Honeywell Rapid EyeTM Hybrid HD Digital Video Recorder Guide Specifications in CSI Format

www.honeywellvideo.com 800-09836 Rev A

SECTION 282319

Digital Video Recording and Transmission System, Rapid Eye Hybrid HD

PART 1 GENERAL

1.1 SECTION INCLUDES

A. Provide a complete Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission System, including design, supply, installation, and commissioning.

1.2 RELATED SECTIONS

NOTE TO SPECIFIER: Include related sections as appropriate if digital video recording and transmission system is integrated to other systems.

A. Section 260500 – Common Work Results for Electrical, for interface and coordination with building electrical systems and distribution.

B. Section 280513 – Conductors and Cables for Electronic Safety and Security, for cabling between system recorders, panels and remote devices.

C. Section 280528 – Pathways for Electronic Safety and Security, for conduit and raceway requirements.

D. Section 281300 – Security Management System, for interface and coordination with electronic access control systems.

E. Section 282300 – Video Surveillance Equipment, for interface with, and administration of video recording devices and equipment.

1.3 REFERENCES

A. Reference Standards: Provide systems which meet or exceed the requirements of the following publications and organizations as applicable to the work of this Section:

1. Canadian ICES-003

2. Canadian Standards Association (CSA)

3. Conformity for Europe (CE)

4. Consultative Committee for International Radio (CCIR)

5. Electronic Industry Association (EIA)

6. Electrical Testing Laboratories (ETL)

7. Federal Communications Commission (FCC)

8. Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG)

9. Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG)

10. National Television Systems Committee (NTSC)

11. Phase Alternating by Line (PAL)

12. Underwriters Laboratories Inc. (UL)

1.4 SYSTEM DESCRIPTION

A. The Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission System shall provide powerful, intelligent, enterprise-class, digital storage management that combines Video, Motion Video, Audio, and Data capabilities in a single DVR. User and security management shall be available either from a centralized control (for one DVR or many DVRs) or from a standalone DVR, or in combination.

B. Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission System available in a minimum of seventeen (17) different configurations, allowing the user to select the right DVR for every application.

1.5 SUBMITTALS

A. General: Submittals shall be made in accordance with the Conditions of the Contract and Submittal Procedures Section.

B. Manufacturer’s Product Data: Submit manufacturer’s data sheets indicating systems and components proposed for use, including instruction manuals.

C. Shop Drawings and Schematics: Submit complete shop drawings including connection diagrams for interfacing equipment, list of connected equipment, and locations for major equipment components.

D. Record Drawings: During construction maintain record drawings indicating location of equipment and wiring. Submit an electronic version of record drawings not later than Substantial Completion of the project.

E. Operation and Maintenance Data: Submit manufacturer’s operation and maintenance data, customized to the system installed. Include system and operator manuals.

F. Field Tests: Submit results of field testing of every device including date, testing personnel, retesting date (if applicable), and confirmation that every device passed field testing.

G. Maintenance Service Agreement: Submit a sample copy of the manufacturer’s maintenance service agreement, including cost and services for a one (1) year period for Owner’s review. Maintenance shall include, but not be limited to, labor and materials to repair the system, tests and adjustments, and regular inspections.

1.6 QUALITY ASSURANCE

A. Manufacturer: Minimum ten (10) years experience in manufacturing and maintaining Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission Systems. Manufacturer shall provide toll-free technical assistance and support, available 24/7.

B. Manufacturing Location: Provide equipment assembled in the United States.

C. Installer: Minimum two (2) years experience installing similar systems, and acceptable to the manufacturer of the system.

D. Environmental Conditions: Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission Systems shall be designed to function in the following environmental conditions:

1. Operating Temperature: 40°F to 105°F (5°C to 40°C) non-condensing.

2. Emissions: FCC: Part 15, Class B; CE: EN 61000-6-3:2007; CE: EN 61000-3-2:2006.

3. Immunity: CE: EN 50130-4:1995 + A1:1998.

4. Safety: ETL Listed to UL 60950-1 / CSA; C22.2 No. 60950-1; CB report: IEC 60950-1:2005.

E. Power Requirements: Components shall have the following electrical specifications:

1. Input Voltage: 100-240 V AC (60 Hz/50 Hz).

2. Operating Voltage: 120V/240V Auto-sensing.

3. Power Consumption: 350 W (maximum).

1.7 DELIVERY, STORAGE, AND HANDLING

A. Deliver materials in manufacturer’s labeled packages. Store and handle in accordance with manufacturer’s requirements, in a facility with environmental conditions within recommended limits.

