Regarding AHP & CM15A. If I set TRANSCEIVE to NONE, my understanding is that the CM15A will not convert a received RF signal to a PLC. For instance, an EagleEye set to H1 will send out an RF signal H1-ON - the CM15A will receive the RF and transmit it to AHP via the USB wire. AHP can/will act on the H1-ON in whatever manner the user has set (macros). The key is the CM15A will not place an H1-ON onto the powerline.
But, if the CM15A is set to TRANSCEIVE housecode "H", then in addition to the above, the CM15A WILL place an H1-ON signal onto the powerline.
Given the above is correct, the TRANSCEIVE setting of the CM15A has NO EFFECT on what AHP does. For instance if AHP has a macro that triggers on the H1-ON, and in turn sends a H4-OFF PLC, the CM15A will lay the H4-OFF PLC onto the powerline - correct?
So the transceive setting of the CM15A is only for the RF that it receives from sensors or remotes.
If that's all true, what about AHP's RF commands? If a macro sends a RF "H4-OFF" signal, and the CM15A is set to NOT transceive H/C: "H", then the CM15A only transmits an RF "H4-OFF", but if it's set to transceive H/C "H", will it do both an RF and a PLC?
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Jeez, now that I wrote all that, I forget what question I'm trying to anwser in the first place... I think it has to do with I need a failsafe way to turn an appliance OFF and I'm thinking of using an RR501 set to "D1". If AHP sends both a PLC "D1-OFF" and an RF "D1-OFF", then even it the powerline is flooded or noisy, the RF command should ensure the device goes OFF - right? (and the TRANSCEIVE setting of the CM15A has nothing to do with it?)