Understanding X10 Power: Circuit Diagrams and Explanations"

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Older homes often use a loop-in arrangement for light switches, where both wires are live and the neutral is absent. X10 "plug and play" switches draw a small current from the light fixture, but the specifics of their circuit design are unclear. Users are seeking detailed circuit diagrams to understand how X10 modules extract DC power from the live wire. One participant suggests that building a custom electronic light switch could be achieved by using components from a motion detector switch, which includes necessary power management circuitry. The discussion also touches on the compatibility of X10 systems with different voltage standards, indicating that while the American version is tuned for 120VAC/60Hz, there may be European alternatives.
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Hey,

Older homes use a loop-in arrangement where the two wires coming down to a light switch are both live, and the neutral's nowhere near.
The X10 "plug n play" switches leak a small current through the light and draw their current from there... I was just wondering, how exactly do they do this?

Can someone point me in the direction of a full circuit diagram of how the X10 modules draw their DC power inline with the live??

Thanks :)
 
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Sorry, man... I have no idea what you're talking about. :confused:
 
For the pulg in units that something else plugs into. I think there is a fairly standard power arangement.

if you're talking about a replacement wall switch then I think there are two tap methods. One for power off just assumes a low load resistance, the other for power on uses a small inductor.

Don't have any X10 schematics.
 
Danger: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X10_(industry_standard )
http://www.smarthomeusa.com/info/x10theory/x10theory/#theory

NoTime: I'm basically trying to build an electronic light switch of my own, but I need a DC power source in the light switch, so I'm not after X10 specifically, just the same way they tap their power.

Thanks for the replies :)
 
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Thanks for the links. The Wiki article isn't there, but the other one was about as comprehensive as anyone could want. I used to have the plans around somewhere for an intercom system that transmitted over the power lines, but that was just a straight signal over the system-neutral wire. This thing is in a whole 'nother realm. One question, though; it appears to be specifically tuned for 120VAC/60Hz. Do they make a European version as well?
 
danger, yeh...
its not specifically tuned... that's just an american website :)
 
Figures. :rolleyes:
 
juming said:
NoTime: I'm basically trying to build an electronic light switch of my own, but I need a DC power source in the light switch, so I'm not after X10 specifically, just the same way they tap their power.
I never got around to analysing how this was done.
But, you could pick up a cheap motion detector switch.
This would have all the power managment circuitry.
Probably cheaper than buying the components seperatly.
 
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