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Re: Do these exist: "Instant on" or very rapid start CFL???



Please trim your posts or top-post.


Thanx
-------------
"Smarty"  wrote in message news:it7of1$i2h$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

On 6/13/2011 11:30 PM, Robert Green wrote:
> "Smarty"<nobody@xxxxxxxxxx>  wrote in message
> news:it59cr$32a$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> On 6/12/2011 2:07 AM, Robert Green wrote:
>>> "Smarty"<nobody@xxxxxxxxxx>   wrote in message
>>> news:isul5d$i0f$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>>
>>>>> <stuff snipped>
>>>>>
>>>> Thanks Bobby for your great insights and elaboration regarding X-10.
>>> I'm worse that a reformed smoker when it comes to preaching XTB.  I
> really
>>> was just about to dump a lot of time and effort spent with X-10, CPUXA,
>>> HomeVision, etc. because the signal propagation became so unreliable.
> Even
>>> WITH couplers, repeaters and every other thing I threw at it, eventually
>>> including a futile "feudal" system of RF transceivers control items
> local to
>>> them (electrically speaking) because that was the only way to counter
> the
>>> horrendous amounts of line noise besides filters, and even then the "Did
> Not
>>> Turn On" events were getting to be the norm.  Totally unacceptable.
>>>
>> This was the same stage I reached Bobby, but with less effort on my part
>> to really solve the problem. I just "gave up" and concluded that the
>> X-10 hardware was better suited for a different era.
> It's certainly true that X-10 didn't age very gracefully.  But there's not
> much in the world that even COULD make the transition to a different
> "electronic" era.  AM/FM radios still work, but not TVs.  Think of all the
> dead audio and video formats (I have *both* kinds of "video disc" players
> I'm keeping for antique value).  X-10's design is remarkable in a number
> of
> ways and uses some pretty clever techniques to do its magic.
>
> Many of its problems come from features other HA systems don't even have,
> like local sensing when a user turns a lamp switch on.  I suspect that's
> the
> circuitry that's most vulnerable to line noise and spikes.  Some even come
> from its biggest "feature" - its low cost.  People who didn't know what
> X-10
> was were buying it because of their early voucher deals.  Rather than pay
> the programmer who developed their obnoxious pop-under ads, they basically
> gave away their inventory as a loss-leader.  Or so some wags in the
> industry
> say.  I once calculated from some of their filings that there are up to 2
> *million* X-10 users (or should I say owners of X-10 equipment?) out
> there.
> People found out the hard way that it didn't "scale up" well in a quite
> insidious way.  Every transmitter is also a signal sucker so the more X-10
> devices you have, the more signal degradation you experience.  Reminds me
> of
> some government projects I worked on.  (-:
>
>
>>>> At one time quite a few years ago, long before fluorescent lighting and
>>>> other issues degraded my X-10 system, I had a very workable arrangement
>>>> here, and used it without complaints for perhaps 2 decades or longer.
>>> That makes you, as I suspected "an early adopter" who likes to keep up
> with
>>> current technology.  Lots of vendors were selling X-10 gear in the
> 1980s.
>>> It also makes you vulnerable to having some of the noisiest "first
> edition"
>>> gear out there, as was the case with so many CFL bulbs and the parallel
>>> electronic ballast technology for fluorescent tubes.  The early CFL
> lamps
>>> were very X-10 unfriendly.  The very early CFLs I bought, Chinese-made
>>> "Lights of America" $10 bulbs were like miniature broadcast stations,
> they
>>> were so noisy they could pass beyond a normal X-10 filter with ease.
>>>
>> A lot of X-10 hardware I added to my system came from the X-10 web  site
>> and their many enticing offers. They often sold "buy this and get that
>> free" or "buy two and we will give you two more" types of deals and I am
>> a total sucker for discounts, rebates, etc. I wound up buying and
>> installing at least 20 more X-10 items during that period, most of which
>> worked fine until the fluorescent lighting and switched power supplies
>> began to multiply in my home.
> That's a predictable pattern. As offensive as their ads were, they were
> effective.  Who didn't have one or two lights that had switches at the far
> end of the house or in inconvenient places?  Who wouldn't risk the very
> little money it took to get one starter kit and see that the stuff was,
> indeed, close to magic for some intractable electrical problems?  From
> there, X-10 just took over the house because they kept sending me vouchers
> that basically rained nearly free equipment for almost a year.
>
> I began using X-10 when there were still photographic darkrooms.  I had
> the
> room lights hooked up to two appliance modules, one B1, the other B4.
