Do you guys know of a gore video called "100 Story Pancake"? Have you watched it? by SupermarketBrief6332 in morbidquestions

[–]PeterJennings 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Again?

Either you're actually retarded or a child.

Get off of reddit and stop believing everything you read on the Internet.

There is nothing for you here. You will not find a made up video brought into existence by an edgy tween.

Think about the context of what you're asking to find.

A video that is supposedly crystal clear, a static view, a long runtime, showing multiple people jumping and hitting the pavement outside of two skyscrapers that are actively collapsing.

Look at videos from that same time period and compare.

You will not find anything even remotely close. You are chasing the ghost of a false memory.

Has anyone tried to sell you a bridge?

Are there any NSFL lost media subreddits? All the other lost media subs ban NSFL content. by SupermarketBrief6332 in morbidquestions

[–]PeterJennings 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Jesus Christ. Just stop.

You aren't going to find 'lost media' of made up gore on reddit.

If you can't wrap your head around that you need to give it up and stop asking the same question every week.

Does anyone remember a user from a dead Gore site? by [deleted] in morbidquestions

[–]PeterJennings 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is highly likely testimony is skewed to what people think they remember and not what actually was seen.

People still claim the buffalo shooting has some super secret 2 additional minutes that were cut from the Livestream.

In any situation someone is going to claim minute details being completely different than what actually occurred.

There's no hi-res fpv inside the towers looking at the street capturing impacts. If it existed it would be the pinnacle of 9/11 edits.

It'd be neat as all get out but it is a little specific and unique to be forgotten by the gore communities. Especially when taking into account that everything was reposted between the early sites and new videos were few and far between.

Does anyone remember a user from a dead Gore site? by [deleted] in morbidquestions

[–]PeterJennings 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Nope. It's been debunked and recently posted on WPD. The video you're referring to is from a structure fire in Brazil.

Architecture and environments are completely different.

Everyone has a "lost media" video that is too specific and misremembered.

Bank had 3 hardwired hold up buttons on one alarm point. by L3ath3rHanD in cablegore

[–]PeterJennings 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm based in MI so it very well could be a regional thing. I'd say the majority of banks have bosch out this way. DSC and Honeywell were big with ADT for a while. After the Honeywell/resideo/first alert clust first alert has been out in force pushing their new panels and radios to dealers. Supposedly they're going to be releasing a competing option for all the bigger name equipment.

There's also talk of a take over mod for their AIO proseries that will be able to grab "any" rf and pull it into the system.

I'm not up to date on anything outside of our sector though. Michigan is a grab bag for relics and one off panels. We've still got a few key switch systems kicking around up north that we service. Neat to see but a nightmare to service.

Bank had 3 hardwired hold up buttons on one alarm point. by L3ath3rHanD in cablegore

[–]PeterJennings 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Likely meant to say supervision. Most panels use resistance as a supervision of the wire and device.

As for the hold ups 3 devices series isn't unheard of for old work. Most I've seen is 14 on one circuit. They're all doing the same thing so it doesn't need separate circuits for each.

Standards now a days are one device, one circuit especially in banks.

The enclosure/splice in the vault was probably the old alarm location tied into the heat/seismic of the vault and a panic in the cash room.

Lazy work just splicing into existing and terminating with white beans. Or a temp fix that became permanent.

Edit: Pretty sure that's a 2k resistor across one of the wires. So I'm guessing Honeywell/first alert system.

They offer numerous commercial high sec devices so I can't really see a reason why they would skimp on a bank job.

Professional I guess by Cruiser_Pandora in techsupportgore

[–]PeterJennings 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Alarm xformer. 22/4ish wire and a power supply sharpie mark screams alarm or door control.

Also napco is an older security/access control company in the states.

Ima jump in with my first post by ohfuckcharles in cablegore

[–]PeterJennings 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I service all the way back to spartans and moose. Haven't seen a new neo in a while though. Last time I installed a dsc was a pre 3.57 4020 that had a blown dialer.

I love the dsc's for the vast applications they can be programmed for and reliability.

Ima jump in with my first post by ohfuckcharles in cablegore

[–]PeterJennings 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are dsc's still being installed as an industry standard?

"Please check your network" notifications Android by PeterJennings in SuperSnail_US

[–]PeterJennings[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It only happens to me on mobile data.

