[Hai-users] Problem with ALC lighting on OmniPro II

Brad Looney2ns at wowway.com
Wed Mar 19 15:20:53 CDT 2008


I fail to see what a discussion about X-10 has to do with ALC problems.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: MARK HIMES 
  To: HAI-users at tssi.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, March 19, 2008 2:27 AM
  Subject: Re: [Hai-users] Problem with ALC lighting on OmniPro II



  That's really interesting. I have an Omni-Pro I, connected to a Stargate
  system via serial port, for many years. The Stargate and the Omni both
  have all (or most) of the X-10 addresses configured. In the case of my
  Omni (I), it only allows 1/2 of the whole X10 addressing range (128 addresses
  instead of the full 256). I have about 220 X10 addresses configured in Stargate,
  So the Stargate has 99% of all these exclusively programmed for use in the Stargate.
  My Omni-P has about 8 X10 addresses that it will respond to but NONE of the
  X10 addresses are programmed to be transmitted by Omni. I programmed the
  Omni to allow commands to be SENT TO STARGATE that (eventually) 
  trigger an X10 transmission FROM the Stargate. This is so that I could 
  be sure I never had any X10 "collisions" from both of these devices and kept 
  my programming sanity at a "sane" level.

  I have NEVER had random X10 devices go on/off as randomly as your
  experiencing. However, I have had on rare occasions 1 SINGLE receiver/device
  act up and using my Monterey X10 troubleshooter, found the bad receiver
  and/or device (1 address, 1 house code 1 number). On a couple of rare conditions
  I found a bunch of device addresses on the SAME house code causing a lot of grief.
  Again, some troubleshooting with the tool, turning off stuff, etc and found that 
  one of my many 16-button consoles was transmitted random garbage and
  replaced it to get back to NORMAL.  And a couple of times, many years ago when
  I was first programming the Stargate I discovered a several "bugs" (all mine) in the 
  software. Some were easy and some were hard to find. but my Stargate
  X10 transmissions AND programming have been solid for many years.

  SOOOOOOoooooo. You didn't say how many devices or house code
  addresses you had, but make a list of all of them and make sure that 
  some or ALL of them are truly random.

      If all or most all are on the same house code, you might have another
      transmitter somewhere acting up on that SAME house code.  

      If some of the  single device addresses are "ALWAYS" part of your 
      random problem and others are NEVER a problem, you might have some
      devices/receivers that are bad (receiver, device, loose connections).
      And you might also have an address transmitter other than Omni (console)
      or a single device, screwing all the other devices on the same house
      code) I.e. mixture of single device failures along with 1 or more 
      transmitting device failures (Other than Omni). Always keep in mind 
      how many devices that you use ARE ALSO an X10 transmitter !!

      Are all the addresses (house codes and device codes) that are part
      of the random actions on the SAME PHASE of your power lines ?
      What do you use for a Phase coupler ?  That could be part of your
      randomness problem.

  I noticed you said" I have definitely seen this kind of behavior from 
  X-10 switches, and kind of  expect it there. I EXPECT A NEAR 
  PERFECT SYSTEM ! That begs the question "HOW LONG" have you 
  been allowing this randomness to occur ....WITH OUT CHECKING 
  THEM OUT ?????   THOROUGHLY ?????

  Now the biggie. I have an Omni (I) but I NEVER have programmed
  any X10 transmission activity into my Omni. MY reason is more 
  simpler that just sanity. My Omni programming "capabilities" are 
  hugely inferior to Stargate. I don't see that an OMNI 11 could have 
  THAT much difference than Omni I. Actually I upgraded mine to
  an Aegis many years ago.

  So I suggest you FIRST make a LIST of all the addresses you are using
  and track down the ones that DO and the ones that DON'T act up. 
  This may take a while (that's the nature of "random"), From personal
  experience over the many years, that is the best first step I EVER
  take. It allowed you me see the scope of a whole problem and help
  better isolate the next steps to take. That's part of analyzing
  the scope and nature of a "System" and its problems.

  So AFTER you determine ALL THE ADDRESS that DO randomly operate
  and all the ADDRESS THAT NEVER randomly operate, THEN you have a
  better chance if isolating ..... What do all the randomly acting devices
  have in common, (or if its easier, maybe ask what is common about the
  ones that NEVER act up) ?

  Now if you've truly proven there is no single X10 device bad, or something
  messing up a whole X10 house code of addresses and that EVERY device
  code you are using is acting up and both both phases are experiencing
  problems .... AND your program is truly bug free then I'd say
  something goofy is going on with your Omni. If THAT happens,
  try another KNOWN GOOD power adapter (tat supplies power to your
  Omni). Noisy or flakey power supplies are notorious for causing 
  intermittent problems. But if that's the case, then ALL your addresses should be affected.
  Also consider that your X10 Power Line Interface (converts the Omni 10 
  commands to/from the power line, (or loose connection, bad wire, etc etc).

  The only thing I can truly testify is that I have had several years
  now with ABSOLUTELY NO X10 Ghosts. It took a few years of
  troubleshooting to get the "marginal" or even solid failing devices 
  off my complete system and cleaning up all software bugs and 
  an occasional wall-wart. That's 190+ single X10 device/address units, 
  over 14 X-10 transmitting devices/consoles, most with 16 buttons
  and 25 "virtual/indirect (mostly software)" X10 addresses .

               No random here.

  Hope all this ranting gives you a some ideas ?!

  Mark



    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Dan Butterfield 
    To: HAI Users Group 
    Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 12:38 PM
    Subject: [Hai-users] Problem with ALC lighting on OmniPro II


    I recently added some ALC lights (wired via cat-5 to an OmniPro II), and am 
    experiencing some odd lighting behavior.  The lights will periodically 
    spontaneously turn on or off (primarily off).  This happens when no other 
    activity is occurring in the OmniPro II (e.g. no one is turning lights on or 
    off, and no timed events are triggering), and is random and unpredictable. 
    It typically is the case of a light turning off some minutes or hours after 
    manually turning it on.  It occurs with different lights in the house, so 
    doesn't seem to be tied to one switch.

    I am going to start trouble shooting this by disconnecting different 
    switches from the OmniPro II to see if some switch is injecting commands 
    into the system in some way, although with the infrequent intermittent 
    nature of the problem, it'll be a long slow process of elimination.  I have 
    tried to eliminate all programming that references lights, to try to take 
    some kind of programming error out of the equation.  However, has anyone 
    ever encountered this kind of behavior before?  Could bad connections to the 
    switches cause this?  Is cat-5 sufficient for ALC signalling, or is it 
    possibile I am picking up some interference?

    I have definately seen this kind of behavior from X-10 switches, and kind of 
    expect it there, but was surprised to see it in an ALC system.  I had hoped 
    it would be more reliable!  I have a bunch more switches to install, but am 
    holding up because of this problem. 

    _______________________________________________
    HAI-users mailing list
    HAI-users at tssi.com
    http://romaine.tssi.com/mailman/listinfo/hai-users



------------------------------------------------------------------------------


  _______________________________________________
  HAI-users mailing list
  HAI-users at tssi.com
  http://romaine.tssi.com/mailman/listinfo/hai-users
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://romaine.tssi.com/pipermail/hai-users/attachments/20080319/2c3bd490/attachment.htm


More information about the HAI-users mailing list