1.8 WARRANTY

A. Manufacturer’s Warranty: Submit manufacturer’s warranty of thirty-six (36) months from the manufacture date code under normal use and service for the Digital Video Recorder (DVR). Submit manufacturer’s warranty of thirty-six (36) months from date of manufacture for hard drives.

PART 2 PRODUCTS

2.1 MANUFACTURER

A. Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission System Manufacturer: Honeywell Rapid Eye™ Hybrid HD Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission System, www.honeywellvideo.com or www.honeywellintegrated.com.

2.2 SYSTEM COMPONENTS

A. The Digital Video Recorder (DVR), that includes the hard drive(s) and connections to video surveillance devices in the system.

B. A mouse-driven, local user interface (“LocalView”), which only requires a mouse and VGA or DVI monitor to operate and configure the DVR.

C. A workstation/server-based administration tool (“ADMIN”) capable of enterprise-wide site and user management.

D. A feature-rich, workstation-based remote operator program (“VIEW”), used to retrieve and analyze video from a DVR, configure DVR options and perform remote user operations for up to sixty-four (64) DVRs and up to 1024 video streams simultaneously.

2.3 OPERATIONAL REQUIREMENTS

A. The Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission System shall provide a powerful, intelligent, enterprise-class, digital storage tool that combines Video, Motion Video, Audio, and Data capabilities in a single DVR. This system must be designed to record, search, and transmit sixteen (16) channels of Video and/or Motion Video, two (2) channels of bi-directional Audio and up to sixteen (16) Data streams; both live and post-event.

B. The Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission System and its components shall be thoroughly tested before shipping from the manufacturer’s facility.

C. The Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission System’s default priority shall be to capture and store video, motion video, audio, data and alarms. The system must be configurable to prioritize live viewing and retrieval of video, if required.

D. The Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission System shall use a Linux real-time operating system to provide a secure, stable, multi-tasking environment for the DVR and its application software.

E. The Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission System shall include two (2) USB connections on the front panel and four (4) USB connections on the rear panel of the unit for secure clip backup and distribution.

F. The Digital Video Recording (DVR) and Transmission System shall have following major capabilities:

1. Live viewing of up to sixteen (16) IP and/or analog cameras on a single workstation with a VGA or DVI monitor connected. Individual live video streams must be capable of adjusting the resolution and quality rates, independent of recording settings, for a flexible live monitoring workstation.

2. Capturing and converting analog video sources at real-time rates and CIF, 2CIF, and 4CIF resolutions into digital data suitable for storing on hard drives and/or remotely transmitting.

3. Capturing and converting IP video sources from MPEG4 and H.264 video streams into digital data suitable for storing on hard drives and/or remotely transmitting. Maximum recording and viewing resolution for IP cameras is 1280x720 (HD).

4. Secure storage and retrieval of recorded video for post-event analysis.

5. Compatible with most existing and new video equipment and incorporate into any TCP/IP or dialup network. Communication options must include LAN, WAN, Internet, and PSTN, all utilizing the system’s standard equipment (no additional hardware required). Compatibility with ISDN and DSL must be supported using additional hardware.

6. Retrieval of system files and remote software upgrades utilizing any of the communication options.

7. Multiple simultaneous connections utilizing different network and/or communication types.

8. Using an authenticated, proprietary file format (REM) to ensure the integrity of the evidence.

9. User-defined data rates, size, frequency, and thresholds ensure that images and system messages are delivered as quickly as possible within the capabilities of the network’s available bandwidth.

10. Customizing the traditional time-lapse and boosted recording settings to provide the maximum flexibility for extending the video archive while adding the capability to automatically accelerate video recording settings based on predetermined rules. This mission critical video is captured and stored at higher levels than the time-lapse video archive.

NOTE TO SPECIFIER: DVR systems come with either 500 GB or one (1) TB for standard storage capacity. One (1) TB units are specified in this document. Specify the storage availability that suits the requirements. Active Alert units (units with Video Analytics included) can only be expanded to a three (3) TB maximum storage capacity, due to the extra storage requirements of the analytics software.

11. Long term digital storage for recorded video, motion video, audio and data. The DVR must be available in a one (1.0) TB standard storage offering. The DVR storage capacity must be expandable up to four (4.0) TB with the installation of additional hard drives.

12. Estimating the typical number of days the DVR will record, based on the DVR hard drive capacity, desired update rate (IPS), and the number and type of cameras being recorded with the Storage Estimator software.

13. Minimum system update rate of 480 or 120 images per second (NTSC at CIF) or 400 or 100 images per second (PAL at CIF) for video recording, and is capable of simultaneous live transmission.

