piconut Posted March 9, 2017 Posted March 9, 2017 I have a lawn lamp plugged into a load sensing outlet and was wondering if there is any way to write a program to determine if the bulb is burned out? The only program I have on it now just turns it on at sunset and off at sunrise. Thanks for any help you can provide.
Teken Posted March 9, 2017 Posted March 9, 2017 (edited) Insteon offers only one hardware devices which detect wattage: Synchro Linc The iMeter Solo has been discontinued and only the Energy Display is available. If you had Z-Wave incorporated into the ISY Series Controller there might be more options in terms of energy monitoring. The only other recourse is to have a dedicated energy monitor that can relay the information to the ISY Series Controller like the Brultech ECM-1240 & Green Eye Monitor (GEM) working in concert with the Dash Box. So no there isn't a simple, direct, method to detect a blown bulb . . . Edited March 9, 2017 by Teken
piconut Posted March 9, 2017 Author Posted March 9, 2017 OK, thank you Teken. I do have the Z-Wave model so I might see if there is something out there that would work.
PhanTomiZ Posted March 10, 2017 Posted March 10, 2017 This may work for you. I'm not sure what access you have with the ISY, but it is supposed to be able to monitor power used...I have a few in the mail at the moment, so I can't tell you much more, yet. http://aeotec.com/z-wave-plug-in-switch/1477-technical-specifications.html
Teken Posted March 10, 2017 Posted March 10, 2017 Piconut, May I ask are you seeing premature failures of the light bulbs in use? I ask because this isn't very common these days given 2017 production standards in lighting technology. Even the humble incandescent bulb has a standard 15~25,000 hour service life. It should be noted that older Insteon products did not last very long when a bulb expired. Going off old memory and rolling back the time machine its suspected the back flow of surge current when the bulb blew back fed into the Insteon module and damaged various components in the hardware. I haven't seen any recent threads about dual band modules having the same failure rates due to blown bulbs though. Just wanted to give you a related history lesson in case this is something that is happening . . .
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