> With
> a belt RF transmitter, I had to press the two buttons in sequence to get
> the
> lights to turn on.  Very handy and because it was so cheap, piggybacking
> two
> (or even more) modules to make a "security code" of sorts prevented
> someone
> in another room from accidentally activating the lights when the paper
> safe
> was open.  Also extremely useful in preventing "spike ons" - I've never
> had
> a spike turn on two piggybacked modules and unfortunately, after a storm,
> it's a crapshoot what's going to come on by itself.  HomeVision now
> supervises restarts after a power blip, but I still piggyback critical
> items
> ever since I came home to find the X-10'ed vacuum cleaner had been running
> all day. )-:  What a stink - the bag, of course, was almost full for
> maximum
> stenchability.
>
>>>> Over the course of the last few years, I have moved a lot of my branch
>>>> circuits over to a transfer panel for a standby generator, removed the
>>>> phase couplers and amplifiers and some filters I had added, and
>>>> essentially removed most of my X-10 components except those within very
>>>> close proximity to one another.
>>> You are not alone in describing the devolution of your X-10 system.
> There
>>> used to be only two defenses to the problems X-10 experienced with its
> new
>>> neighbors (switched power supplies, mostly) on the home powerline:
>>>
>>> One was extensive filtering which gets a little tiring after the tenth
> one
>>> is installed.  Filters  comes with as many problems as it solves.   )-:
>>>
>>> The other was decentralizing - the feudal approach.  The constant
> failing of
>>> remote signaling leads to disconnection, module by module.  I call it
> the
>>> feudal approach because it parallels the way the Vandals sacked Rome and
>>> destroyed the remarkable lines of communication and commerce of the
> Empire
>>> from the outside in.  Far reaching outposts are abandoned and central
>>> command devolves into local "stronghold" garrisons that are situated and
> act
>>> in a way favorable to staying alive.  But I digress . . .
>>>
>> I particularly began to experience severe signal attenuation as I began
>> using power strips, or otherwise loading my branch circuits. I
>> attributed this to shunt capacitance but may not be correct in this
>> assumption. I briefly played with different power strips, but as I got
>> less control of distant devices, my solution also became more localized
>> (and thus less useful).
> Yep.  I had a bunch of power strips that very, very ironically were
> labeled
> X-Ten that completely absorbed X-10 signals.  Stopped 'em dead unless the
> controller/transmitter was plugged into the same outlet or the power strip
> was plugged into an appliance module.  It took an enormous amount of
> detective work (and shelling out $320 for a Monterey analyzer) to finally
> figure things out.
>
> It also takes a known monomaniac like me to *care* enough to run down the
> intermittent problems that plagued me.  I learned how many things can
> affect
> X-10 transmission.  One of my favorites was the CFL you could turn on, but
> not off (because the noise it emitted on blocked any remote commands).
> That's why there are so many sites that list the potential X-10 problems.
> I
> wouldn't recommend it for non-techies.  It looks easy but isn't.  But I
> can
> set up systems for people who need it and don't care at all how it works.
> It's *very* useful for people with disabilities.
>
>>>> I have no doubts whatsoever that proper filters, additional amplifiers,
>>>> careful removal of the worst offending noise sources, etc. could tame
> my
>>>> system. I just no longer have an interest in doing any of this, and I
> do
>>>> have many hard-wired Ethernet devices doing the specific things I need
>>>> to do with little or no problems.
>>> Then you're probably NOT a candidate for the XTB.  The optimum point
> seems
>>> to be in the first stages of X-10 disconnection, where you stop using it
> for
>>> things that are going to piss you off like outside lights that burn all
> day
>>> because X-10 signals are iffy.  You've moved into the next stage:
> you've
>>> converted critical (I assume) functions that used to be X-10 into
> hardwired
>>> Ethernet devices, inherently more reliable and manageable but IIRC,
> orders
>>> of magnitude more expensive than X-10.  Has that changed?
>>>
>>> I've gone all out and attached an XTB to my all-housecode transceiver
> and to
>>> some other critical transmitting gear so I could indeed go back to "plug
> and
>>> play."  That's more than most people would do - for them an XTB coupler
>>> repeater might suffice but I'm a PC builder and there's a lot of EMI
> running
>>> around my house and I wanted the lights to just work.  And for PLC, the
>>> commands always get through now.  It's just like it used to be in 1985
> when
>>> I pulled all the light switches and converted them to X-10.
>>>
>> I am really beyond an X-10 line carrier solution. I have also
>> unsuccessfully tried other power line carrier devices, including
>> intercoms, CCTV surveillance cameras, and Ethernet extenders, and not a
>> single device I have tried works reliably when my fluorescent lighting
>> is turned on. Some of it does not work even when the fluorescent
>> lighting is turned off.
