Products

 


Learn More:


“What Asentria offered us was the ability to keep the infrastructure we already had in place for our customer. All we had to do was slot it in the right place and we were able to monitor the entire network within a matter of minutes.”
Martin Cooper, president of Transcom


SiteBoss 412 Cost-Effective Remote Monitoring Unit




 General Configuration Features

  • 10Base-T Ethernet Interface - The SiteBoss 412 provides a 10Base-T Ethernet interface which supports TCP/IP, SNMP, and FTP.

  • One Serial Port - The SiteBoss 412 has a single serial port which can be used for direct serial configuration of the SiteBoss 412 and/or as a pass-through port to provide a communication channel to another serial device at your remote site. 

  • Supports up to 8 On-Board I/O Channels - The SiteBoss 412 offers up to 8 on-board I/O channels. These channels can provide 6 contact closure inputs, plus your choice of either 2 analog inputs, 2 relay outputs, or 1 analog input and 1 relay output. The analog inputs which measure 0-5vdc. These options allow you to directly monitor and control environmental and equipment alarms and conditions within your remote equipment room.  The SiteBoss 412 can detect discrete contact alarms from devices such as backup power systems, air conditioners, door sensors and status outputs from countless non-networked devices. Analog sensors can measure voltages and battery outputs, and relays can control small devices or indicate alarms to other management systems.  Asentria also offers a line of mechanical sensor accessories, including Temperature, Humidity, Water, Smoke Alarms, and Door Sensors.

  • On-Board Temperature Sensor - The SiteBoss 412 provides an internal temperature sensor which can be read via SNMP, and/or can be setup to alarm when the temperature moves into the very high, high, normal, low, and very low ranges that you assign.

  • On-Board Humidity Sensor - The SiteBoss 412 provides an internal humidity sensor (optional) which can be read via SNMP and/or which can be setup to alarm when the humidity moves into the very high, high, normal, low, and very low ranges that you assign.

  • Supports up to 2 External EventSensor™ ModulesThe SiteBoss 412 can be with an optional EventSensor Port on its back panel that allows you to connect up to 2 external EventSensor Modules. The modules provide additional capabilities to sense temperature, humidity, contact closures and analog inputs, and can also switch relay outputs. You connect EventSensors to the SiteBoss 412 via standard CAT5 cable that may extend hundreds of feet away from the SiteBoss 412 base unit. The SiteBoss 412 powers the EventSensors over the same cable. However, you may also choose to power the EventSensors individually.

  • Power Requirements and OptionsThe standard SiteBoss 412 comes with a standard US-compatible wall transformer that supplies input power for the SiteBoss 412. Wall transformers for other countries are available for an additional charge.

 Remote Access & Management Features

  • Remote Console Port AccessThe SiteBoss 412 provides transparent pass-through access to devices connected to its serial I/O port. You can utilize this feature to manage remote PBXs, voicemail, routers, and other devices with RS-232 admin ports.

  • Alarm Notification OptionsThe SiteBoss 412 transmits its alarms via SNMP Trap, which is the most common form of alarm notification when integrating with a network management system.   To receive SNMP Traps, you may utilize your existing SNMP software or Asentria AlarmManager software, which is available free. 

  • Easy Custom Modifications Do you have an application with some customized requirements? There may be a special capability that you do not see listed in the SiteBoss 412 feature set? If so, call us to discuss your application.

  • Free Alarm SoftwareIn addition to any other alarm notification methods you use, you can use Asentria AlarmManager software to send SNMP traps directly to your desktop. AlarmManager is minimized to the Systray of your Windows screen and pops up when a new alarm arrives. The alarm messages are displayed along with their site names, and are logged under individual folders according to their Site Names.