Recently with the seasonal installation of some X10 modules for Christmas lights I found some modules were not responding to commands as they should. In the past however, if my memory is not faulty, they responded in all locations without a problem.
At the main electrical panel I have an XPCR unit that has been installed for several years and also installed are two 250V 1Mfd capacitors in series across the two phases. I also have an old carrier current intercom kicking around that I found can be used to hear the X10 signals if I open the squelch all the way.
What I have discovered on investigation is that with the two breakers closed so that capacitors are connected between the phases, I can here X10 signals on the intercom when the source is on one phase and the intercom is on the other. If I open the breakers on the capacitors, I cannot hear any X10 signals in the same configuration. If I then close the breakers connecting the XPCR, I still cannot hear the X10 signals on the intercom even though the light blinks twice on the XPCR with each command given.
From what I have seen, actually heard, I am pretty sure the XPCR has failed but I have several questions.
1. How many times should the light blink on a properly operating XPCR? I have a feeling the lights are only showing the reception of the original double burst signal from the source and it is not repeating it. The only thing I can find in the instructions is that the light blinks but there is no description of how it blinks.
2. If it has failed, and it appears that it has, I am also guessing that since the light still blinks on signal reception, fixiing it is probably not as easy as replacing a MOV or some such and it is best just tossed but I am open to suggestions.
3. As an aside, and nothing to do with my problem, in searching through past posts on XPCRs to see if I could find a blink sequence, I found where someone said that the both breakers connecting the XPCR should be closed simultaneously with no real explanation as to why. In the past I have flipped one breaker on and the other since they are not ganged and not had a problem. I am curious as to the rational for that statement. I would think as long as the neutral remains connected it would not be a problem. Even a ganged breaker might have some time difference even if it is very small.