> I can assume from your radio operations that you may have a level of EMI
> that's beyond what most of us see.   A long time ago when I was a police
> reporter, the *thing* to have was a Bearcat programmable police scanner
> (at
> a time when the Regency 10 channel crystal unit was king).  I brought my
> new
> toy over to my ham friend, we programmed in all the local channels. Worked
> fine.  We programmed one channel to match his new handheld VHF portable.
> Every time he keyed that stinking radio up near the Bearcat, it lost all
> its
> programming.  Reprogrammed, it worked fine, but if he was just a few feet
> away, whap!  All gone. From that experience and from hearing my
> girlfriend's
> radio, TV, telephone AND record player all emitting signals from the three
> HUGE AM radio towers across the street even when turned off, I realized
> radios can do some strange things when near by.
>
> In a perverse way I am glad so many people have given up on X-10.  I've
> been
> able to buy huge assortments of modules on FeeBay for 10 cents or less on
> the dollar.  More for me!
>
>>>> I've had commercial and ham FCC licenses since the 1950s, and have
> built
>>>> 35 Heathkits in total, as well as spent most of my professional career
>>>> as an electrical / electronics engineer, so the technical aspects are
>>>> comfortable and familiar.
>>> I apologize if it sounded like I was impugning your CV.  It's infinitely
>>> superior to mine.  In getting to know Jeff and several other
>>> designer/builders of X-10 gear I've realized that it does take highly
>>> specialized gear to make sense of the X-10 signal.  You obviously know
> that
>>> the X-10 signal is not just an bit train without any error correction
>>> whatsoever.  It's primitive but it's there and it seems to be enough.
> Take
>>> a look at Jeff's pages - you'll be able to appreciate the quality of the
>>> units, the thought that went into building them and his ongoing
> commitment
>>> to continuous improvement.
>>>
>> No apologies needed Bobby, and I was merely trying to make the point
>> that I am not over my head with this stuff, and have spent a lot of
>> hours with logic analyzers, DSOs, spectrum analyzers, and much home
>> built RF gear, and find the X-10 problem to be much better solved with
>> other methods rather than X-10.
> I'm relieved.  I can be *very* insulting when I try.  (-:
>
> There's no doubt that hardwiring is preferable to X-10 control wherever
> it's
> possible. I've switched over things to HomeVision's relay controllers if
> the
> item's critical.  With all the problem paths on the X-10 troubleshooting
> tree I'd certainly be tempted to go in another direction if I were
> starting
> over.  Some things that X-10 did weren't really suitable for such a slow
> protocol.  Temperature sensing was one and motion detection another.
> Those
> two functions put too many commands on the line and collisions became
> inevitable. However, for straight up load control, nothing comes close to
> the price range and assortment of available gear.  There's no fear with
> X-10
> that the company might sink and drag its protocol down with it.  It's in
> the
> public domain now, which is GOOD for standards, at least IMHO.
>
>> I sincerely do believe that all the
>> false triggering of my lights whenever the CFLs are turned on is
>> entirely a noise issue, and that a longer code or better protected code
>> would minimize or prevent this problem entirely. There are no collisions
>> of actual X-10 in this situation since no deliberate X-10 transmissions
>> are being sent. The X-10 receivers are totally responding to the noise
>> and interpreting it as if it were X-10, and my lights come on all over
>> the place with regularity and relatively annoying frequency within
>> seconds or minutes after certain CFLs are switched on manually in other
>> parts of the house.
> I'd love to see what an analyzer says is going on.  Do you have any two
> way
> modules?  What kind of transmitters/controllers are you using?  Live
> anywhere near the DC area?  (-:
>
> Did I mention monomania?  Every hinky X-10 installation calls to me and my
> faithful meter, Tonto.  Watched too much TV growing up growing up, I
> guess.
> Hi, ho, Silver!
>
>>>> I attended classes with Irv Reed, who (quite
>>>> famously) co-developed the Reed Solomon coding methods (at MIT /
> Lincoln
>>>> Labs) still used prominently to mitigate bit errors in communication
>>>> channels, and still feel up to the task of analyzing and designing such
>>>> things.
>>> Obviously.  (-:
>>>
>>> I'm sure you have the IQ, but even the smartest guys who design and
> still
>>> maintain X-10 systems for a living own X-10 specific meters and
> analyzers.
