Has anyone had experience with these types of switches doing this? I
am assuming there are no safety concerns.
RonB
Power outages will do that. I have a lamp that does that. 1 outage goes to
low. 2 outages goes to medium. 3 outages goes to high. 4th outage will turn
it off. When I return home lamp shows how many outages. If lamp is OFF I had
4 outages OR had NONE. ww
Hi,
Did you unplug the cord from the receptacle wait couple mins. and plug
back in? If not, try it.
HUMIDITY MAY BE A FACTOR....I LIKE THEM, BUT I'D REMOVE IT...A SHORT
ANYWHERE NEAR THAT CIRCUIT MAY HAVE AFFECTED THE ELECTRONIC SWITCHES
INTERNAL COMPONENTS....A REGULAR DIMMER MAY BE BETTER.
TGITM
I once had a touch lamp that would come on whenever there was a power
burp. I would hear all the backup power supplies beeping their
complaints about the incoming power quality at which time I would
notice the touch lamp come on.
TDD
The detection has to be pretty sensitive so disruptions in the supply
easily trip them. I'm not a fan myself ans we don't have any but
there's nothing wrong with them other than the occasional false trip.
I'm going to assume it was power interruptions or surge, and keep an
eye on it for a while. We live in a rural area where brief
occurrences happen now and then. The switch really doesn't get used
much unless we are looking at something in the display cabinet.
Thanks to all.
RonB
Apologies if I repeat myself but last fall one of the metal bodied end
table lamps I'd installed a touch swich in maybe ten years ago began to
turn off (from its highest intensity) without my touching it.
I noticed a couple of Box Elder bugs had made it inside the house again
and were occasionally seen near that lamp.
I couldn't believe that a bug that small had enough body capacitance to
trip the touch dimmer if it landed on the lamp body. And, I finally saw
one land there without affecting the dimmer.
I finally cought one of those damn bugs affecting the dimmer. It was
crawling up the brass bulb socket shell and when it reached the top one
of its front feet touched the top of the lamp bulb's screw base which
was just barely visible at the top of the socket shell.
So, what was happening was that the bug was creating a resistive path
between the metal lamp body and one side of the ac line. (Which side of
the line depended on which way the non polarized line cord was plugged
into the wall outlet.) And that was more than enough to trip the dimmer.
Jeff
--
Jeffry Wisnia
(W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE)
The speed of light is 1.8*10e12 furlongs per fortnight.
And nobody without your sig block would have had the patience,
curiosity, and expertise, to figger all that out.....
Good going. It is nice to know some people just can't let a mystery
remain unsolved.
--
aem sends....