Serious Audio Video offers a wide range of smart home control options. More times than not, our customers are interested in Elan Home Systems. As the only Platinum Elite Dealer in the area, we have a wealth of experience designing custom Elan systems for a number of homes and businesses. Some of our recent/notable Elan systems include a minimalist condo, a suburban mansion, a grandfather’s dream home, a seaside vacation home w/ a private screening room, a smart penthouse, the award winning integrated system at Boa Lounge (now Reign), Kilroy’s Sports Bar and Buffalo Wild Wings (Toms River). Even our office and showroom are controlled by Elan.
Forbes reports :
ELAN is considered a super-premium home automation controller that comprehensively controls nearly every use case and application. It is expensive, too, as the average installed systems controlled by ELAN occurs inside luxury homes and costs from several thousand up to even $100,000, which is why it’s considered the “rich and famous” solution.
ELAN Control Points
Why do the rich and famous install ELAN systems? Lots of reasons. I’ll use their newly-announced ELAN gSC2 and gSC10 Controllers on the v7 Platform as an example. First of all, from one wall controller, handheld controller, mobile app, or PC web page, ELAN controls everything imaginable in huge homes and even businesses:
- Entertainment (64+ zones of distributed audio & video over 32 displays)
- Power conditioners (enhance audio & video, and protect home devices)
- Security (256+ different sensors, 16+ cameras, 16+ door locks, gates and garage doors)
- HVAC (32+ different thermostats)
- Lighting (256+ different devices)
- Irrigation (expansive landscapes, sprinklers, etc.)
- Pool (heating, cooling, fountains, lights, cover, etc.)
- Messaging (group email from Google, Microsoft MSFT, Yahoo, etc.)
ELAN SC2 and SC10 hardware support
ELAN SC2 and SC10 Controllers supports products from Nortek’s own stable of brands including Core Brands’ own SpeakerCraft, Niles, Sunfire, Panamax, Furman and Xantech. While you may not have heard of these brands, they are market share-leading brands in the installer space with quality levels surpassing most branded products. Instead of investing in retailing, packaging, and consumer marketing, Nortek’s Core Brands invests in product development and the installer channel. This model is the polar opposite of a Nest, Sonos, or Dropcam.
ELAN also supports a houseful of 3rd party branded products, too, brands like AppleTV, Roku, GE, Honeywell, Lutron, Yamaha, Dennon, Marantz, Pioneer and many others. Because the new ELAN v7 platform is now Linux-based, I think it will be much easier to physically support different peripherals. ELAN is releasing today a limited distribution API to physically connect devices if they haven’t created drivers already, enabling vendors to write the drivers themselves. To logically control 3rd party peripherals, ELAN is releasing the “ELAN Development Kit”, a Lua-based package to control what you want all the devices to do under different circumstances. This is really, really important as there could be 100’s of 1,000’s of different things you may want done. Think of a giant “if-this-then-that” (IFTT) grid that is “configured” by the installer.
Complex scenario in action
A good example of IFTT in action could be watching an action movie in the entertainment room with one press of a button on your iPhone app. Let’s just say the user picked a 4K title off one of the new Sony 4K storage drives. ELAN, with one button press, could:
- Lower the projector screen
- Turn on the 4K projector (not that old 1080P one)
- Switch audio and video to the correct inputs/outputs
- Turn on the equipment room AC to vent the equipment
- Pause all irrigation as you don’t want to hear any noises
- Close the cover on the pool if no one swimming
- Lock every lock.
- Wine chiller turns on.
- Lower the temperature five degrees
- Redirect phone calls to your cell phone
- Text your cellphone if you get any security sensor ‘pings” like someone at your front door
OK, this is a bit of an extreme example, but gives you the idea of just how comprehensive ELAN is today. You see, ELAN is the “glue”, represented by one mobile app or wall controller that controls each device, interaction between different devices, what each device should do, and under what circumstances. Each one of these controller instances is configured by an installer who could be at the new home for weeks dependent on how complex the install. The usability and reliability must be rock solid as the installer is the one throat to choke and is made easier the ELAN’s development kit.
Controller nuts and bolts
I’d be remiss to not talk about some of the guts of the SC controllers. The entire controller is power efficient, sucking less that 3-5 watts of power, meaning they are fanless and can be powered over Ethernet (POE) or an external adapter. This makes installation easier and improves reliability. This is much less power than a smartphone or tablet. Here are some of the raw specs of the new SC controllers:
- The new “IP centric” ELAN Platform Architecture uses a Freescale i.MX at 1Ghz, which delivers what Core Brands characterizes as a “10X performance improvement” over their prior solution
- 300 Mbps WiFI
- 100 Mbps Ethernet
- Linux 2.64
- iOS and Android mobile device support, plus Mac and Windows personal computers
One of the bigger differentiators in the installer world is that the controller’s firmware is 100% internet-updatable, meaning it doesn’t require an installer truck roll to add a feature or fix something. While we may take that for granted today with a Nest or Sonos, ELAN systems are controlling an infinite number of devices and functions, while Nest and Sonos are limited in what they perform and control. Another ELAN consumer benefit is that you can control your system with dedicated handheld controllers and wall mounted touchpads, but also phones, tablets and personal computers.
Unifying Your Smart Home Control
Different ways to control ELAN
The cool part about Elan is that I believe it doesn’t seek to create a locked “walled garden” system and architecture. Rather, it goes beyond proprietary structure and unifies control not just for the world of smart things in the home, but their agnostic approach to how you control these devices includes full compatibility with the devices you like using the most – turning your mobile devices and PCs into control devices whether it be from Android, Apple, or Windows.
Read more about Elan on Forbes and contact us for a demo in our NYC area show room.