Wireless Alarm Systems: Frequency Hopping, Battery Life Considerations, Jam Detection and Grade Limitations

Quick Answer: Modern wireless intruder alarm systems from approved manufacturers can achieve Grade 2 and Grade 3 compliance under BS EN 50131. They use encrypted frequency-hopping spread spectrum (FHSS) radio to prevent jamming and eavesdropping, bidirectional communication to detect signal loss, and tamper-monitored enclosures on every device. Battery life ranges from 2–5 years depending on polling frequency and environment. Key limitation: Grade 3 wireless requires certified panels, detectors, and communicators — mixing grades invalidates the system.

Summary

Wireless alarm systems were once regarded as the inferior choice — prone to RF interference, with short battery life, and unable to achieve the higher grades required for commercial premises or police URN applications. This is no longer the case. The leading wireless platforms in the UK market (Ajax, Pyronix Enforcer, Hikvision Ax Pro, Risco Agility, Texecom Ricochet) are now certified to Grade 2 and, in several cases, Grade 3 under BS EN 50131.

The appeal of wireless for the installer is speed of installation — no chasing walls, no conduit, no cable runs. This makes wireless ideal for retrofits in occupied buildings where disruption must be minimised, listed buildings where chasing would damage historic fabric, or commercial tenants who cannot alter the fabric of the building.

The appeal for the customer is the clean installation with no surface-run cabling. However, wireless systems impose ongoing maintenance obligations (battery replacement) and require radio survey work before installation to confirm signal quality throughout the premises.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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System/Platform Frequency Grade AES Encryption Jamming Detection Typical Battery Life
Ajax (Hub 2 Plus) 868 MHz FHSS Grade 2–3 AES-128 Yes 3–5 years (PIR)
Pyronix Enforcer 868 MHz FHSS Grade 2 Proprietary Yes 3–4 years
Hikvision Ax Pro 868 MHz FHSS Grade 2 AES-128 Yes 3–5 years
Risco Agility 4 868 MHz FHSS Grade 2 AES-128 Yes 3–5 years
Texecom Ricochet 868 MHz FHSS Grade 2 AES-128 Yes 2–4 years
Honeywell EvoHome (alarm) 868 MHz Grade 2 Yes Yes 2–4 years

Battery life is manufacturer-rated; actual life varies significantly with polling frequency, environment, and activation frequency.

Detailed Guidance

Radio Survey Before Installation

A pre-installation radio survey is not optional — it is the foundation of a reliable wireless installation. Walk the premises with a survey tool (most manufacturers provide a survey mode via the panel or a dedicated survey device) and map signal strength at each proposed device location.

Key things to check:

Signal quality changes with the environment — the survey is a snapshot. Document the survey results and include them in the commissioning record.

Jamming Detection: How It Works and Its Limitations

Jamming detection in modern wireless systems works on the principle of continuous supervision. Every device sends a heartbeat to the hub at the programmed interval (e.g., every 3 minutes). If the hub does not receive the heartbeat within the expected window, it raises a fault.

A broadband jammer transmitting on 868 MHz will prevent all heartbeats from reaching the hub simultaneously — the hub detects multiple device failures at once and can generate a specific "jamming" alert rather than treating each as a separate device fault.

Limitations:

For Grade 3 systems, the supervision interval and jamming detection response time must meet the BS EN 50131 requirements. This typically means shorter polling intervals (60–120 seconds) at the cost of battery life.

Battery Management in Practice

Battery management is the ongoing maintenance obligation of wireless systems that has no wired equivalent. Best practices:

At commissioning:

During maintenance:

Customer advice:

Battery types by environment:

Grade Compliance: What Wireless Can and Cannot Do

Grade 2 wireless: Readily achievable with modern systems from the platforms listed above. All devices must be BS EN 50131-2-x certified to Grade 2. The panel must be Grade 2 certified. The communication path to the ARC (if monitored) must meet ATS3 minimum.

Grade 3 wireless: Achievable but more demanding. Verify:

  1. Panel is independently certified to Grade 3 (check EN 50131-3 certificate, not just manufacturer claim)
  2. Every detector is Grade 3 certified (PIR, contact, shock — all must carry individual Grade 3 marks)
  3. Keypad/control device is Grade 3 certified
  4. Supervision interval meets Grade 3 requirements (typically 60–120 seconds max)
  5. Jamming detection generates an alarm (not just a fault) reported to the ARC
  6. ARC communication meets ATS4 (dual-path) for Grade 3 police URN

Grade 4 wireless: Not currently achievable with off-the-shelf wireless platforms; Grade 4 requires wired systems.

Common pitfall: A panel certified to Grade 3 does not automatically make the whole system Grade 3 if the detectors are only Grade 2. The lowest-certified component determines the system grade.

Wireless vs Wired: Decision Framework

Factor Wired Wireless
Installation disruption High (chasing, conduit) Low (surface mount devices)
Listed buildings May not be permitted (consent required for chasing) Preferred (no fabric damage)
Ongoing maintenance Minimal (no batteries) Battery management required
Grade 4 capability Yes No
Long-term reliability Very high (no battery dependency) High (with maintenance)
Cost (installation) Higher (labour intensive) Lower
Cost (lifetime) Lower (no battery cost) Higher (battery replacement every 3–5 years)
New build / renovation Wired preferred (cables in structure) Less advantage

Frequently Asked Questions

Can wireless systems achieve police URN?

Yes, for Grade 2 URN applications and in some forces for Grade 3. The system must be installed by an NSI or SSAIB approved company, monitored by an NPCC-approved ARC using a confirmed alarm protocol, and the wireless system must be certified to the required grade. Some police forces have historically been sceptical of wireless systems, but this has largely changed as Grade 2/3 certified wireless systems have become mainstream.

How do I test for RF interference before installation?

Use the panel's survey mode or a dedicated RF survey tool. Scan for interference in the 868 MHz band across the premises. Look for consistent interference sources — fixed interference (from equipment) is more concerning than transient interference. Note nearby devices: some building management systems, DECT phone systems, and older wireless systems use adjacent frequencies. If persistent interference is found, switch to a different channel (most systems support multiple 868 MHz sub-channels) or consider a wired installation.

Can a wireless system be added to an existing wired system?

Yes. Most modern panels support hybrid installations where some zones are wired and others are wireless. This is common when extending an existing wired system into a new area where running cables is impractical. Ensure the wireless receiver module is compatible with the panel, and verify that adding wireless zones does not downgrade the system's overall grade.

Are wireless systems suitable for larger commercial premises?

Yes, with careful design. Large premises require signal repeaters to ensure coverage, and multiple devices may compete for the same radio frequency channel. High-end systems (Ajax Hub 2 Plus, Risco Agility 4) handle many devices per hub (250+ on some platforms). For very large sites (> 50 devices per building section), consider multiple hubs linked to a central management platform. Always survey the site first — wireless on a large complex site without proper survey can result in unreliable coverage.

Do wireless systems need planning permission?

No planning permission is required for standard wireless alarm equipment. External sounders do require compliance with local authority rules (some councils restrict sounder activation duration and decibel level). A wireless system generates no visual impact beyond the sounder box and possibly keypad — this is an advantage in conservation areas and listed buildings.

Regulations & Standards