| Which One Should I Use - Part III 120/240v Residential Coupling by Phil Kingery |
Well, actually, before we get to "which one should I use ("part trey"), we have some unfinished business to discuss. First, in the April HTI issue, I gave you information on the use of X-10 receivers with non-linear loads (Which One Should I Use, Part II). For those of you who yearned for more I have some additional information for you. Many of you who read the "comp.home.automation" newsgroup will recognize the name Edward Cheung, Ph.D. (We call him Doc Ed in the newsgroup.) He is a frequent contributor and very well respected in the group and in the industry. He, too, was disappointed with the humming and buzzing associated with using X-10 dimmer receivers with non-linear loads, especially, ceiling fans, so he put his considerable metal powers to bear and came up with a solution. He has designed an add-on device that makes an X-10 dimmer work better with motors. He calls it his "Not ho-hum but no-hum ceiling fan speed control". You may have to do some surfing to get to the exact page, but I strongly suggest that you begin at his home URL of http://members.tripod.com/~edward_cheung ... and work your way down through his home automation section and then to the dimmer page. Most electronic tinkerers should be capable of building his do-it-yourself project. Next! Thanks to all who sent me the nice emails and voted for their preference on the subject of this part of the series, "Which One Should I Use?" I especially want to thank Dwight Hapeman who said (in part):
Well Dwight, I did show your email to my boss. He said that it must be a misprint. It should have read, "$15,000". (...oh well, we tried...) Third! What did I choose as the subject for this installment? Well, it wasn’t easy. From the very beginning, "Basic Coupling" took an early lead in the votes with "Three and Four-Way Circuits", a close second. Then as more and more votes came in, the order did not change but it looked like it was going to be a photo finish as "Basic Coupling" and "Three and Four-Way Circuits" were running almost neck and neck with "Noise and Filtering" a very close third. I may have subliminally influenced the voting by listing them in that order. Thinking that "Basic Coupling" was still going to win, I began working on "Part III" with that as my subject. Well, here I am, putting the finishing touches on the piece and it now appears that "Three and Four-Way Circuits" has won by a nose. One of the later votes was from John Diamant (thank you, John) who sent me an email. Not only did he cast his vote for "Three and Four-Way Switch Circuits", but he lobbied heavily for his choice with:
In light of his, plus a few other votes, I feel a little deceptive in presenting this next segment in the series. Unfortunately, I have already done too much work on "Basic Coupling" to jump to the another horse. To all who voted, thank you very much. To all who voted for "Three and Four-Way Circuits", I promise that I will write that one after this one is finished. Did you notice how cleverly I worded that last sentence? "...after this one is finished". You see, the problem is that as I started writing this one, I realized that it was such a large subject that I couldn’t do it justice in one small section. Bob Hetherington, here at HTI, has been very generous in allowing me to write about whatever I wanted and as much as I wanted, but I have to be realistic. None of you want to stay on-line to read "Gone With The Wind". So this one will be "Which One Should I Use, Part III - 120/240v Residential Coupling" and later I will do the next section, "Which One Should I Use, Part IV - Complex Residential Coupling with Considerations for Dim/Bright". After that I will do my best to do the "Three and Four-Way" piece. For all you who voted for "Noise and Filtering", I will most likely do that a way down the road but don’t worry, I won’t forget you. Okay, I think we are all finally ready for....... Which
One Should I Use, Part III Most of us started in the X-10 world using Radio Shack stuff. We would buy a plug-in lamp module and a desk-top transmitter and once home eagerly rip them out of the bubble pack and rush to plug them in and try them out. At that time we had no idea how they worked (sure we had heard some stories about signals on the line) but we didn’t care. Most of the time we were lucky and they "did" work. If we had just happened to plug the transmitter and receiver into outlets on the same circuit, they nearly always worked. If we were lucky enough to plug them into outlets that were on different circuits but on the same "leg" of the transformer, they still nearly always worked. |
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So, we went back to Radio Shack to buy some more "X-10
Powerhouse" stuff. This time, however, we didn’t happen to pick an
outlet that was on the same "side" of the panel as the one before. No
matter. The house is not very large and so the signal still makes it from
there to here. Figure 2 shows the path the signal must now take to go from
the transmitter to the receiver. Somehow it has to pass from one side of the
panel to the other side of the panel.
