Hi I should have clarified this is when my Alarm goes off, you know how they blink on and off well if the alarm goes off at night they sometimes seem like they get out of sink,
(long blather...FWIW)
Tom,
Do you have a mix of the old "instant on" switches and the newer "soft start" switches? If so, I could see the ON-OFF sequence of the lights getting out of sync because of the delays in the Soft Start units. I believe X10 has since fixed this by changing the switch firmware again, but not sure, maybe another forum "old geezer" has better info.
The CFL troubleshooting may be the answer to some units simply not responding. If you have a large system you might consider JV Engineering's XTBM signal/noise meter. I loaned mine to a friend and long time X10 user, in Florida who moved in to a new home and had serious "nothing works at night" problems and could not locate the problem.
After an hour of using the XTBM, he nailed it to a fluorescent ceiling fixture in the kitchen. He had not considered the old 4 foot, 40watt, fluorescent tube fixture a possible noise source to X10, and generally they are not. Perhaps this one has a solid state ballast instead of the old magnetic style. But my point is sometimes noise sources are so "outside of the box" that some X10 trouble shooting equipment is needed.
BTW a simple, cheap, battery powered AM radio tuned to the low end of the dial (550 - 650KHz) can sometimes help you find troublesome electrical noise. Sweep it around the home room by room, holding near outlets, appliances, wall warts, etc. A loud buzz will indicate a noise source BUT THE NOISE MAY NOT BE A PROBLEM FOR X10 transmissions (emphasis on
may not). Temporarily disconnect the noise source and see if X10 starts to work again. If it does, you have identified a possible problem area for filtering. Noise tend to be cumulative so not everything needs filtering. Also a "blow torch" repeater will many times solve noise problems without the need for additional filtering.
Credit to Charles Sullivan and "Uncle Phil" Kingery for the AM radio troubleshooting hint.