14. An optional DVD-RW drive and/or USB port available for distributing evidence clips that can include video, motion video, audio, and data.

15. All physical connections made directly to the DVR, without the need for additional hardware (IP cameras connected to the local network are an exception).

16. Sixteen (16) BNC composite video inputs, each with a corresponding BNC looping video output. The video input BNCs must be auto-terminating.

NOTE TO SPECIFIER: IP camera support on DVRs is limited to four (4) IP channels with Local monitoring enabled, but can be expanded to sixteen (16) IP channels with Local monitoring disabled. Specify the IP channels available on a local monitoring enabled/disabled basis.

17. Up to sixteen (16) channels of IP video inputs, with Local monitoring disabled (4 channels of IP video inputs with Local monitoring enabled).

18. One (1) BNC composite monitor output for spot monitoring functionality.

19. Eight (8) individually user-configurable serial ports (RS232/RS422/RS485). Used for wiring PTZ control directly to the DVR, expanding data capture capabilities (POS or ATM) for up to sixteen (16) streams, and allowing the use of a SMARTPIT device.

20. One (1) 10/100 Base T Fast Ethernet internal Network Interface Card (NIC) must be included in the DVR, with the standard RJ45 supporting CAT5 cable provided as standard equipment.

21. Alarm Inputs and Outputs have TTL and 12 V rating, making them compatible with traditional physical Alarm devices.

22. Connecting to a designated PC (“Alarm Station”), using either a telephone connection or network connection, when an alarm is triggered by a user-defined event.

G. LocalView interface shall provide the following operator functions:

1. Capability of configuring and operating the system without the need for a separate computer.

2. Displaying real-time live video of a single camera or any valid grid combination of all connected cameras. LocalView can be used for interactive monitoring, as needed, or for continuous public view monitoring.

3. Vector driven control of PTZ cameras with a connected mouse.

4. Capability of enabling accelerated recording rates for five (5) minutes (default) with a single-click Boost button.

5. Customizing the traditional time-lapse and boosted recording settings to provide the maximum flexibility for extending the video archive while adding the capability to automatically accelerate video recording settings based on predetermined rules. This mission critical video is captured and stored at higher levels than the time-lapse video archive.

6. Password protected PTZ control to prevent control of PTZ cameras by unauthorized LocalView users.

H. Admin Workstation shall provide the following operator functions:

1. Site Management (DVRs and locations) to group sites by location, DVR type, and so on. Site management options facilitates the management of large central databases.

2. Setting up LAN/WAN Network and/or TCP/IP Dial-up communications for all the sites in the system. DVRs must provide an option for TCP/IP port forwarding (multiple units sharing the same IP address).

3. User Management (Users and Roles), to add/edit/delete roles and to associate predefined privileges with the roles, and then add/edit/delete users and associate users with specific roles.

4. Sites, or sub-sites, newly added to the site list will automatically be added to user site list privileges and/or Alarm Stations site lists, if desired.

5. Alarm Station Management, to add/edit/delete Alarm Station(s), central stations for processing alarms from multiple DVRs, and to setup an Alarm Station’s network connections.

6. Default streams selection for live Alarm sessions, allowing user selection of the streams the DVR will transmit by default during a live Alarm session.

7. Automated Tour Setup (Tours of multiple DVRs), to add/edit/delete tours of multiple sites in the system. The duration that the tour spends at each site must be individually editable.

I. View Workstation shall provide the following operator functions:

1. Configuration (Maintenance sessions). An operator (with Administrator privileges) shall have the option to configure DVRs remotely. The following configurations shall be possible:

a. Recording Configuration, to optimize the system’s boosted and event recording capabilities (resolution, frame rate and quality), providing maximum flexibility for Response recording rules. DVRs must be able to automatically increase the recording settings upon initiation of a Response rule or Boosted recording event.

b. Continuous Recording Configuration, to specify the settings (resolution, frame rate and quality) for the traditional time-lapse recording mode, extending the video archive when the system is not using boosted or response recording settings.

c. Event driven Response recording, featuring sixty-four (64) user-definable Response rules to provide total adaptability in programming a comprehensive event-driven digital recording solution. Multiple recording Triggers can be combined with multiple responses, with the option of adding schedules for very flexible Response Rule options.

d. Remotely programming IP and/or analog PTZ domes from within a Maintenance session, without the need for an external dome controller. Includes advanced configuration and programming of PTZ domes with Honeywell’s Maxpro protocols, seven (7) other industry leading protocols, or fifty (50) other PTZ protocols using Bossware.