Hey all, I'm pretty new so forgive any strange questions. I did some research before posting this so I hope I'm not asking the already covered.
I just installed an XPCP phase coupler hoping it would fix my problems and it doesn't appear to have helped at all. I'm not inexperienced in wiring things to my panel. I'm fairly certain I have the coupler connected properly.
Is there any sure fire test to see if the coupler is actually functional? I got it off ebay, listed as new, but if it's defective how would I determine it?
I did an inventory of my panel and mapped out every last switch and outlet. I've identified each one's phase and have a pretty good idea of where the wires are all run.
I'm thinking I'm either having noise issues or distance perhaps? My house isn't huge by any means. It is an older house but it is all copper, some very new and some older.
I did identify one source of noise I believe. My hall light wasn't coming on, I unplugged my microwave and now it works. They are apparently on the same circuit (I verified this). Do many microwaves cause noise, or will newer ones be better? This is occurring when the microwave isn't running, so I found that odd.
Considering that I notice no improvement to anywhere in my house with the coupler, and after mapping out what each light or outlet's phase is, one thing that is strange to me is I have issues talking to some circuits on the same phase as the circuit my cm15a is plugged into. BUT I am also experiencing excellent reliability in some rooms that are on the opposite phase.
Particularly, Let's say my cm15a is on phase B in my office. My living room lights, porch lights, fireplace controller and ir543 receiver are all in the same circuit, and they are on phase A. I haven't experienced a single reliability issue with these devices. So to me that might suggest I don't have issue bridging phases, with or without a phase coupler.
My dinning room however has exhibited various reliability issues, which is strange because it is on phase B. What's more strange to me is unlike my living room circuit with many many electronics connected to it, my dinning room really has just one lamp module connected to it.
So, same phase as cm15a, few devices = issues. Opposite phase of cm15a, many devices = no issues.
Presuming I don't have phase bridging issues, what am I left with? I can't have noise on the dinning room circuit, can it be noise from another? Can this be an issue with distance? From my office to the breaker to either room they look about the same distance to me.
I'm going to continue troubleshooting tomorrow. Swapping breaker positions regardless of them being on the same phase. Turning all breakers off but the one to my pc, and the offending area. Testing as such.
As a last note, I do own a leviton plug in signal booster. These don't work very well, the lock up. BUT when I plugged this in, my dinning room and my hall light appeared to work well, even with the microwave plugged in. I had it plugged into my dinning room, the room I can't get a signal to the lamp module. So the lamp module can't read the signal, but the booster can? I find that odd, I thought they have to be placed somewhere that can get a half decent signal. Maybe the booster is just better at picking up weak signals.
Any tips? Thanks.