This post is specifically designed to discuss the Salwico Consilium Fire Alarm System. If you have any problems with this system, please leave a comment below, and I'll try to help. For more information on the system, I recommend reading the article: "Salwico Consilium Fire Alarm System. Troubleshooting".
Comments in that article are closed because there were so many of them, and that's why this separate article was created.
Here is a summary of the article “Fire alarm system Salwico Consilium. Troubleshooting”.
Fire Alarm System Salwico Consilium – Troubleshooting Experience
The article presents practical field troubleshooting on a 10+ year old Salwico Consilium fire alarm system, focusing on how to systematically diagnose faults in chargers, batteries, loop wiring, SCIs, addressable devices, and loop modules.
1. Charger/Battery Faults — Error 158 “BATTERY CABLE / FUSE FAULT”
Observed Symptoms
- Persistent Error 158 pointing to CHARGERM 90.
- Battery fault did not appear, even though the charger fault was active.
- Physically, equipment was running in +30–40 °C environment.
Key Technical Points
- Salwico chargers are designed to work up to +55 °C, but aging components reduce thermal tolerance.
- High temperature increases:
- charger internal resistance,
- battery internal resistance,
- fuse/terminal heating,
- false detection of cable/fuse faults.
Diagnostics Performed
- Retightened and replaced battery cables.
- Measured voltage – batteries stable.
- Replaced the charger (DIP switches set correctly).
- Charger swap produced a new BATTERY FAULT, indicating the battery condition is borderline and affected by temperature.
Root Cause
- Thermal stress: The charger and batteries overheated, causing intermittent voltage anomalies and false current-sense readings.
Resolution
- Temporary: Install a fan inside the panel for cooling.
- Long-term: Replace:
- CHARGERM unit,
- Both batteries (old, degraded, sensitive to heat),
- Improve ventilation.
2. Loop Fault — Error 142 “CABLE BREAK NEGATIVE” on Loop 1
Observed Fault
- Loop 1 shows break on the negative conductor.
- System shows fault quickly after reset, indicating hard break or high resistance on the line.
Technical Diagnostics Method
The article uses the official Salwico loop troubleshooting method:
1. Isolate the loop by removing loop input/output at the module.
2. Bypass SCIs using manual jumpers (SCIs open when they sense overcurrent or wiring faults).
3. Measure resistances:
- (+) to (+)
- (–) to (–)
- cross resistance if needed.
These checks allow locating the faulty segment.
Root Cause Identified
- Not a cable fault.
- Two manual call points had severely oxidized contacts, causing:
- Intermittent breaks,
- High resistance on the negative side,
- Loop instability.
Final Solution
- Cleaned call-point contacts.
- Tightened and cleaned all intermediate terminal blocks.
- After cleaning, loop resistance returned to normal and error cleared.
3. Loop MX Module Replacement Test
Steps Taken
- Suspicion that Loop Module 1 had internal damage.
- Replaced with spare Loop MX Module No. 4.
- Configured DIP switches to match original address.
System Behavior
- After power cycle:
- System booted slowly.
- Loop initially failed to detect devices.
- After several minutes, devices slowly repopulated.
Conclusion
- The module itself was not faulty.
- Delayed device detection was a consequence of loop instability and previous cabling/contact issues, not the module.
4. Detector Contamination — Error 130 “DIRTY SENSOR”
Technical Mechanism
Salwico detectors have internal contamination measurement that monitors:
- Optical chamber transparency,
- Drift of sensor gain,
- Scattering coefficient changes.
Why the error appears
- Smoke, dust, engine-room contaminants,
- Lack of filter cleaning,
- Age of sensors (sensitivity drift).
Recommended Maintenance
- Clean detector chamber.
- If cleaning fails → replace detector.
- Use Salwico address programmer to set the correct address for replacement units.
5. General Troubleshooting Recommendations
Critical Technical Steps
- Always inspect power quality and charger output.
- Check panel temperature — thermal issues are common in bridge installations.
- Use SCIs to segment loops and find high-resistance zones.
- Perform resistance measurements in both polarities.
- Look for oxidized terminals — very common on older vessels.
- When replacing modules:
- Set correct DIP address,
- Ensure proper seating in the backplane,
- Reboot and wait for full polling cycle.
Common failure points in old Salwico systems
- Manual call points with corroded contacts,
- Loose or oxidized terminals,
- Aged CHARGERM units,
- Batteries with high internal resistance,
- Overheating due to poor ventilation,
- Contaminated optical smoke detectors.
6. Support and Documentation
Suggestions:
- Using official Salwico manuals for each subsystem.
- Joining “Marine Engineering Manuals” Telegram channel for additional configuration files and guides.
- Asking for help in comments—article is intended as a practical reference.
If you have any issues with this fire alarm system, I recommend discussing it in the comments section of this article. I'll try to help! See you there!
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