Missed your update while I was scanning microwave ratings. Yes, a 15A filter should be adequate. However, if the 5A filter did not solve the problem with the microwave plugged into it but off, then the 15A filter may not be the answer either.
It IS safe to plug the microwave into the filter for testing as long as it is not switched on. If your X10 devices work properly in that configuration, then the larger filter should do the job.
Jeff
So here is what I have tried...
1) Old Microwave (1000 watt GE Model) is plugged into wall. No filter, nothing. x-10 works.
2) Microwave is plugged into the wall. No filter, nothing. x-10 does not respond in 2 rooms, but all of the others work.
3) Microwave is plugged into 5 amp filter. Microwave is off (clock is on). x-10 does not respond in 2 rooms, but all of the others work.
4) Microwave is unplugged. x-10 works.
So based on your response above, the 15 amp filter might not work. I really don't want to keep buying solutions that don't work. I understand that this is tricky stuff. Any other things to try?
Thanks for all of the posts, I am just getting frustrated.
John
he microwave plugged into a 5 amp filter, plugged into the wall. The microwave is OFF (but the clock is on). x-10 does not work. If I remove the filter and leave the mir