• Time Delay Relay or other something that is ON TOPIC!!

    From ABLE1@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jul 29 10:21:31 2023
    Hello,

    I thought I would post this question here to see if someone can assist.

    I have a outside flood light on the soffit at about 16 Feet AGL with
    a motion sensor that is mounted at about 8 Feet AGL that is powered
    24/7 from a 120VAC Switch inside the garage.

    That is until Mother Nature throws a lightning bolt ⚡💥and zaps the
    power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the
    switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.
    Which is not needed and cranks up the electric bill!$!$!

    I could tear all the Romex wiring apart, install a water proof box,
    wire in a Time Delay Relay so that when the power comes back on the
    Motion Head is not powered for maybe 30 seconds or so.

    However, that seems like a lot of work and there should be a easier
    way!!!

    So, anyone have a thought or solution that would fit inside
    of a 4" Round Weather Tight Box that the Motion Head is mounted on??

    Or maybe some other thoughts that would make it a simple fix??

    Maybe some small Electronic Circuit thingie that would fix the problem.

    Thanks for any hints.

    Les

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  • From JoeC@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jul 29 10:12:34 2023
    On Saturday, July 29, 2023 at 9:21:47 AM UTC-5, ABLE1 wrote:
    Hello,

    I thought I would post this question here to see if someone can assist.

    I have a outside flood light on the soffit at about 16 Feet AGL with
    a motion sensor that is mounted at about 8 Feet AGL that is powered
    24/7 from a 120VAC Switch inside the garage.

    That is until Mother Nature throws a lightning bolt ⚡💥and zaps the power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.
    Which is not needed and cranks up the electric bill!$!$!

    I could tear all the Romex wiring apart, install a water proof box,
    wire in a Time Delay Relay so that when the power comes back on the
    Motion Head is not powered for maybe 30 seconds or so.

    However, that seems like a lot of work and there should be a easier
    way!!!

    So, anyone have a thought or solution that would fit inside
    of a 4" Round Weather Tight Box that the Motion Head is mounted on??

    Or maybe some other thoughts that would make it a simple fix??

    Maybe some small Electronic Circuit thingie that would fix the problem.

    Thanks for any hints.

    Les
    The light is designed to stay on if the power is interrupted momentarily. Your installation is not the problem. Either a new light or design a circuit that resets the power automatically.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ABLE1@21:1/5 to JoeC on Sat Jul 29 15:54:09 2023
    On 7/29/2023 1:12 PM, JoeC wrote:
    On Saturday, July 29, 2023 at 9:21:47 AM UTC-5, ABLE1 wrote:
    Hello,

    I thought I would post this question here to see if someone can assist.

    I have a outside flood light on the soffit at about 16 Feet AGL with
    a motion sensor that is mounted at about 8 Feet AGL that is powered
    24/7 from a 120VAC Switch inside the garage.

    That is until Mother Nature throws a lightning bolt ⚡💥and zaps the
    power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the
    switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.
    Which is not needed and cranks up the electric bill!$!$!

    I could tear all the Romex wiring apart, install a water proof box,
    wire in a Time Delay Relay so that when the power comes back on the
    Motion Head is not powered for maybe 30 seconds or so.

    However, that seems like a lot of work and there should be a easier
    way!!!

    So, anyone have a thought or solution that would fit inside
    of a 4" Round Weather Tight Box that the Motion Head is mounted on??

    Or maybe some other thoughts that would make it a simple fix??

    Maybe some small Electronic Circuit thingie that would fix the problem.

    Thanks for any hints.

    Les

    The light is designed to stay on if the power is interrupted momentarily. Your installation is not the problem. Either a new light or design a circuit that resets the power automatically.


    Hi JoeC,

    That is what I am looking for but to just hold off turning the power
    back on quickly. A small Time Delay Relay that on power up puts
    the Motion Detector unit back into it's normal operation.

    Basically the same as I do with the power switch in the garage but
    without my mental strain!!!

    I just need some device that is small enough to fit the 4" round box.

    Thanks for your interest in the challenge.

    Les

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  • From Bob F@21:1/5 to JoeC on Sat Jul 29 13:18:10 2023
    On 7/29/2023 10:12 AM, JoeC wrote:
    On Saturday, July 29, 2023 at 9:21:47 AM UTC-5, ABLE1 wrote:
    Hello,

    I thought I would post this question here to see if someone can assist.