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![]() Now bear in mind that the signal is like water pressure, it actually goes everywhere it can. Just because there is no X-10 receiver on that circuit in the living room doesn’t mean that the signal doesn’t go there. Don’t give that X-10 signal any anthropomorphic qualities. It can’t "decide" where it will go and where it won’t. Believe me, it just goes anywhere it can. Since those cute little house diagrams are so hard to draw, lets use a simpler "schematic" type of diagram to
investigate the behavior of the signal as it travels
through the electrical distribution system. Figure 4 shows a diagram of just
the "A" side of the panel. (Oh, by the way, all my diagrams
show neutral as yellow because white just doesn’t show up. You
should all know that in the real world, at least here in Now, however, we have added our second receiver on the opposite side of the
panel (figure 5). Even with only natural coupling, there is usually sufficient
"bleed-through" of the signal (through 240v loads, or through the
transformer) to make it to the second receiver. Oh
sure, the signal
Now look back at figure 5. If the signal level on the "A" leg is about 2v and the signal level on the "B" side is about 200mv (at the furthest point), then everything should work. However, what if the house is much larger than the common do-it-yourselfer’s house. What if it has a lot of electronic do-dads that "suck up" the signal like a sponge? What if your neighbors’ have a lot of do-dads that also suck up your signal? You can’t tell your transmitter, "Don’t send your signal that way!". You still may have enough signal on the "A" side. It may have dropped from 2v to about 400mv but that’s still enough. The problem is on the "B" side where the signal has dropped to about 40mv. Oh sure, sometimes you can get the receiver to go "On", but it is not reliable. And what’s more, you don’t know why it isn’t reliable and you don’t know how to fix it. What if you could divide that 200mv that is still on the "A" side and give a chunk of it to the "B" side. You would then have over 100mv on each side, right? There are several ways to do that. First, you could leave you electric stove on all the time. (I have a cute story about a guy who tried turning on his gas stove....but perhaps another time.) Or you could install a capacitor in your breaker panel. You may have read the FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) in the comp.home.automation newsgroup and found the part that described just such a thing. You may be a little reluctant to do that knowing that a capacitor by itself, is not very frequency selective and not very safe. (I have to admit that it usually works fine, but as a representative of Advanced Control Technologies, Inc. I can not condone it. Actually even if I weren’t a representative of ACT, I still wouldn’t condone it.) |
Or you could use a device that has been specifically designed to be a
"short cut" for those little pulses of X-10 signal so that they can
freely pass from the "A" side to the "B" side
and, if needed, back the other way. Figure
6 shows the schematic of just such a device. Ours goes by the part number CP000
(and is available from all the usual places). I have to admit that Leviton also has a similar device, but I just hate the term
"signal bridge". Bridges are for people, cars and trains....not high
frequency signals. I prefer the more technically accurate term of "passive
coupler".The "CP000 Passive Coupler" is a twin-tuned circuit that separates
the two phases (if it didn’t, there would be one huge flash and your main
breakers would pop off) while allowing any high frequency signals to pass
through. It is a bi-directional device allowing signal to pass from "A"
to "B" and from "B" to "A". In
figure 7 the CP000 has been installed (next to the breaker panel in a 2x4 wall
box) so that the signal from
For most modest sized homes the CP000 is more than sufficient for the job. However (and you knew there was going to be a "however", didn’t you...), sometimes the addition of a passive coupler merely trades one problem for another. Figure 8 shows the addition of a 240v, phase-to-phase receiver. Now that
there is a passive coupler installed, (1.) - the
source leg still has sufficient signal level, (2.) - the
"B" leg has improved signal level, (3.) - but
for some reason, the phase-to-phase receivers don’t seem to work, or are
not reliable. Well,
here’s what is happening. The X-10 signal is "referenced"
to the neutral, so that any amount of signal on one
Figure 9 is a visual representation of a silly analogy. If we had 3 wires
(just 3 wires, not connected to anything) sitting on our work bench, we could
easily see what was happening. The battery represents the transmitter and so
there is 1.5vdc when measuring from the first wire to the third wire. With the
jumper in place we also measure 1.5vdc from the second wire to the third wire.
