Just seems there must be some difference in the signal strength of the CM11A vs a TM751. The CM11A and the TM751 are plugged into the same circuit in the same room. And the palmpad/TM751 works fine.
I haven't measured this myself, but have read that the powerline signal level transmitted by an RR501 or TM751 is substantially higher than that sent by the CM11A or CM15A, maybe by a factor of two.
I agree with
Charles Sullivan on this - for a DETAILED CHART of the measured output voltages of most, if not all, of the
X10-Manufactured PLC Transmitters, SEARCH the
NEWSGROUP: comp.home.automation for articles by author '
Dave Houston'. He researched this topic a few years ago and documented his results.
You'll also find a few statements (somewhere in the same
NG too!) that
PLC TRANSMITTERS are actually
SIGNAL SUCKERS themselves!
[And plugging 4 of them into one 7-Outlet Power Strip will have an adverse effect. ]
(
Jeff Volp will
probably explain WHY to us all when he reads this.
).
Referring to your map of the circuits in your home (you did make one, right?
) try:
- Moving the RR501 and/or TM751 to a different circuit on the SAME PHASE as the CM11A
. - Moving the RR501 and/or TM751 to a different circuit on the OPPOSITE PHASE as the CM11A
Let us know if there are any differences.
A lot of signal strength problems are caused by newer electronic equipment like TV, PC, UPS, etc. which have switching power supplies. These either introduce RF noise on the power line or act as "signal suckers" because of a large filter capacitance directly across their line input. Try unplugging all appliances like this from the wall (merely turning off won't help) and retesting. If you can identify an offending appliance, a special X10 noise filter will solve the problem.
Yep!
robkwil61,
Take a look at this
New Troubleshooting Thread that I've been assembling and let me know if it helps you out.