    I have a outside flood light on the soffit at about 16 Feet AGL with
    a motion sensor that is mounted at about 8 Feet AGL that is powered
    24/7 from a 120VAC Switch inside the garage.

    That is until Mother Nature throws a lightning bolt ⚡💥and zaps the
    power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the
    switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.
    Which is not needed and cranks up the electric bill!$!$!

    I could tear all the Romex wiring apart, install a water proof box,
    wire in a Time Delay Relay so that when the power comes back on the
    Motion Head is not powered for maybe 30 seconds or so.

    However, that seems like a lot of work and there should be a easier
    way!!!

    So, anyone have a thought or solution that would fit inside
    of a 4" Round Weather Tight Box that the Motion Head is mounted on??

    Or maybe some other thoughts that would make it a simple fix??

    Maybe some small Electronic Circuit thingie that would fix the problem.

    Thanks for any hints.

    Les
    The light is designed to stay on if the power is interrupted momentarily. Your installation is not the problem. Either a new light or design a circuit that resets the power automatically.

    I have had multiple sensor lights that would do that.

    The light is probably designed to lock on if you turn it off and on
    again quickly. So making sure the power stays off long enough would
    disable that feature and do what he wants. Then, you would have to
    disable the fix to keep the light on for Halloween.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ABLE1@21:1/5 to Bob F on Sat Jul 29 17:03:06 2023
    On 7/29/2023 4:18 PM, Bob F wrote:
    On 7/29/2023 10:12 AM, JoeC wrote:
    On Saturday, July 29, 2023 at 9:21:47 AM UTC-5, ABLE1 wrote:
    Hello,

    I thought I would post this question here to see if someone can assist.

    I have a outside flood light on the soffit at about 16 Feet AGL with
    a motion sensor that is mounted at about 8 Feet AGL that is powered
    24/7 from a 120VAC Switch inside the garage.

    That is until Mother Nature throws a lightning bolt ⚡💥and zaps the
    power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the
    switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.
    Which is not needed and cranks up the electric bill!$!$!

    I could tear all the Romex wiring apart, install a water proof box,
    wire in a Time Delay Relay so that when the power comes back on the
    Motion Head is not powered for maybe 30 seconds or so.

    However, that seems like a lot of work and there should be a easier
    way!!!

    So, anyone have a thought or solution that would fit inside
    of a 4" Round Weather Tight Box that the Motion Head is mounted on??

    Or maybe some other thoughts that would make it a simple fix??

    Maybe some small Electronic Circuit thingie that would fix the problem.

    Thanks for any hints.

    Les
    The light is designed to stay on if the power is interrupted
    momentarily. Your installation is not the problem. Either a  new light
    or design a circuit that resets the power automatically.

    I have had multiple sensor lights that would do that.

    The light is probably designed to lock on if you turn it off and on
    again quickly. So making sure the power stays off long enough would
    disable that feature and do what he wants. Then, you would have to
    disable the fix to keep the light on for Halloween.


    Hi Bob F,

    You are most likely correct that the quick off/on is built into
    the circuitry to give that ability. I had not thought of that
    before. However, Mother Nature does know and just wants to punish
    me for some unknown reason. :-(

    BTW The Halloween issue is a non-issue here!!!

    I would think a small Delay <On> Timer for 30-60 seconds would fix the
    problem. It just needs to fit the box.

    Thanks,

    Les

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  • From Allodoxaphobia@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 30 12:48:07 2023
    On Sat, 29 Jul 2023 10:21:31 -0400, ABLE1 wrote:

    power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the
    switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.
    Which is not needed and cranks up the electric bill!$!$!

    "cranks up the electric bill"?!? How do LED lights do that?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ABLE1@21:1/5 to Allodoxaphobia on Sun Jul 30 09:34:20 2023
    On 7/30/2023 8:48 AM, Allodoxaphobia wrote:
    On Sat, 29 Jul 2023 10:21:31 -0400, ABLE1 wrote:

    power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the
    switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.
    Which is not needed and cranks up the electric bill!$!$!

    "cranks up the electric bill"?!? How do LED lights do that?



    LOL

    So LED's apply a negative KWH co$t???

    I don't think so!! :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From ABLE1@21:1/5 to Klay Anderson on Sun Jul 30 14:05:05 2023
    On 7/30/2023 1:41 PM, Klay Anderson wrote:
    On Sunday, July 30, 2023 at 7:34:27 AM UTC-6, ABLE1 wrote:
    On 7/30/2023 8:48 AM, Allodoxaphobia wrote:
    On Sat, 29 Jul 2023 10:21:31 -0400, ABLE1 wrote:

    power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the >>>> switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.

