A Class-A zone differs from a standard Class-B zone in that it does not use an EOL resistor at the end of the zone. Instead, the zone is looped back into Class-A input terminals on the circuit. Class-A must first be programmed on the panel for it to be used, and it is not available on all panels.
It means 'End Of Line'. In a fire alarm system (usually conventional systems use this technique) a resistor is placed at the very end of the fire alarm circuit at the last device. This device could be a Manual Call point, Sounder, Bell Smoke/Heat detector, strobe etc. This then enables the panel to monitor the circuit. For example, if the resistor is moved or disconnected, then it will show up as a fault on the panel, giving indication the something has gone wrong in the system and that it needs to be fixed. Not all EOL's are resistors though. They can also be capacitors or diodes from what we know.
Style Y is a designation of circuit performance under different states of the circuit. For example: an initiating circuit and a NAC circuit may both be class B, with a panel on one end of the circuit and a resistor on the other. If there is an open on either circuit (the panel doesn't see the EOL), then a trouble is initiated at the panel. However, if there is a short between the two wires on a circuit, the panel will react very differently on the initiating circuit than it will on the NAC. Style Y means that the fire alarm panel will display a trouble on either an open or a short on the NAC circuit, where style 4 means that the Initiating circuit will generate an alarm on the panel in the event of a short, and a trouble in the event of an open.
Eol Lee was born in 1964, in South Korea.
It says '얼굴(eol-gul)'
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The intials EOL typically mean end of life and are often seen on the charts of nursing home patients who are nearing their deaths. It is sometimes a term that will determine the amount of medication or prescriptions that a patient will receive.
The end of line (EOL) character marks the end of a line in a text file or document. It helps control how text is displayed and ensures proper formatting when files are viewed or edited using different platforms or programs.
The cast of Bunhongsin - 2005 includes: Eol Lee
The cast of Chukje - 1996 includes: Eol Lee
EOL terminology is also related to fire alarm systems. It is the end of line resistor that is in each pull station loop. It is used to put a load on the circuit so that each circuit draws a current. This in turn is how a trouble is monitored, if the circuit gets opened a trouble alarm will sound notifying maintenance that the circuit is inoperative. First thing which I am familiar with, which kinda goes back to the "older" days, is that EOL = End Of line. The term is largely archaic outside the bounds of mainframes. For home computers, the "EOL" is usually "LF"+"CR", or linefeed (advance to next line) + CR (archaic but still in use - Carriage Return, which moves the cursor to the beginning of the line), thus "LF+CR" is used most often in DOS and Windows applications while some applications and/or operating systems treat just the "CR" to mean both... Go to next line AND go to the beginning.... basically the exact way the CR on a typewriter works. Hitting "CR" on a typewriter both advances the paper one line, and moves the carriage, or "typing spot" to column one. Wow, the old days... heheh
(JEUN DANG SIN EOL sarangham nida.)