Napco Detectors Guard National Military Park on 150th Anniversary of Battle For Chattanooga

July 2, 2013
With these dual technology microwave/PIR detectors, environmental disturbances are better tolerated and the threat of false alarms or nuisance alarms is dramatically reduced, surpassing the performance of conventional dual technology devices.

This year marks the 150th anniversary of the U.S. Civil War’s Campaign for Chattanooga, TN. Besides an impressive array of authentic cannons, the modern Chickamauga National Military Park Visitor Center, in Fort Oglethorpe, GA is guarded by Napco Dual Technology Detectors, fighting false alarms and providing superior detection in all sorts of conditions, including RF, sunlight, vehicle lights, lightning, HVAC shifts, and more, all factors in this glass-atriummed building.

The attractive visitor center stands in stark contrast to the battlefield of the same name, as Chickamauga, with an extended front of 150 miles, is the site of the bloodiest two-and-a-half day battle of the Civil War, where in 1863, Union and Confederate forces fought for control of Chattanooga, known as the "Gateway to the Deep South" for its strategic railways and position. Newly revised estimates for overall losses in the US Civil War now include over 750,000 American casualties, with the highest counts and hardest fighting here, in adjacent south Tennessee and north Georgia.

It’s been said, due to scope, magnitude and importance, “No battlefield park of this quality and magnitude could be found in any other location in the world.” 

The battlefields of Chickamauga and Chattanooga were the nation's first official military parks, signed into law by President Harrison in 1890.  “In recommending creation of the park, both House and Senate military affairs committees pointed out that probably no other field in the world presented more formidable natural obstacles to large-scale military operations than the slopes of Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge. Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park, were officially dedicated in 1895.”

Most of the 1,400 monuments and historical markers on the battlefields were planned and placed by veterans of the battles, under the supervision of the War Department, which administered all national military parks, until they were later transferred to the National Park Service.

Napco Adaptive® Dual Technology Microwave/PIR detectors automatically adjust to their environment, minute by minute, for false alarm immunity and reliability. Upon installation, a NAPCO Adaptive Microwave/PIR detector powers up, initialized in the first of its 12 sensitivity modes, i.e., the most sensitive, enabling it to sample prevailing environmental conditions. Faced with hostility or tranquility, the Adaptive detector automatically selects the most appropriate detection mode accordingly, optimizing both intruder catch and stability. Each time the sensors detect a stimulus strong enough to generate a signal, but insufficient in strength to indicate an alarm, the detector will automatically change sensitivity modes, effectively widening the gap between the detected signal and its alarm threshold. Therefore, environmental disturbances, those that register by the PIR and/or microwave sensor, are better tolerated and the threat of false alarms or nuisance alarms is dramatically reduced, far surpassing the performance of conventional dual technology devices.

For more security product and false alarm prevention information, contact Napco Security Technologies at 1-800-645-9445 or visit www.napcosecurity.com. For information on Chickamauga National Military Park, go to http://www.nps.gov/chch/index.htm.