Openai/69724e33-29b0-8006-ac22-cbee12c0cc8a
This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]
gpt-5-2[edit | edit source]
User: Morning everyone!!![edit | edit source]
Morning everyone!!! Has anyone seen this before? Doors/motions/glass breaks (hardwired) are on partition 1
Duress buttons (wireless) are on partition 2
The 2 keypads for partition 2 are working fine.
The ONE keypad for partition 1 is showing this and does not respond to any commands….any idea?
Assistant: Yep — this is a known alarm-panel behavior, and the symptoms you described narrow it down pretty well.[edit | edit source]
Yep — this is a known alarm-panel behavior, and the symptoms you described narrow it down pretty well.
Based on the display style and wording, this looks like a DSC PowerSeries keypad (or a rebranded version).
What “SYSTEM 12” means[edit | edit source]
System Trouble 12 = Keypad Lockout / Keypad Communication Issue
It usually appears when that specific keypad is no longer properly communicating with the panel.
That explains why:
- Only one keypad is affected
- It’s on partition 1
- It doesn’t respond to commands
- Partition 2 keypads work fine
Most likely causes (in order of probability)[edit | edit source]
1. Keypad lost its partition assignment[edit | edit source]
This is extremely common after:
- Power outages
- Battery failures
- Panel reboots
- Wiring glitches
If the keypad is no longer assigned to partition 1, it will show trouble and ignore commands.
2. Keypad address conflict[edit | edit source]
Two keypads accidentally sharing the same address = one will go stupid.
This happens when:
- A keypad was replaced
- Programming was done recently
- DIP switches / address programming changed
3. Wiring issue (most common in hardwired keypads)[edit | edit source]
Loose or failing:
- Red (12V)
- Black (ground)
- Yellow/green (data)
Even a slightly loose data wire can cause exactly this symptom.
4. Keypad is locked out[edit | edit source]
DSC will lock a keypad after too many bad code attempts. It looks “dead” but is actually just ignored by the panel.
5. Keypad is failing[edit | edit source]
Less common, but old LCD keypads do go bad — especially if it’s the only one on that partition.
What to try (in order)[edit | edit source]
Step 1 – Full power reset (very often fixes this)[edit | edit source]
- Unplug AC transformer
- Disconnect panel battery
- Wait 2–3 minutes
- Reconnect battery
- Plug AC back in
Step 2 – Check keypad wiring[edit | edit source]
At the keypad and at the panel:
- R → Red
- B → Black
- Y → Yellow
- G → Green
Make sure they’re tight, not corroded, not swapped
Step 3 – Reassign keypad to Partition 1[edit | edit source]
At that keypad:
[*][8][Installer Code]
[000]Then:
[11] = Keypad Partition AssignmentSet it to:
1Exit programming.
Step 4 – Check keypad address[edit | edit source]
Default should be 01, 02, 03, etc. If two are the same, one will fail.
Programming:
[*][8][Installer Code]
[000]
[20]–[27] (keypad slots)Step 5 – Swap keypads[edit | edit source]
If you plug a working partition 2 keypad into that wire run:
- If it works → bad keypad
- If it doesn’t → wiring or panel issue
TL;DR[edit | edit source]
This is almost certainly a keypad assignment or communication problem, not a zone or partition issue. Power cycle + reassign keypad fixes this 80% of the time.
If you want, tell me:
- Panel model (DSC 1616 / 1832 / 1864 etc.)
- Keypad model
- Installer code status (if you have it)
…and I can give you exact button presses.
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ "Keypad Communication Issue". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2026-01-24.