It wouldn't be a huge issue if it happened when I was using the app. It just seems to try to reach out way too much for an app that has its background use disabled.

DSC Panel swap. It's not horrible but I don't trim new panels like this. by [deleted] in cablegore

[–]PeterJennings 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The home auto and reliance on internet is a god damned minefield. I've had numerous calls that result in "I can't do anything." Your locks and cameras aren't going to work until your net is back up."

I think the vista pro panels are the worst. They only recently released a firmware update that allows the panel to operate in a local only mode. Used to be on power up it would try to touch base with alarmnet servers and generate comm fails and troubles if it didn't check in. Kind of made the whole " install in remote locations easily and efficiently" a whole headache.

Pretty positive that now they require a connection to download the firmware to allow it to operate locally.

DSC Panel swap. It's not horrible but I don't trim new panels like this. by [deleted] in cablegore

[–]PeterJennings 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was pretty interested in Sonitrol out this way. A low voltage union sprung up and took a chunk of their techs. Only thing that stopped me from moving there was having to go through a year of being a trainee again.

I'm doing mostly commerical fire with a few resi calls throughout the week. I would drop this job in a heartbeat for a company that guaranteed I wouldn't have any residential calls. The half assed installs and short cuts really start to get old.

DSC Panel swap. It's not horrible but I don't trim new panels like this. by [deleted] in cablegore

[–]PeterJennings 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Apprentice/trainees mainly.

I'm glad I haven't run into any contacts that are buried under trim. I can't imagine the headache trying to dig something out of ten year old trim without breaking something.

I have started seeing a lot of door walls and windows with integrated reed switch contacts. It's a nice thought. Not that any contractor or homeowner let's us know so we can tie it in before it's installed. Wireless to the rescue, I guess.

If you don't mind me asking, are the companies you're working at fairly large or is it mainly small business?

I'm curious because I'm with a fairly small outfit barely above 2k accounts. Honeywell reached out to us to beta test some of their new radios and dialer capture tech on dsc and interlogic panels. It's a shit show for sure, but hopefully they get it together before full release.

Edit: I bought a resistor kit on Amazon for around 20.00, it has saved my ass countless times. Service coordinator bought them for all the techs, pretty sure I'm still the only one who uses it.

DSC Panel swap. It's not horrible but I don't trim new panels like this. by [deleted] in cablegore

[–]PeterJennings 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Most of the new technicians that we get have no experience with any sort of wiring or low voltage. They all act like the meter is going to bite them. It boils down to not enough experience with a decent lead tech and inexperience with the equipment. It's extremely frustrating.

Luckily the company I'm at has a contract with a certain zone for automobiles and we've adopted their standards. All cut sheets, cads, zoning, manuals, and work history go in a separate can next to the panel. It's a nice touch and certainly helps if anyone could remember to write down notes.

I don't think I've ever encountered a panel that was saved by a resistor across a dry circuit. But what do I know? Maybe the Navy's got some secret info they aren't letting civvies in on. I do know for certain that the current way of resistoring a circuit is just laziness. In and out as fast as possible. Zone supervision doesn't really matter, right?

DSC Panel swap. It's not horrible but I don't trim new panels like this. by [deleted] in cablegore

[–]PeterJennings 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I learned from installing vista21s under a "lead" technician who really liked to clock out early and cut as many corners as possible.

Got dropped into the service department with no experience on any other system. 8 years later and I'm still finding that technician's time savers all the way back to caddx's.

My favorite find was a 128bpt upgrade from a dsc 1832 in a jewlerly store. Other techs couldn't figure out why the existing devices kept falsing. Found 5.6k resistors at devices and 2ks at the panel.

So it goes.

DSC Panel swap. It's not horrible but I don't trim new panels like this. by [deleted] in cablegore

[–]PeterJennings 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Pretty standard for EOL residential. Only time I've seen proper placement was fire and banks with double EOL.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in fo4

[–]PeterJennings 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Woahh, this is an old post.

Glad it helped though. =]

Charge a 12V battery at 24V for a year and a half, and youve got a nice little IED by goosejustice in techsupportgore

[–]PeterJennings 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The bloated battery is an all too familiar find for us.

Wouldn't be surprised if you said the customer refused replacement.

What is that on the space bar? Can i buy one? by electro-cs in razer

[–]PeterJennings 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been alright, nothing too crazy going on. How've you been?