    There are quite a few off-shore assembled circuits that will do what you want but will not fit in the space. Additionally, they typically need a small amount of DC to work the circuitry. There are several I've used and they work fine. Since you
    indicated an additional waterproof box is not desired, I suggest a box extender and possibly one of those cards. No matter what you do it's gonna get crowded in there. Oh, BTW, there are some programmable DIN rail mounting devices as well for mounting
    closer to the breaker box. Yet another idea is to add Z-Wave (Smartthings) to your home to automate this and other devices in your home. Replace that wall switch with a z-wave and you can at least turn it off and on remotely. There may be a way to add a
    turn-on delay as well depending on the switch.


    Hi Klay,

    Thanks for the extra input. I have found from another group
    that a Omron H3Y-2 would do the job. Already ordered one
    at a very good price. Once I have in my hands I will determine
    a best fit for the existing box. It it is a challenge I will
    swap it out for something else that will work. With the socket
    for the Relay Module it is only about 3.4" high and it might fit
    laying it on it's side. If not a 4" square PVC box should work.

    Time will Tell!!

    Les

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  • From Klay Anderson@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 30 10:41:43 2023
    On Sunday, July 30, 2023 at 7:34:27 AM UTC-6, ABLE1 wrote:
    On 7/30/2023 8:48 AM, Allodoxaphobia wrote:
    On Sat, 29 Jul 2023 10:21:31 -0400, ABLE1 wrote:

    power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the
    switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.

    There are quite a few off-shore assembled circuits that will do what you want but will not fit in the space. Additionally, they typically need a small amount of DC to work the circuitry. There are several I've used and they work fine. Since you indicated
    an additional waterproof box is not desired, I suggest a box extender and possibly one of those cards. No matter what you do it's gonna get crowded in there. Oh, BTW, there are some programmable DIN rail mounting devices as well for mounting closer to
    the breaker box. Yet another idea is to add Z-Wave (Smartthings) to your home to automate this and other devices in your home. Replace that wall switch with a z-wave and you can at least turn it off and on remotely. There may be a way to add a turn-on
    delay as well depending on the switch.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ehsjr@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 30 17:41:23 2023
    On 7/30/2023 2:05 PM, ABLE1 wrote:
    On 7/30/2023 1:41 PM, Klay Anderson wrote:
    On Sunday, July 30, 2023 at 7:34:27 AM UTC-6, ABLE1 wrote:
    On 7/30/2023 8:48 AM, Allodoxaphobia wrote:
    On Sat, 29 Jul 2023 10:21:31 -0400, ABLE1 wrote:

    power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion >>>>> sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the >>>>> switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.

    There are quite a few off-shore assembled circuits that will do what
    you want but will not fit in the space. Additionally, they typically
    need a small amount of DC to work the circuitry. There are several
    I've used and they work fine. Since you indicated an additional
    waterproof box is not desired, I suggest a box extender and possibly
    one of those cards. No matter what you do it's gonna get crowded in
    there. Oh, BTW, there are some programmable DIN rail mounting devices
    as well for mounting closer to the breaker box. Yet another idea is to
    add Z-Wave (Smartthings) to your home to automate this and other
    devices in your home. Replace that wall switch with a z-wave and you
    can at least turn it off and on remotely. There may be a way to add a
    turn-on delay as well depending on the switch.


    Hi Klay,

    Thanks for the extra input.  I have found from another group
    that a Omron H3Y-2 would do the job.  Already ordered one
    at a very good price.  Once I have in my hands I will determine
    a best fit for the existing box.  It it is a challenge I will
    swap it out for something else that will work.  With the socket
    for the Relay Module it is only about 3.4" high and it might fit
    laying it on it's side.  If not a 4" square PVC box should work.

    Time will Tell!!

    Les


    Your break even point (cost of electricity saved vs cost of
    Omron) comes out to about 4 years using rough estimates:
    12 outages per year; 6 hours 27 minutes per outage;
    15.5 W LED floodlight; $0.23 KWH average.
    You can come to a more accurate number using the specs that
    apply to you instead of the averages I used.