>>>    From what I was told a long time ago (hence very unreliable!) you
>>> need
> a
>>> scope with digital storage and even then you'd have to count hex to
> decode
>>> what you were seeing.  Analyzers like the Monterey do all that grunt
> work
>>> (alas with no easy recordabilty until now for me*) and present a decoded
> (or
>>> not) human understandable display of what commands were sent and,
> depending
>>> on the meter, a lot more.  You can read the strength of each bit in a
> single
>>> frame.  The noise level at different "windows" of the AC cycles, the
>>> frequency of that noise, whether the frame you were measuring was the
> first
>>> frame, the second frame, or a repeater-enhanced second frame.  Why would
> you
>>> care?  Well, when two transmitters collide, a bit by bit voltage map
> will
>>> show that and give you a relative idea how far from the meter each
> device
>>> is.  Meters can detect many other conditions that the best ham radio
>>> operator in the world would have to laboriously decode manually.  That's
> why
>>> the X-10 meter has been invented over and over again in so many
> different
>>> formats!
>>>
>>> What I am trying to say is that unless you have some pretty specialized
>>> tools in your radio shack, investigating serious X-10 problems isn't
> very
>>> easy with a scope, even if only you need to drag it to a few different
>>> outlets or get 100' long extension cords.
>>>
>> I agree and I have never brought any big guns into this problem solving.
>> I fundamentally say that turning on a noise source causes frequent false
>> triggering, with no X-10 traffic, and thus I must either reduce the
>> noise or improve the receiver / detector. Deliberate X-10 triggering is
>> an entirely different matter, also suffering from severe probability of
>> detection versus false alarm rate issues. In this latter case, SNR is
>> indeed an issue, and power density per bit, SNR across bits, frames,
>> etc. would be meaningful to measure and talk about, but my most severe
>> issues were entirely false triggering with no X-10 traffic present. This
>> is what prompted my comment regard code design / code length /
>> protection bits / etc. in the common situation I experience where random
>> lights turned on very often but only when CFLs where pumping out noise.
> You realize this is torture for a self-taught X-10 detective.  (-:
> Hearing
> the gruesome details of a crime but not being able to apply my "forensic"
> tool kit to the crime scene makes me twitch.  Actually, you've probably
> removed all of the offenders of interest by now, so you've reached a sort
> of
> "move along, there's nothing to see" point.
>
>>>> In the case of my own X-10 EMI as well as the more troublesome
>>>> wideband EMI that compromises my shortwave and AM reception, I have
>>>> learned to live with it. Even if I am willing to invest the time and
>>>> effort and money, my neighbors still create a lot of powerline and near
>>>> DC to 20 MHz trash as well.
>>> Well, you're clearly out of my league.  (-:  Maybe Jeff will chime in
> and
>>> talk about all the troublesome installations he's tamed.  I realize
> you've
>>> taken another path with Ethernet and I believe that some form or
> wireless
>>> Ethernet home automation solution will dominate the market - the
> "highway"
>>> is already built and is usually power-failure protected and standalone
> (no
>>> PC required).  Until X-10 for Ethernet appears, I'm going to stick with
> X-10
>>> for lights, fans and other non-critical appliances.  For the rest of the
>>> stuff, I've got a HomeVision expansion board with relay and sensor chain
>>> channels.  Not quite as plug and play as the Ethernet but sufficient to
>>> monitor and execute criminal (oops, I meant critical!) functions in the
>>> house.  Since Ethernet is workable world-wide, it's going to overtake
> any
>>> proprietary protocol.  Why build another highway when so many layers of
> the
>>> OSI network are already built, usually with enormous overcapacity (at
> least
>>> 1GB nets in the house, anyway)?
>>>> I entirely agree that Zigbee has been far too long in coming although
>>>> there are some devices out there. Hardly a replacement for X-10 at this
>>>> point. And Insteon appears to have gained enough traction and solved
>>>> enough problems to be the real contender at this stage.
>>> I'm amazed they survived the recession.  Lots of similar "modern living"
>>> stores folded during that time.  I've been stranded by companies going
> out
>>> of business before.  Their proprietary nature gives me pause.  But I
> agree,
>>> they seem to be the only contender out of many that appeared around the
> year
>>> 2000, except for hoary old CeBuS (cough) that still has defenders
> throughout
>>> the world but that never lived up to the hype.
>>>
>>> Sorry if I offended you.  My proselytizing is better aimed at people who
>>> haven't yet converted away from X-10.  Maybe that number is shrinking
>>> because a lot of people have disconnected back to ground zero or who
> just
>>> use a mini-timer to control some lights when they are away
>>>
>>> --
>>> Bobby G.
