We inherited an Honeywell Galaxy 2 Series alarm system (originally installed by Barlows) when we moved into our roughly 10 year old house and although there is no ongoing contract with the installer, the system does display an alert if there is ever an interruption to the landline.
We are currently with EE for broadband / landline (no phone plugged in, not generally used) and have been told the only way for them to reduce our bill is for their engineer to visit and move us to a broadband / VoIP account, i.e. no traditional landline. This will presumably upset the alarm system. I'm aware that many providers are going this way, but wondered if anyone had similar issues and what the cheapest and most straightforward solution might be!
The system does appear to be capable of dialling out as it was able to send us text alerts once we gave it a mobile number, e.g. low battery on a sensor. This was expensive and unreliable so we removed it (multiple “attempts” to send messages seemed to appear on our bill without always receiving anything). I’m not sure how it would react to being cut off altogether! I suppose it may be a one off alert that we can dismiss. Can anyone advise? There is a box accessible in the loft and it has been suggested we could open this and pull out the phone cable to test, but I don't want to be left in a situation I can't resolve without an engineer visiting.
I found an installation manual online, but from memory I think the engineer codes have been changed from the default (would need to double check).
We are currently with EE for broadband / landline (no phone plugged in, not generally used) and have been told the only way for them to reduce our bill is for their engineer to visit and move us to a broadband / VoIP account, i.e. no traditional landline. This will presumably upset the alarm system. I'm aware that many providers are going this way, but wondered if anyone had similar issues and what the cheapest and most straightforward solution might be!
The system does appear to be capable of dialling out as it was able to send us text alerts once we gave it a mobile number, e.g. low battery on a sensor. This was expensive and unreliable so we removed it (multiple “attempts” to send messages seemed to appear on our bill without always receiving anything). I’m not sure how it would react to being cut off altogether! I suppose it may be a one off alert that we can dismiss. Can anyone advise? There is a box accessible in the loft and it has been suggested we could open this and pull out the phone cable to test, but I don't want to be left in a situation I can't resolve without an engineer visiting.
I found an installation manual online, but from memory I think the engineer codes have been changed from the default (would need to double check).