ajchien
Well-known member
Homeowner here. It was past the 10 year mark for our old CO monitor in the house. (Stuff deleted to remove confusion)
Found out the old CO monitor is an Edwards Signaling 250-CO (by interlogix). The “replacement” is a 260-CO.
I’ve posted below the wiring diagram and pictures of the OLD wiring configuration. Note a resistor between the green and yellow wires.
When I connect the NEW 260-CO, it constantly flashes RED alarm while setting off the beeps unless I silence it. If I remove the resistor between the green and yellow wires, the LED pulses green intermittently - “working normally”.
I don’t understand the wiring diagram. Am I supposed to have this resistor in there? It looks like it should have the resistor for the end-of-Line device And this is a single unit installation ... but that the alarm constantly sounds with the resistor in there. (Looks to be a 3300ohm resistor by the colors). Tech support not open till tomorrow.
Again, Pics below are how it used to be wired. If I copy that, the alarm doesn’t stop sounding. Taking out the resistor puts it into a “normal mode”.
Found out the old CO monitor is an Edwards Signaling 250-CO (by interlogix). The “replacement” is a 260-CO.
I’ve posted below the wiring diagram and pictures of the OLD wiring configuration. Note a resistor between the green and yellow wires.
When I connect the NEW 260-CO, it constantly flashes RED alarm while setting off the beeps unless I silence it. If I remove the resistor between the green and yellow wires, the LED pulses green intermittently - “working normally”.
I don’t understand the wiring diagram. Am I supposed to have this resistor in there? It looks like it should have the resistor for the end-of-Line device And this is a single unit installation ... but that the alarm constantly sounds with the resistor in there. (Looks to be a 3300ohm resistor by the colors). Tech support not open till tomorrow.
Again, Pics below are how it used to be wired. If I copy that, the alarm doesn’t stop sounding. Taking out the resistor puts it into a “normal mode”.
Attachments
Last edited: