I started with a limited system. All I had hoped for was to dim the lights in my home theater. But because my lights and equipment was in both phases of my electrical service I almost immediately starting having problems. adding a RR501 relocating the TM751 made my theater stable. But the CM11A I purchased was useless. Remote range was never a problem, I always used palmpads or the theater remote and a Infrared Mini Controller (IR543).
By the time I installed cameras, I understood the phase issue and simply planned the system to operate all on the same phase. Again the palmpad remotes and the X10 floodlights gave plenty of signal transmission.
When I decided to expand my system .... and add AHP with BXVC (through-out the house).... I had to make a new plan. I put in a passive phase coupler, the dryer plug thingy, which made the two phases function as one.
Of course the range (or lack of) of the AHP gave me fits! I copied a mod I had read about here at the forum. It was a simple mod: breaking off the top of the plastic antenna, exposing a bit of the wire inside, then soldering on a long bare wire, and taping it to the plastic stub. The fast-and-cheap mod resolved my AHP issues.
I now use one transceiver for one house code, four other codes are transceived through AHP. BOTH the transceiver and AHP are located in my basement, not generally what I would recommend, but it works well. I don't get all the range I would like from eagle and active eye motion sensors. I am sure partly, because the transceiving is done in the basement.
I use one stick-on remote, about 14 feet from the AHP.... close to it's limit in range. I use one two button remote... no range problems with it. Actually, now with BXVC, most of my remotes are in drawers. The one stick-on remote and the one two button remote trigger macros that control my microphone switching. But even those are back-ups as I use follow me commands, which trigger the macros and turn microphones on. and off.