to screw
in all the way and make sure its level. Oops, dropped our level. Perfect.
I'm going to screw it in all the way now. And our last screw. And our back
plate is nice and secure.
Now we've got to connect our wires, so we've got our same sheet from before
that's showing us which wires are connected where on the panel. Again we
had six from the old destiny, because the destiny had a built-in speaker,
which the Tuxedo does not or rather the Tuxedo doesn't need two wires for
the built in speaker, it does have a speaker. So, the two that we do not
need. We need blue, green, green and white, and yellow. So these two, blue
and white and yellow and white we're going to snip off.
Now again, you don't normally want to leave bare wires here, but I know
that they're not connected to anything at the panel and they're snipped
down at the panel, so I'm just going to wrap them around the core there and
we'll be okay. We want to strip the ends here. So this is our green. It's
going to go for our aux power. We've got our blue, which is our negative
power. Strip that, and then we've got yellow and green and white for our
data in and data out going back to the key pad bus on the panel so strip
these and we've got our four connections here on the Tuxedo on the back
you've got your Ethernet port.
This is the Tuxedo Touch Wi-Fi, so we're not going to actually connect hard
line Ethernet cable. We're going to use our wireless network in the house
to connect the web server of the Tuxedo to the network, but we do need to
connect our power and our data wires. And just like on our 6160 V,
Honeywell was kind enough to label nice and clear G for green, negative for
our negative auxiliary power, positive or plus sign for our positive power,
and yellow or Y for yellow.
So, matching up with our list, blue is going to ground so our blue is
connected to this red and we're going to go to our negative terminal, fit
in the wire, screw it down nice and tight, so it's not going to go
anywhere, fits in nice. We've got blue... No, we just did that. Okay, we
have green connected to purple, that's our positive power so that's going
to the positive terminal. Screw it down. Key pad has power now. So finally,
we need green and white, which is connected to this purple cable for our G
terminal, G for green. Going to our data on our key pad bus and then
finally our yellow which is connected to this white wire is going to go to
our remaining Y for yellow terminal.
Try to keep it simple there, yellow for yellow, since we didn't have the
normal colors. The key pad is now connected, you can feed the slack of the
wire here, along with the beanie connectors, back into the wall. And there
are four mounts on the back plate. Slide it in. Slide it down. And we've
got a nice, tight installation. And it is level. So we did a good job.
We've installed our Tuxedo Touch Wi-Fi. We can go and power the panel up
and this should come online. So I will be right back after powering the
panel.