h a l f b a k e r yWe are investigating the problem and will update you shortly.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
Rather than whole-house replacement units for home automation, build inband X10 or wireless ZigBee functionality into the small replacable circuit breaker units compatible with currently in-use panel systems.
These smart breakers would be able to monitor per-circuit power usage and power quality/factor,
sending monitoring data back to a home control unit or PC, and possibly if desired offer remote control tripping of the breaker.
This should be feasible with current technology -- consumer devices like the Kill-a-Watt meter show that power monitoring electronics that run parasitically off the monitored load can be fit in a small profile, and Zigbee/X10 chipsets are not very large either.
Kill-A-Watt
http://www.thinkgee...ts/electronic/7657/ Kill-A-Watt meter [skids, Oct 25 2006]
(?) Zigbee
http://www.zigbee.org/en/index.asp Zigbee Alliance Homepage [skids, Oct 25 2006]
X10
http://en.wikipedia...(industry_standard) About X10 (wikipedia) [skids, Oct 25 2006]
[link]
|
|
With a traditional console too, in case your PC's circuit breaker trips, right? |
|
|
I know for a fact that this is already possible with some reasonably small MCB. Schneider Electric do them with an embedded web page. They may manufacture under Telemechanique or SquareD. Have a google. |
|
|
I love the idea of sitting at a dead PC, trying to remotely reset the breakers. |
|
|
Circuit breakers are a safety device. They are intended to operate when some other part of the system has failed. As such it's best that they are completely self contained, without any dependencies on other parts of the system, since those other parts can't be trusted to be operating correctly at the time when the circuit breaker has to do its job. It's also best that the breaker doesn't try to do anything other than its safety-related task, as this introduces complexity into its design, along with a corresponding risk that the breaker will misbehave at a critical moment. [-] |
|
|
Correct, Wrongfellow. I may have to find these devices as a reference but the fact that you can view them and see the last fail state has got to be great for diagnostics. |
|
|
I see that as you giving yourself a self-diagnostic to see whether you're insane or not. If the test results come up positive, who attempts to give you treatment? |
|
|
[if a circuit breaker trips in the forest...] |
|
| |