Eyonic ELV Service
Practical planning, supply and installation
Alarm planning considers zones, entry delay, user access, false-alarm reduction and handover training.
01
Site survey
02
System proposal
03
Installation & handover
Where we have done this
Installed for practical Sarawak client needs
Eyonic supports this service for client types such as homes, retail shops, offices and operating sites that need dependable security, access or connectivity.
Why you need it
A system that solves a real site problem
Alarm systems add an active layer of protection when nobody is watching the site. They are useful for homes, shops, offices and storage areas that need intrusion alerts, sensor coverage and a clear siren response path.
Why it is good
A useful alarm setup is planned by zones, not just by hardware count. Entry delay, sensor placement, door contacts, siren location and user training all help reduce false alarms while keeping real alerts noticeable.
Is it worth it?
It is worth it when you want a warning system that reacts before a problem becomes bigger. It works especially well with CCTV because the alarm tells you something is happening and the cameras help you check what it is.
How much does it cost?
We have promo RM1500 for a basic system setup. WhatsApp me now!! Final pricing depends on site condition, equipment selection and installation scope.
WhatsApp me nowWhat to expect from us
Clear recommendations, clean work and useful handover
- Zone planning for doors, motion areas and vulnerable points
- Panel, siren and sensor installation
- Training for arming, disarming and basic troubleshooting
Detailed guide
What is Alarm Systems?
Alarm Systems is a practical intruder detection and alert system planned for homes, shops, offices, storerooms, counters, warehouse zones, back doors, windows and areas left unattended after hours. In simple terms, it is not only a product purchase. It is a site system made from the correct equipment, suitable mounting locations, clean cabling, proper configuration, user training and support after installation. The right setup should make the property easier to manage every day, whether the user is a homeowner checking activity from a phone, a shop owner reviewing an incident, an office manager controlling staff entry or an operations team keeping a remote site connected.
For Eyonic, the starting point is always the real site. We look at how people enter, where staff or family members move, where equipment can be installed neatly, what the user wants to see or control, and what will happen after installation day. A alarm system should answer a clear need: safer entry, better visibility, faster checking, more convenient operation, stronger communication or more reliable connectivity. That is why we avoid treating every property the same way.
A complete alarm system can involve alarm panel, motion sensors, magnetic door contacts, siren, keypad, backup battery, zone wiring, panic button and notification options. Some projects need only a small starter setup, while other sites need a more integrated design across CCTV, access control, alarm, intercom, autogate, internet and monitoring points. The important part is choosing the level that fits the actual risk, budget and operation. When the system is planned well, the owner gets a cleaner result and avoids paying for hardware that does not solve the main problem.
The main planning focus is entry delay, zone layout, sensor direction, pet movement, staff routine, siren location, arming habits and false-alarm reduction. These details sound technical, but they are what decide whether the system feels useful after handover. A camera that cannot see the face, a door lock installed on a weak frame, an alarm sensor facing the wrong movement path, a gate motor fitted on a poorly aligned gate or a router hidden in the wrong corner can all reduce the value of the installation. Careful planning prevents those common issues.
The risk of a rushed installation is that poor zone planning creates false alarms, ignored sirens, user confusion and weak protection at the exact points where intrusion is most likely. This is why Eyonic explains the practical trade-offs before installation. Sometimes the best recommendation is not the most expensive option. Sometimes it is a cleaner cable route, a better mounting height, a stronger power point, a more suitable device model or a simpler system that the customer can operate confidently.
The outcome we want is an active warning layer that alerts users when a door, motion area or vulnerable zone is triggered. We want the system to work for the person using it at 8 AM on a busy day, at night when the site is closed, during rain, during a power interruption and months after installation when footage, access or alerts may suddenly matter. Good ELV work is not only about making devices turn on. It is about making the system understandable and dependable.
Installation workflow
How we install it
Our installation method is built around survey, recommendation, installation, testing and handover. The exact equipment changes from one service to another, but the discipline is the same: understand the site first, install neatly, configure properly and make sure the user knows what to do after we leave.
01
Identify doors, windows, motion paths and vulnerable zones
This step keeps the final system aligned with the property layout, the user routine and the practical support needs after handover.
02
Choose sensors, keypad location and siren position
This step keeps the final system aligned with the property layout, the user routine and the practical support needs after handover.
