Since then I have been pursuing a new approach - the Tuned Signal Sucker - to severely attenuate out-of-band noise, and even attenuate in-band noise. Of course, that also attenuates the X10 signals themselves, and it will only work in homes that incorporate a signal booster to push the X10 signal well above the noise level. In the limited testing I have done here it seems to do exactly what the simulation showed.
That is basically what the XPNR does.
That is true, but there is a difference. Because the XPNR is intended for systems with normal X10 transmitters, it has relatively little in-band attenuation. The problem that many of us have is due to noise near 120KHz that gets right through the receiving stage bandpass filters.
The TSS attenuates all noise, but in-band noise not as severely as out of band noise. The TSS has about a factor of 4 more attenuation to in-band noise compared with the XPNR. Of course, the downside is that it will also attenuate the X10 signals themselves, which is why it must be used in a system with a signal booster.
I don’t see this as any panacea. I started work on it initially due to the fellow who had an insurmountable noise problem coming in over the powerline. Everything we tried did not totally solve the problem, and he eventually gave up on X10 control. I think that one of these on each phase with his system driven by the XTB-IIR would have at least given him a shot at a working system.
Jeff