>>>
>> Bobby, your comments and suggestions regarding X-10 are very insightful,
>> and no offense of any kind is taken. I also hope my comments are not
>> seen as offensive in any way. My lack of enthusiasm has mostly to do
>> with the timing of any X-10 improvements, which for me would have made
>> sense perhaps a year or two ago, but now seem pretty irrelevant. I have
>> disconnected and removed many devices, and still own and use a few
>> localized X-10 systems where they continue to work reliably.
> I totally understand.  The time to involve the XTB is before switching
> over
> to other solutions but I still think if you've got any X-10 running at
> all,
> that you really benefit by boosting the repeated signal from 5 to 25V in
> almost every case.  It's sometimes simply being able to "muscle through"
> the
> mire of EMI that wins the day.
>
> While I've never used any of the many firmware features of the XTB-IIR
> repeater, I know that Jeff has taken great care to eliminate noise issues
> and make the XTB configurable to various problem installations.  In that
> respect, his XTBM meter shows both the current noise level and the
> frequency
> of the transmission, noise or not.  That's why I selected it for my CCTV
> "channel four" - it gives, in a single screen, information that you have
> to
> wander around the Monterey's many menu options to see.
>
>>> than $20) that is recorded on the fourth channel of my CCTV recorder.
> This
>>> way I can call up the video and play it in slo mo, reviewing all the
>>> commands received in the last week.  I can also see real-time readings
> of
>>> X-10 from any TV in the house.
>>>
>>>
>> This is a very ingenious and inexpensive alternative to a DSO or logic
>> analyzer. What a clever approach!
> It only took ten years to come up with it!  I could have done it with the
> Monterey much sooner but several things stopped me.  For one, the Monterey
> shows less useful information on the screen at one time, and that's a
> serious consideration for "televising" the data.  I can't push the
> Monterey
> scroll button when I am looking at the signal display on the downstairs
> TV.
> Also, at $320 for a device that appears out of production (but still in
> stock in some places) I wasn't willing to risk the Monterey's existence
> leaving it on all the time.  It's still the best portable diagnostic X-10
> tool on the market because of all its functions but Jeff's meter is what I
> would recommend to anyone but a monomaniac like me.  There have been times
> when knowing the exact strength of each bit of the X-10 frame has been
> useful in figuring out what was wrong.
>
> As nice as the playback capacity is, I would much rather have a meter that
> could log all the X-10 related "stuff" (noise, legit commands, collisions,
> fragments, etc) to a text file for search.  I tried fooling around with
> OCR's the video but OCR is hinky enough without trying to read characters
> from an NTSC source using CCTV resolution.  Oh well.
>
> When the XTBM came out, I convinced Jeff to add a backlight option so that
> it would be easily readable via camera and bought one of the first
> assembled
> units.  Since the XTBM is much cheaper and much more easily repaired, I
> thought it would be the perfect device to leave on 24x7.  So far, so good.
> (-:
>
> Now I have to convince him to build something to "sniff" X-10 RF signals
> because on occasion I've been badly tripped up by the little rubber
> buttons
> on the PalmPad series of transmitters sliding under the edge of the button
> hole and getting stuck ON.  The missing tool from my X-10 detection kit is
> something that could determine where a rogue X-10 RF transmission was
> coming
> from.  Someone recently suggest that Dave Houston's DIY all housecode
> transceiver was able to read RF signal strength and could be repurposed as
> an X-10 specific RF meter, but it's outside my skillset to modify
> something
> like that to be an RF sniffer.
>
> --
> Bobby G.
>
>
Thanks again for your insights and comments Bobby. To answer your
question, I do not own any 2 way X-10 devices. My X-10 devices were
almost entirely light control, with some outdoor motion detector
spotlights which could emit X-10 codes to turn on indoor lighting when
motion was detected. I had several appliance modules to switch heavier
loads, some pocket RF transmitters to remotely control things,
controllers all over the place, some with built in timers / clocks, and
not much more. My total investment in X-10 was, at most, a few hundred
bucks. It was very easy to walk away from it financially, but I do miss
the ability to control everything.

X-10 owners like us are likely to be "control freaks" to some extent,
and having a system which acts randomly and erratically defies our
"authority". It is frustrating to see the system mis-behave, and even
more so while our significant others scoff and smirk and complain when
lights begin to randomly turn on, turn off, or not light at
all.......... It was extremely easy for me to eventually "pull the plug"
on X-10 as my CFL and other noise environment took over control...

I had a long and happy run with X-10, and was indeed an early adopter,
probably late 1970's if I had to guess up until the late 1990s for the
truly useful and reliable operation. I would call that a success, and
thus I had no problem taking it down. Some stuff still remains, and I
occasionally look at the Insteon stuff and think about starting over again.

Then I take a deep breath and put down the Smarthome catalog and come to
my senses...........



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