    That assumes your cost is $10.00. It won't be, using the
    Omron. You'll need to buy the proper fittings/rails/enclosures/
    wire etc. You'll need to install it in a dry location - ie
    indoors - which can add construction costs. If you jury rig
    the thing it will likely be unsafe, and definitly be unsafe
    as far as the NEC is concerned.

    The best solution - if it exists - is to buy a floodlight that
    is programmable the way you want it. What you (and I) have is
    designed to be programmable via an on/off switch to do exactly
    what you describe: a real brief power interruption turns the
    light on until either the sun comes up or you turn off the
    switch; an extended (several seconds) power interruption
    enables the light to respond to motion. You can find the
    description of that buried somewhere in the documentation that
    applies to your light.

    The REAL question is what is it worth to you to do about it?
    I understand the attraction of looking for a "gizmo" to modify
    what you've got. It can be hard to defeat that attraction.
    Cold hard reality can help. Run the numbers for your floodlight
    in your location. Think really hard about whether making things
    unsafe - or potentially unsafe - is worth it. Think about how
    much time and effort you have to put into it. There does come
    a point where it is no longer fun.

    Ed

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  • From ABLE1@21:1/5 to ehsjr on Sun Jul 30 20:55:31 2023
    On 7/30/2023 5:41 PM, ehsjr wrote:


    Your break even point (cost of electricity saved vs cost of
    Omron)  comes out to about 4 years using rough estimates:
    12 outages per year; 6 hours 27 minutes per outage;
    15.5 W LED floodlight; $0.23 KWH average.
    You can come to a more accurate number using the specs that
    apply to you instead of the averages I used.

    That assumes your cost is $10.00.  It won't be, using the
    Omron. You'll need to buy the proper fittings/rails/enclosures/
    wire etc. You'll need to install it in a dry location - ie
    indoors - which can add construction costs.  If you jury rig
    the thing it will likely be unsafe, and definitly be unsafe
    as far as the NEC is concerned.

    The best solution - if it exists - is to buy a floodlight that
    is programmable the way you want it. What you (and I) have is
    designed to be programmable via an on/off switch to do exactly
    what you describe: a real brief power interruption turns the
    light on until either the sun comes up or you turn off the
    switch; an extended (several seconds) power interruption
    enables the light to respond to motion.  You can find the
    description of that buried somewhere in the documentation that
    applies to your light.

    The REAL question is what is it worth to you to do about it?
    I understand the attraction of looking for a "gizmo" to modify
    what you've got.  It can be hard to defeat that attraction.
    Cold hard reality can help.  Run the numbers for your floodlight
    in your location.  Think really hard about whether making things
    unsafe - or potentially unsafe - is worth it.  Think about how
    much time and effort you have to put into it.  There does come
    a point where it is no longer fun.

    Ed


    Hi Ed,

    I totally understand your thinking. Being a Electrical Contractor for
    far too many years and now I that I have sold the business and basically
    QUIT!! I now have every day as Saturday and this is just going to be
    FUN!! And at my age of in excess of the national average of males.

    My cost on the Omron and parts will be about $25 and any needed wire
    and fitting is already in my old stock. The biggest bonus will be
    that if this all works as planned will be not lighting up the
    neighborhood all night long. :-) Especially if I am on a overnight
    road trip and wouldn't know it happened until I got home and was
    informed by others of the issue.

    To me it makes more sense taking on the challenge this way rather than searching for a Motion Head that will not do it or has the ability to
    program out the ability or some new fancy AI BlueTooth thingie that
    will do it my way. I see that as wasting my time and it would more
    than likely cost a lot more.

    Again Time will Tell!!

    Les

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  • From three_jeeps@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 30 17:16:26 2023
    On Saturday, July 29, 2023 at 10:21:47 AM UTC-4, ABLE1 wrote:
    Hello,

    I thought I would post this question here to see if someone can assist.

    I have a outside flood light on the soffit at about 16 Feet AGL with
    a motion sensor that is mounted at about 8 Feet AGL that is powered
    24/7 from a 120VAC Switch inside the garage.

    That is until Mother Nature throws a lightning bolt ⚡💥and zaps the power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.
    Which is not needed and cranks up the electric bill!$!$!

    I could tear all the Romex wiring apart, install a water proof box,
    wire in a Time Delay Relay so that when the power comes back on the
    Motion Head is not powered for maybe 30 seconds or so.

    However, that seems like a lot of work and there should be a easier
    way!!!

    So, anyone have a thought or solution that would fit inside
    of a 4" Round Weather Tight Box that the Motion Head is mounted on??