03
Plan zone naming, entry delay and user operation
This step keeps the final system aligned with the property layout, the user routine and the practical support needs after handover.
04
Install panel, sensors, contacts, siren and battery
This step keeps the final system aligned with the property layout, the user routine and the practical support needs after handover.
05
Configure arming modes, user codes and basic alerts
This step keeps the final system aligned with the property layout, the user routine and the practical support needs after handover.
06
Trigger-test every zone and train users
This step keeps the final system aligned with the property layout, the user routine and the practical support needs after handover.
Why you need it
Useful when the site needs clearer control
Alarm systems add an active layer of protection when nobody is watching the site. They are useful for homes, shops, offices and storage areas that need intrusion alerts, sensor coverage and a clear siren response path.
You may need alarm systems if your site has repeated uncertainty: you are not sure who entered, you cannot check a location remotely, staff have to manage keys manually, visitors wait without direction, or the internet behind your security system is unreliable. These are operational problems, not just equipment problems. A well-planned installation reduces the guesswork and gives the owner a clearer way to respond.
Alarm Systems is also useful when the property is growing. A home may start with only a few important entry points, then later add alarm zones, smart locks or autogate. A business may begin with CCTV and later add door access, intercom or backup internet. When Eyonic plans the layout, we consider how the system may expand so the first installation does not block future improvement.
Site-fit chart
Where it performs well
Intrusion alert
91%
Active warning is the main advantage.
False-alarm control
78%
Planning and training reduce unnecessary triggers.
CCTV pairing
87%
Cameras help confirm what happened.
Best for
sites that are empty at night, properties with stock or equipment, homes that need intrusion alerts and businesses that want CCTV plus active detection
Main outcome
an active warning layer that alerts users when a door, motion area or vulnerable zone is triggered
Main risk if done badly
poor zone planning creates false alarms, ignored sirens, user confusion and weak protection at the exact points where intrusion is most likely
Comparison table
Choosing the right level of system
| Option | What it means | Best use case |
|---|---|---|
| Basic alarm | Panel, keypad, siren and key sensors | Best for homes and small shops |
| Zoned alarm | Multiple areas with named entry and motion zones | Best for offices and larger premises |
| Alarm plus CCTV | Alerts paired with cameras for visual checking | Best for businesses and higher-risk areas |
Pros
What works well
- Provides an active warning instead of passive recording only
- Works well with CCTV for checking what caused an alert
- Zone planning helps users understand where activity happened
- Can protect doors, motion areas and after-hours spaces
Cons
What to plan carefully
- False alarms happen if sensors are placed without understanding the site
- Users must learn arming, disarming and basic troubleshooting
- Pets, curtains, heat and airflow can affect some sensors
- Battery and siren condition should be checked over time
Eyonic experience
How our experience helps your site
Eyonic can do this for you from consultation to handover. We start by listening to the problem you want to solve, then we check the site condition, recommend a practical scope, explain what should be installed, and carry out the work with clean cabling and proper testing. If the site needs a basic package, we keep it simple. If the site needs a more complete solution, we explain the stages clearly so the owner can decide with confidence.
Our experience comes from working with Sarawak homes, shops, offices, service counters, education sites, government-related environments, hospitals, utility teams and remote operations. These environments do not behave the same way. A home needs family-friendly use. A retail shop needs transaction visibility and after-hours checking. An office needs access permissions. A remote site needs connectivity. This mix of experience helps us ask better questions before recommending equipment.
After installation, we test the system with the user in mind. That means checking viewing angles, playback, lock behavior, alarm triggers, gate movement, intercom audio, Wi-Fi reach or queue calling flow depending on the service. We also explain the daily steps: how to view, how to open, how to arm, how to reset, how to call, how to check internet status and when to contact us for support.
How we can do it for you
A practical path from inquiry to working system
01
Contact
Send us your location, property type and what problem you want to solve.
02
Survey
We review layout, cable paths, power, network and daily user flow.
03
Proposal
We recommend a practical scope with clear equipment and installation notes.
04
Install
We install, configure and test the system under normal site conditions.
05
Support
We hand over the system and remain available for practical after-sales support.

























