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RE: Interesting Concept... or complete idiocy?
- To: <ukha_d@xxxxxxx>
- Subject: RE: Interesting Concept... or complete idiocy?
- From: "Phil Harris" <phillip.harris1@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 20 Feb 2002 20:42:26 -0000
- Delivered-to: mailing list ukha_d@xxxxxxx
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Title: Message
I
forgot to mention that it also isn't as conveniently cased as a plug in
appliance module...
Phil
D'oh, ignore the last message, just me typing b4
thinking!
Stuart
About a tenner more than an appliance module...
...plus no current sensed local control....
...plus no "latching" output (so loses status when power
removed).
Phil
Alan,
Have you looked into building one of these?? Any ideas of
approx cost?
Cheers
Stuart
take a look
at http://www.cix.co.uk/~pplunkett/x10.htm
Alan
Shields alan@xxxxxxx On Wednesday, February 20,
2002, at 06:34 pm, Ian Lowe wrote:
I am fishing for the views of experts before
comitting time to something that's obviouslly flawed.
As I
understand it, X-10 signalling is basically this:
You place (and
detect) a 1ms wide pulse of 120khz with an amplitude of as little as
.1v 20ms or so after the zero crossing, such that after an
agreed pre-amble, a burst means "1" and no burst means "0" this
transmits house code, unit code, command a couple of times for
redundancy.
Now, I saw some articles about improving X-10 range and
reliability, which all centred around improving how accurately the
reciever circuit was tuned to 120khz, and this got me
thinking..
It started as "what if the 120khz oscillator was *very*
precise?" I figured a PIC Chip with an XTAL clock could be that
precise, and then I figured, why bother?
Why not just use the
ADC in the PIC chip to analyse the powerline as an analog signal, and
watch for a burst of "noise" in the right place on the wave?
I
figure if I used a large resistor to limit the current, and used
some circuit arrangement to "crop" the powerline "signal" so that I was
only looking at the segment from -10 to +10 I would be able to do some
simple DSP on the line to watch for firstly, the zero cross, then a
pulse of "something kinda like 120khz" in the right place.
As i
recall, if you want to recognise (and replicate) a signal, your
sample rate needs to be at least double the signal rate. so, for a
120khz signal, you would want to be sampling at 240khz. Given that even
the fairly basic PIC12C jobs have a 10Mz clock, I'm sure sampling at
240khz wouldn't be stressing things too much!
Just wondering if
you could implement a basic X-10 module with very little in the way of
components?
Does this seem deeply ridiculous? or just technically
too bothersome? or might it even
work?
Ian.
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