Plugwise Oddities and general findings
Posted: Sun Jan 02, 2011 8:53 pm
Got my 9 plugs installed and running however:
2 circles in the cellar (circle 8 powering the Quinta and Avanta and circle 2 a fridge). I call them circles 2 and 8 because that's the sequence my own software polls them. If I poll circle 2 then circle 8 fails and if I don't poll C2, C8 comes through OK. The same thing happens visa versa. So when C8 is polled first, C2 fails. Both circles are plugged in all the time so it's not that they are taken out of the loop. I just have problems with polling both. The source software also has trouble but finds them both eventually. I took a good look at the Source messages and saw that sending multiple of the same request takes care of a burnthrough. So if one circle request fails, I repeat the same request up to 5 times and almost always I get a reply somewhere within these extra five requests. It is not a timing issue. It appears to me as somekind of routing problem but don't understand why. I don't have much clou about MESH networks so that may be the problem. But Source also has trouble so....
Second oddity is this: I got a circle now powering my complete PC domotica setup and it ran fine for two days orso. After that I got two very quick powercycles (off and back on again) within one hour which obviously shutdown my server PC and that is unacceptable. The circle was plugged into the wall directly and in the circle I got a surge protector and in the surge protector I got the power cable to my setup. These cycles happened during testing and programming, but I cannot issue a command that would cycle (toggle) a plug so quickly so....??? Or is there a reset command somewhere that does this?
Now I got the surge protector first in the wall followed by the plugwise circle followed by the power cable to my setup. I never had trouble with powercycles before, so maybe a Circle can produce a spike that triggered my surge protector. I find the surge protector of more importance so if it happens again I will remove the circle from my PC setup.
In general: I can't find standby killers to save money on which a cheaper system like FS20 couldn't do better. I checked my waterboiler and one hour it takes 55W and the other 0W. Average 27W. After 8 hours of no power, it takes 1900W for 5 minutes and therefore killing all the presumed savings. Same goes for the Quooker. That thing takes between 9 and 13W per hour and consumes even more when powering up again. Oven and Microwave can't be turned off because of the running clock display but consume even less power in standby than a circle would do. Same goes for dishwasher, drycleaner etc. So in my system I got the circles now just for fun to have something to look at and they produce nice indicators in my domotica theme. I can now see if a device is in use or not which makes up for good eyecandy in my floorplan panel.
Stuff I can save money on is a spare PC consuming 15W when it is powered off, my old Humax DVB-C plus some other stuff attached to the same plug (30W) and two speakers with powered subwoofers consuming 17W each while doing nothing. All of those now switched using 25Euro FS20 switches. Obviously money can be saved when going on holliday because of the time factor.
2 circles in the cellar (circle 8 powering the Quinta and Avanta and circle 2 a fridge). I call them circles 2 and 8 because that's the sequence my own software polls them. If I poll circle 2 then circle 8 fails and if I don't poll C2, C8 comes through OK. The same thing happens visa versa. So when C8 is polled first, C2 fails. Both circles are plugged in all the time so it's not that they are taken out of the loop. I just have problems with polling both. The source software also has trouble but finds them both eventually. I took a good look at the Source messages and saw that sending multiple of the same request takes care of a burnthrough. So if one circle request fails, I repeat the same request up to 5 times and almost always I get a reply somewhere within these extra five requests. It is not a timing issue. It appears to me as somekind of routing problem but don't understand why. I don't have much clou about MESH networks so that may be the problem. But Source also has trouble so....
Second oddity is this: I got a circle now powering my complete PC domotica setup and it ran fine for two days orso. After that I got two very quick powercycles (off and back on again) within one hour which obviously shutdown my server PC and that is unacceptable. The circle was plugged into the wall directly and in the circle I got a surge protector and in the surge protector I got the power cable to my setup. These cycles happened during testing and programming, but I cannot issue a command that would cycle (toggle) a plug so quickly so....??? Or is there a reset command somewhere that does this?
Now I got the surge protector first in the wall followed by the plugwise circle followed by the power cable to my setup. I never had trouble with powercycles before, so maybe a Circle can produce a spike that triggered my surge protector. I find the surge protector of more importance so if it happens again I will remove the circle from my PC setup.
In general: I can't find standby killers to save money on which a cheaper system like FS20 couldn't do better. I checked my waterboiler and one hour it takes 55W and the other 0W. Average 27W. After 8 hours of no power, it takes 1900W for 5 minutes and therefore killing all the presumed savings. Same goes for the Quooker. That thing takes between 9 and 13W per hour and consumes even more when powering up again. Oven and Microwave can't be turned off because of the running clock display but consume even less power in standby than a circle would do. Same goes for dishwasher, drycleaner etc. So in my system I got the circles now just for fun to have something to look at and they produce nice indicators in my domotica theme. I can now see if a device is in use or not which makes up for good eyecandy in my floorplan panel.
Stuff I can save money on is a spare PC consuming 15W when it is powered off, my old Humax DVB-C plus some other stuff attached to the same plug (30W) and two speakers with powered subwoofers consuming 17W each while doing nothing. All of those now switched using 25Euro FS20 switches. Obviously money can be saved when going on holliday because of the time factor.