But when we try to measure the voltage (or signal) from the first wire to the
second wire, we get zilch. Now, any electrical engineer worth Pi will tell you
that a direct current circuit will not act exactly like a
multi-frequency, multi-circuit distribution system, but in this case it
is close. Before we try to do something about the phase-to-phase signal cancellation we still have another possibility to consider. Sometimes, especially as the residence gets larger and larger, it eventually comes to the point where there is simply not enough original signal to go around. The output power of a typical X-10 transmitter is actually less than the smallest night light. That is an awfully small amount of power to try and spread out over a large facility. What if the source leg (that side with the transmitter on it) has such a large area to cover, electrically speaking, that the signal level is only about 80mv to begin with. The opposite leg has practically no measurable signal at all. The home owner (or home automation company technician) decides to install a passive coupler only to discover that instead of increasing the signal level on the "B" leg, both sides now quit working. (Then they call me and rant and rave that our passive coupler is a crappy piece of equipment....but that is another story.) Most of the time it is far more advantageous to use a
sophisticated device that actually "recreates" additional signal
instead of just trying to spread out the original signal. Figure
10 is a block diagram of ACT’s "CR230"
coupler/repeater. It does not just allow original signal to pass through it, it
actually receives signal and then recreates and retransmits signal. When
installed next to a 120/240v breaker panel (figure 11) it will receive signal
from either leg and then it retransmits strong signal onto both legs. The
CR230, like all of ACT’s eight different X-10
compatible repeaters, was designed by our talented engineers and then built in
our production department right here in |
Don’t misunderstand now. I almost never recommend that a passive coupler
and a coupler/repeater be used together. In the overwhelming number of
instances they will cancel out each other,
or at best, reduce their
effectiveness. The
repeater tries to send signal that it has specifically created for the "A"
leg but the passive coupler steals part of it and puts it on the "B"
leg where it isn’t needed. Then they get in a big fight and its not a pretty thing to watch. So if you are ever
installing a coupler/repeater, remember to take the old passive coupler
completely out of the circuit. Don’t think that if one is good, both are
better. It doesn’t work like that.Most "Home Automation" companies used to automatically include a
repeater on any house that is 5,000 sq/ft or larger. It’s not that square
footage is an absolute measure. Actually, we at ACT have successfully shot
signal over 6 miles but I have also seen
As I said, most HA companies used to say that any house larger than 5,000 sq/ft got a repeater, but now many HA companies are lowering that figure to 4,000 sq/ft. As more and more homeowners install more and more home theater systems, computers and other electronic do-dads, the overall high frequency impedance is getting lower and lower (more "leaks") and so the need for a repeater becomes more prevalent. Not only will the repeater make increased signal available to the regular receivers, it will also fix that bothersome "phase-to-phase signal cancellation" problem. |
Okay so how does a coupler repeater work? Figure 12 is another one of my silly analogies. The original transmitter sends out its signal, in this case "A1 A1 A-On A-On". Unfortunately the original signal is not strong enough to get to the receiver. A coupler/repeater, however, is installed midway between the two. It receives the first frame of data (the first "A1) from the transmitter and then retransmits it at the exact same time as the
second frame of data (the second "A1") from the transmitter.
The repeater then receives the next frame of data (the first "A-On")
and, as before, retransmits it at the exact same time as the next frame of data
(the second "A-On") from the transmitter. The receiver
"hears" (receives) the "A1" and then the "A-On"
from the repeater.Don’t be confused by the term "signal amplifier" that is used by some people in the X-10 industry. In the true electronic sense of the word, the CR230 (like its Leviton counterpart) is not an "amplifier" but a "repeater". For most users the difference is inconsequential, but I want you to know the difference (...and yes, we at ACT also have true "amplifiers" but they are almost never used in residential applications). And so, in some small do-it-yourselfer houses, no additional coupling is needed. What natural coupling is present works fine. In larger houses, a passive coupler is usually needed to help that little bit of signal get from one side of the panel to the other. Then, in those big expensive houses, a coupler repeater is needed to "recreate" signal over the entire distribution system. |
Ah, I see that some of you have read between the lines and have a few questions, like:
Well, those questions (except for the last two) will be answered in the next installment, entitled... Which One Should I Use, Part IV As always, comments and suggestions are always welcome. Email me at pkingery@act-solutions.com |
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Phillip Kingery
is the representative of Advanced Control Technologies, Inc. |