bk wrote: » The questions to ask with this sort of setup: - Do you own the equipment? - What happens after the 3 years are up? - After the 3 years, can you cancel the monitoring contract and monitor and maintain it yourself? Any costs for doing this? BTW it looks like the door/window contacts are contacts only and aren't shock sensors. I don't know much else about this company or any experience. Just general advice.
Grumpypants wrote: » I have it in, for about a year now. I got the full system that controls heating and hot water (it saved a fortune). Having the alarm also dropped the house insurance price by a nice chunk. I'd consider the full pack if you are doing it. I've found them good to deal with, customer service and tech support is great (in cork). Very quick to call if something is wrong. Our fire alarm went off and in under 10 seconds they had me on a call. Termostats are great money saver. You can set the alarm, heating, hot water from anywhere in the country. Can also set timers. It does work with Alexa but the commands are long. Alexa, ask alarm.com to turn up the heating.
Grumpypants wrote: » I think mine was €250 to install. Then €29 a month. We didn't have an alarm so house insurance dropped by over 200 right away. And I've spent about €1000 less on oil. That is a combo of better insulation, the thermostats and a mild winter. But i'm pretty confident I'm up a nice few hundred die to this system.
danois wrote: » Hi all. I am wondering if anyone has ever used the company smartzone.ie? I mailed them and asked for price and below is the quote I received. I am not very knowledgable in this area so before going ahead I wanted to check Here first. Boardsies have always steered me in the right direction in past. I’d love to know is this an ok deal and is the company a reliable one? Supply and install 1 x Smartzone Smart Home Hub 1 x Alarm Keypad at Front Door 2 x Door/Window Sensors Front and Back Door 3 x PIR Motion Sensors – Front, Back and Upstairs Landing 1 x External Dummy Bellbox €99 total Add 5 additional sensors as required at €40 each, total €200 On Sale January only - Video Doorbell €20.20 (RRP €270) Finally we charge a monthly fee on a 36 month contract of €29.99 and that includes PSA Certified Monitoring, Lifetime Warranty and Maintenance. We offer a 36 month warranty on external video cameras only. Thanks
Grumpypants wrote: » Then €29 a month.
We didn't have an alarm so house insurance dropped by over 200 right away.
And I've spent about €1000 less on oil. That is a combo of better insulation, the thermostats and a mild winter.
ted1 wrote: » Sounds like you are overpaying for your house insurance, most companies all give 5%
Grumpypants wrote: » I had a look again and the alarm discount was only 12.5%. The rest was a loyalty and extra year no claims discount. Still 12.5% is a nice chunk. Combined with the heating savings system still pays for itself.
Grumpypants wrote: » Never mentioned any of the other systems like Hive because the OP was asking specifically about smartzone and not general advice.
bk wrote: » With a bit of negotiation you can usually get the same discount, without actually having the alarm system on your insurance and thus non of the downsides and risks of listing it. That is what I did. Well the OP only asked about smartzone in terms of security systems, you are the one who expanded the conversation to include heating, etc. Only fair for others to point out that you can achieve the same results with other systems and without subscriptions for it.
Grumpypants wrote: » The T&Cs say if the house alarm isn't on and it gets broken into they double the excess. So it will cost €300. Tiny risk compared to leaving a house without a monitored burglar, fire and emergency alarm.
Grumpypants wrote: » There is no subscription for the heating. The sub is just for the monitored alarm.
*Smartzone Smart Heating Controls are subject to a monthly fee. Fee is €10 per month.
Shefwedfan wrote: » I dont understand why you would pay so much for Smart zone when you can buy the components yourself.....
Grumpypants wrote: » Looking at nest on screwfix a thermostat is around €200, the nest Alarm €360. Add in 2 smart plugs and you are in and around €600 and i still havent factored in installation you would be doing well to get it all installed for under €200, and that's without any monitoring. I'm sure other products can be got cheaper. But Smart zone was €250 for everything including installation. With 3 years monitoring is €1329. I saved over €1000 in the first year so it's paying for itself and I'm supporting an Irish company employing people in Ireland.
2011 wrote: » I can see your point to some extent. However I would much prefer an alarm by Siemens (with free self monitoring) or HKC (with self monitoring at around €5 per month). Both of these systems provide superior security thanks to inertia shock sensors. The lack of these on the system you are using I see as a considerable disadvantage. Why? Because someone could literally throw a brick through your window and not set the alarm off! I always insist on an alarm that activates before someone enters a home in all instances. I would recommend complementing this with something like Nest for heating control. All of these systems are extremely reliable, have an excellent track record and will cost less “to run” in terms of monthly charges although the upfront capital cost is more. Monitoring via a central station is also available for far less than what you are paying. Anyway I don’t want to get into a protracted argument about it, each to their own.
maxamillius wrote: » Do the Yale/Nest/ring not come with windows contacts? Or is my interpretation of window contact vs inertia sensor different?
Shefwedfan wrote: » The HKC will go off if the window is broken. Most of the system will just detect if the windows/door is open So a burglar could break glass and get in window without setting off alarm To combat this with the Yale/ring system you can put in motion detectors and of course the cameras which are far better deterant The flashing red light with Yale and Philip is the best option I have seen, if you are in an estate then it will warm the whole place
maxamillius wrote: » That makes sense re the motion detectors, didn’t think that. By flashing red light do you mean linking it to hue and having all the lights flash red?
Shefwedfan wrote: » All the alarms come with motion detectors so you can combat against this
2011 wrote: » Yes, contacts detect whether a window or door is open or closed. They do not detect vibrations or glass being smashed, inertia shock sensors do this. That is not correct. Motion detectors do not provide perimeter protection, they only activate when an intruder is already in the house. Furthermore when the system is set to part guard motion detectors have to be disarmed to allow occupants free movement within the home. The best type of alarm systems provide comprehensive perimeter protection (in addition to other features of course) that is backed up with motion detectors. That way intruders will activate the alarm before they gain entry rather than when they are already inside.
maxamillius wrote: » Ye it’s a fair point, I’d rather the alarm went off before someone was already in my house, strange that none of the smart alarms come with inertia sensors?!
2011 wrote: » Yes, contacts detect whether a window or door is open or closed. They do not detect vibrations or glass being smashed, inertia shock sensors do this. That is not correct. Motion detectors do not provide perimeter protection, they only activate when an intruder is already in the house. Furthermore when the system is set to part guard motion detectors have to be disarmed to allow occupants free movement within the home leaving inferior systems in a vulnerable state. The best type of alarm systems provide comprehensive perimeter protection with the use of inertia shock sensors (in addition to other features of course). These systems are backed up with motion detectors rather than having the motion detectors as the primary or only layer of protection. That way intruders will activate the alarm before they gain entry rather than when they are already inside.
Shefwedfan wrote: » It depends on your system.....
I am going to combine with motion exterior lights etc.
If a burglar breaks a window they have no concerns about noise so they won’t give a cr*p if your alarm is going off.....