Installation Guide

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VisionPass - 2019_2000045728
4.6 > Wiegand output
The following figure shows how to cable the wires of the serial port of the terminal for the Wiegand protocol
24 Green WIEGAND _OUT0 Out Wiegand OUT D0 (5V TTL)
26 White WIEGAND _OUT1 Out Wiegand OUT D1 (5V TTL)
25 Blue WIEGAND_LEDOUT1 In
Wiegand LED IN 1 (option): panel
feedback
(Output type required: Open drain or
5V+/-5%)
28 Blue / Red WIEGAND_LEDOUT2 In
Wiegand LED IN 2 (option): panel
feedback
(Output type required: Open drain or
5V+/-5%)
27 Black / Red WIEGAND_GND Ground for Wiegand
Figure 23: Wiegand output wiring
The use of LED1 and LED2 wires is described in the paragraphs below.
The controller supports neither LED1 nor LED2 signals
When the access controller has no relay contact to provide an answer to the VisionPass terminal, then the
decision to emit either the “access granted” signal or the “access denied” signal is taken by another way.
It is either the VisionPass terminal itself that decide, or it waits for the access controller answer through
the local area network (TCP), or on the serial port in (RS485 or RS422).
It is strongly recommended to disable the LED IN feature, to avoid any interference on VisionPass terminal
behavior.
The controller supports only LED1 signal
When the access controller has only one relay contact which is dedicated to the “access granted” answer,
this one must be connected between the LED1 and GND wires. The LED1 wire is set to the low level by
closing the contact between the LED1 and the GND wires, and it means “access granted”.
The VisionPass terminal uses the timeout of the wait for a low level on the on LED1 wire or LED2 wire as
“access denied” answer.
To minimize at most the waiting time of the user, the VisionPass terminal timeout value, must be adjusted
to a value a little bit higher than the maximal value of the controller response time.
Warning: if the LED2 wire is connected, it must be constantly maintained in the high state.