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Many homes have two-way light switches, particualrly in stairwells.
These switches have a shortcoming; the "on" and "off" positions reverse when the partner switch is operated.
This can lead to a wall plate where both switches are in the "off" position, yet one is up, the other down.
There are
two solutions
1. The switches are replaced by non-latching pushbuttons. Each push changes the state of a flip-flop which controls a solid-state relay. Push on, push off, all switches always correctly aligned.
2. Rocker switches with a small solenoid and some control logic, linking each pair of switches. When the partner switch is toggled, after a short delay, both switches snap into the "correct" position consistent with the status of the light.
[link]
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Actually, in a two-way switch system, it is dependent entirely upon which way the switches are installed. Either 'on' is consistently both toggles in the same configuration, or consistently opposite eachother. There's no way to effect the logic unless you flip the switchbox over. |
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Both of these seem sortof baked, by-the-way. |
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I must admit, I have gone back and forth in houses to flip things around in an effort to make both the switches "correct". |
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Push button switches for on and off are no good, however. I have an X10 lightswitch which is a button, and i find that when I'm entering a room where the lights were left on, I turn them off by habit, and when leaving a dark room, turn them on. |
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A toggle is nice because on stays on and so forth. |
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a real buggar if you want to change lightbulbs and *hate* it when the new bulb lights up in your hand. |
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Use double-throw momentaries at both locations. For each switch, "up" will energize a latching relay, "down" will turn it off. The switch will always return to center, and always moves in the same direction for the same action. (So pushing it down when the lights are off doesn't do anything.) |
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Just buy a feckin candle. |
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//(So pushing it down when the lights are off doesn't do anything.)// |
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Except in the UK, where it's necessary to invert the circuitry so "up" is Off, and "down" is On. |
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//in the UK.... "up" is Off, and "down" is On// |
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Not so. "Down" is On and "up" is Off. |
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//in the UK.... "up" is Off, and "down" is On//
Just be sure to mount the switch cross-wise. |
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// the depressed bit or the bit left out // |
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Ah, the eternal dilemma of choosing between Unipolar Disorder and Paranoia resulting in Social Exclusion.... |
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Even if you flip one (or both) of the switches over, you still have a situation where the fixture could be either on or off with any pair of configurations. |
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This must be the slow class .... |
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At the bottom of the stairwell is a 2-gang light switch. One switch operates the porch light, the other the stairwell light. Up is off, down is on. |
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When the porch light is on, the switch is down, when it is off, up. |
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A person enters the house. The porch light is on. The switch is down. They turn off the porch light and turn on the stairwell light. The porch switch is now up and the stairwell switch is down. The upstairs switch moves DOWN, indicating ON. |
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The person goes upstairs, turns on a bedroom light and switches the stairwell light off by moving the switch UP. The downstairs switch also moves UP (= OFF). |
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Please, try to understand before you die. |
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in an open stairwell just use one of those pullstring fixtures. |
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Good idea, [FT], why don't you make a noose and hang yourself from one ? |
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I tried; got cut down by somebody that wanted to turn the light off and couldn't lift me. |
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Damn. We'd have got away with it too, if it wasn't for those pesky kids ...... |
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I am just finishing off commissioning a very upmarket apartment that has a lighting control system.
A Pair of pushbuttons are set (left is on/Dim up, right is Off/Dim down). Each active status can be set on the switch via a feedback object. We have two of these, one at the top and one at the bottom of the stairwell. Because the system is on a network bus you can use the same button for the same function and can synch the active status on the pushbutton LEDs to either tell you which one is active or else indicate which button you should push to change the light status. Very expensive but very functional. |
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