I've been using X10 for over 10 years in my home.
I'm working on setting up an application in a nearby business with a Wifi router mounted in the rafters about 20 ft up in the high-ceiling lobby. Occasionally, the router gets into a state where it stops responding to wireless traffic and turning the unit off and back on will reset it and get it to start working again. The problem is that the router is powered by an outlet that is not switched, so I figured a remote switch would do the trick. At this point, I don't expect there to be any other things that need to be remotely controlled, so I really don't need PLC signals - just RF control of the transceiver module will suffice.
I get the RR501 transceiver mounted on the outlet in the rafters and control it with an HR12A remote from the ground. After I got it installed, I tried a few test power cycles using the remote. What happens is that once I switch the module off, it will not respond to the command from the remote to turn on again.
I searched through the forum and I've seen a few other posts with a similar problem and the suggestion in the past has been that either the transceiver or the remote (or both) are defective. I don't believe either to be the case in this instance.
- I have tried plugging the transceiver module into a ground-level outlet at the site, and the module consistently switches both on and off from well over 50 ft across the lobby.
- With the transceiver module installed in the outlet in the rafters, the same off-but-no-on behavior happens even if the remote is within inches of the transceiver. Unplugging the transceiver module for a second and replugging it in restores it to normal operation for a few more test power cycles, but eventually it quits responding. Manually power-cycling the module via the pushbutton on the module also restores it to normal operation for a few test power cycles after which it eventually stops responding again.
Any ideas on how to solve this?
Ultimately, the solution in this case looks to be purchasing a new router that doesn't go off into the woods requiring power-cycling to reset (it's a Linksys WRT54G that's at least 5 years old), but it'd still be useful to figure out how to troubleshoot/fix the transceiver/remote issue for future applications.