SDC 400W1-433 4-Door Wireless Access Control Transmitter
Overview
The SDC 400W1-433 is a 433 MHz wireless transmitter controller built for multi-door access control deployments where wired backbone infrastructure exists but wireless credential distribution is required. This unit manages up to 4 doors simultaneously and supports 250,000 user profiles — enough capacity for mid-sized enterprise facilities, distributed warehouse networks, or retrofit installations where running new card reader wiring is impractical. The 400W1-433 communicates via OSDP (Open Supervised Device Protocol) and TCP/IP, meaning it fits into existing security architectures without forcing proprietary lock-in. HID credential compatibility ensures your existing badge stock and reader hardware work without replacement.
Key Features
- 4-Door Capacity: Manages credential issuance and access rules for up to 4 separate entry points from a single controller — reduces the number of devices needed in smaller facilities or branch locations compared to single-door units.
- 250,000 User Profiles: Handles substantial user databases without requiring external directories; typical for mid-size warehouses, office parks, or multi-tenant buildings where credential churn is continuous.
- 433 MHz Wireless Transmission: Operates in the unlicensed ISM band used by many access and alarm systems — avoids interference with licensed spectrum but requires line-of-sight planning and site survey to verify coverage in concrete or metal-clad environments.
- OSDP Protocol Support: OSDP is a modern, open-standard protocol for reader-to-controller communication; this standard implementation simplifies integration with third-party readers and VMS platforms, reducing vendor dependency and supporting long-term device lifecycle management.
- TCP/IP Connectivity: Network integration via standard Ethernet permits remote programming, event logging, and audit trails without requiring physical facility access — critical for centralized multi-site administration.
- HID Credential Compatibility: Works with HID formats (magnetic stripe, proximity, smart card) already deployed in many enterprise environments — eliminates expensive credential replacement campaigns during system migration.
Integration and Deployment Context
The 400W1-433 fits hybrid deployments: wired backbone (main controller, network, power distribution) with wireless reader endpoints. This topology works well in warehouse expansion zones, temporary access routes, or multi-building campuses where trenching new conduit is cost-prohibitive. OSDP and TCP/IP support mean integration with access control systems and third-party VMS platforms that speak these protocols — no vendor-specific middleware required.
Wireless range depends on site conditions (building materials, RF noise, antenna orientation); expect 100–300 feet line-of-sight in open space but significantly less through metal shelving, concrete walls, or radio-frequency-dense environments (warehouses with heavy machinery, data centers). Site survey before deployment is non-negotiable. The 250,000 profile ceiling is generous for most small-to-mid deployments but will require database pruning in high-turnover facilities (e.g., temporary staff warehouses) after 2–3 years unless profiles are actively archived.
When to Choose a Different Model
If you need to manage more than 4 doors from a single device, look for higher-capacity SDC controllers in the same family. If your site cannot support 433 MHz wireless (heavy RF interference, regulatory restrictions, or requirement for licensed spectrum), consider wired reader implementations or models supporting alternative wireless bands. If your user base will exceed 250,000 profiles within the deployment lifecycle, consult an integrator about clustered or federated controller architectures.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Does the 400W1-433 require a separate power supply?
A: Yes. The device is wired (not PoE), so it requires a dedicated 24VDC power input. Confirm your facility has UPS-backed power for the controller to maintain access during utility outages.
Q: Will the 433 MHz signal penetrate concrete or metal walls?
A: No. 433 MHz is line-of-sight. Thick concrete, steel shelving, and metal-frame buildings significantly attenuate the signal. Always conduct a site survey with the exact antenna placement before ordering reader endpoints.
Q: Can I use the 400W1-433 with non-HID readers?
A: OSDP support permits integration with any OSDP-compliant reader, regardless of credential format. However, if your readers are proprietary (not OSDP-aware), integration will require a protocol gateway or reader replacement.
Q: What is the maximum wireless range?
A: Line-of-sight range is typically 100–300 feet in open air. Obstacles (walls, machinery) reduce this significantly. Site survey is required before final deployment.
Q: Does the 400W1-433 integrate with Milestone or Genetec?
A: If your VMS platform supports OSDP and TCP/IP access control modules, integration is possible. Consult your VMS vendor for specific driver availability for the 400W1-433.
Q: What happens if the user database exceeds 250,000 profiles?
A: The controller will not accept new profiles. Archive inactive users or deploy a second controller to expand capacity.
Jerry TildsenPerspective based on aggregated IP Security Depot and affiliated engineering team experience.
The 400W1-433 is a solid fit for hybrid-infrastructure access control — wired backbone with wireless reader reach. The 4-door capacity and 250,000 profile database handle mid-size enterprises well, but the real value is OSDP and TCP/IP support, which keeps you from getting locked into proprietary protocols. That said, the 433 MHz wireless range is its constraint: you cannot ignore RF site surveys on this one.
Technical Highlights:
- 433 MHz Wireless Band: Unlicensed ISM spectrum avoids regulatory licensing, but line-of-sight requirement means concrete and metal obstruct coverage significantly — typical 100–300 feet open-air range degrades rapidly with barriers.
- OSDP + TCP/IP Dual Protocol: Future-proofs against vendor lock-in; you can swap readers or integrate third-party VMS platforms without replacing the controller backbone.
- 250,000 User Profiles: Sufficient for warehouses and office parks but requires active archive practices in high-turnover environments (temp staffing, seasonal labor) to avoid database saturation within 24–36 months.
Deployment Considerations:
- RF Site Survey Non-Negotiable: Before committing to reader placement, conduct propagation testing with actual antennas in the target building — 433 MHz performance is unpredictable without empirical validation.
- Power Redundancy Critical: Wired 24VDC power means you must size UPS capacity to keep the controller alive during mains failure; battery runtime will determine how long access remains functional.
Deploy the 400W1-433 in warehouses or distributed facilities where wireless reader installation reduces trenching cost and OSDP integration with a centralized VMS is a priority. Avoid it in RF-hostile environments (data centers, metal-clad industrial buildings) or where you need more than 4 access points on a single controller.