Not sure if this is the proper forum, and this is my first post, so I'm not sure about other technicalities here. But, here goes.
I am new to X10, and really want to stick with it. My problem is controlling a basic outdoor lighting transformer. It is an inductive magnetic wire-wound transformer, rated for dimming, 200W, 12VDC output, 120VAC (dimmable) input.
After speaking to X10 tech's, and reading the spec sheets, the XPDI3 seemed perfect. And after hooking everything up today, all worked perfectly, woo hoo!
BUT. At that last dimming increase step of the XPDI3, the transformer's input circuit breaker blows.
At the second to the last X10 step-up of the dimmer, the voltage between the XPDI3 and the transformer is 121.9 VAC; and the transformer output is 12.4 VDC. With the final step of the XPDI3, however, the transformer hums, AC voltage goes to 107, DC voltage goes to 7.3, and the transformer's input circuit breaker trips.
Again, every dimming step below this works perfectly, going up and down. It's only that last step that messes up. These results are the the same, with and without a 12v load on the transformer.
I'm no electrician, but here's some guesses at causes and solutions:
1. Is my house current slightly too high (122VAC)? And will a conditioner or limiter of some kind fix all this?
2. Or, is the transformer's input circuit breaker too sensitive? And perhaps in need of replacement? (BTW, spec sheet says it's good for 4A at 32VDC / 250VAC; looking up the part number, I found the spec:
http://www.digikey.com/product-detail/en/W28-XQ1A-4/PB185-ND/45062)
3. Or, is there something about the XPDI3's functioning, in that last control step does something special, but intolerable to a downstream circuit breaker?
I really want to stick with X10 and solve this, and it seems I'm so close! So thanks for any ideas.
Best regards,
Cliff
[edit, a little later]
I hooked up the transformer directly to the mains, without X10 components. Input = 122.6VAC, output = 12.5VDC. And its breaker did NOT trip. So that seems to rule out #1. And maybe #2.
Then I set things up using the basic lamp module, LM465. It behaved identically, that is, perfectly, up to just before the brightest dimming step; then the transformer input breaker tripped in the same manner. I'm kinda dismayed that the "pro" version, specifically designed for inductive loads, didn't do any better than its little brother.