    Or maybe some other thoughts that would make it a simple fix??

    Maybe some small Electronic Circuit thingie that would fix the problem.

    Thanks for any hints.

    Les
    This should work: https://www.supplyhouse.com/ICM-Controls-ICM203B-ICM203-Delay-on-Break-Timer-03-10-Minute-Knob-Adjust-Delay?utm_source=google_ad&utm_medium=shopping_neutral&utm_campaign=Shopping_Neutral_New_users&gclid=CjwKCAjwlJimBhAsEiwA1hrp5iwaXx2qiYpvi7f-
    no2JczNmZznzwvodL86iaQE2bqBrwaPbXWZYDhoCdVMQAvD_BwE

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From three_jeeps@21:1/5 to ehsjr on Sun Jul 30 17:19:38 2023
    On Sunday, July 30, 2023 at 5:41:31 PM UTC-4, ehsjr wrote:
    On 7/30/2023 2:05 PM, ABLE1 wrote:
    snip
    The best solution - if it exists - is to buy a floodlight that
    is programmable the way you want it. What you (and I) have is
    designed to be programmable via an on/off switch to do exactly
    what you describe: a real brief power interruption turns the
    light on until either the sun comes up or you turn off the
    switch; an extended (several seconds) power interruption
    enables the light to respond to motion. You can find the
    description of that buried somewhere in the documentation that
    applies to your light.

    The REAL question is what is it worth to you to do about it?
    I understand the attraction of looking for a "gizmo" to modify
    what you've got. It can be hard to defeat that attraction.
    Cold hard reality can help. Run the numbers for your floodlight
    in your location. Think really hard about whether making things
    unsafe - or potentially unsafe - is worth it. Think about how
    much time and effort you have to put into it. There does come
    a point where it is no longer fun.

    Ed

    THis may be the best solution but one will be hard pressed to find an outdoor light that is programmable in the way he wants it. Searching for the perverbial needle in a haystack. If there are any.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From ABLE1@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 30 21:16:15 2023
    On 7/30/2023 8:16 PM, three_jeeps wrote:
    On Saturday, July 29, 2023 at 10:21:47 AM UTC-4, ABLE1 wrote:
    Hello,

    I thought I would post this question here to see if someone can assist.

    I have a outside flood light on the soffit at about 16 Feet AGL with
    a motion sensor that is mounted at about 8 Feet AGL that is powered
    24/7 from a 120VAC Switch inside the garage.

    That is until Mother Nature throws a lightning bolt ⚡💥and zaps the
    power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the
    switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.
    Which is not needed and cranks up the electric bill!$!$!

    I could tear all the Romex wiring apart, install a water proof box,
    wire in a Time Delay Relay so that when the power comes back on the
    Motion Head is not powered for maybe 30 seconds or so.

    However, that seems like a lot of work and there should be a easier
    way!!!

    So, anyone have a thought or solution that would fit inside
    of a 4" Round Weather Tight Box that the Motion Head is mounted on??

    Or maybe some other thoughts that would make it a simple fix??

    Maybe some small Electronic Circuit thingie that would fix the problem.

    Thanks for any hints.

    Les
    This should work: https://www.supplyhouse.com/ICM-Controls-ICM203B-ICM203-Delay-on-Break-Timer-03-10-Minute-Knob-Adjust-Delay?utm_source=google_ad&utm_medium=shopping_neutral&utm_campaign=Shopping_Neutral_New_users&gclid=CjwKCAjwlJimBhAsEiwA1hrp5iwaXx2qiYpvi7f-
    no2JczNmZznzwvodL86iaQE2bqBrwaPbXWZYDhoCdVMQAvD_BwE


    Hi three_jeeps,

    DRAT!! Yes that would but............... the Omron is already
    on the way. For convenience and size that would do the job!!

    Another day!!

    Thanks for the insight, just a bit late. ;-(

    Les

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  • From ABLE1@21:1/5 to All on Sun Aug 6 16:39:35 2023
    On 7/29/2023 10:21 AM, ABLE1 wrote:
    Hello,

    I thought I would post this question here to see if someone can assist.

    I have a outside flood light on the soffit at about 16 Feet AGL with
    a motion sensor that is mounted at about 8 Feet AGL that is powered
    24/7 from a 120VAC Switch inside the garage.

    That is until Mother Nature throws a lightning bolt ⚡💥and zaps the
    power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the
    switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.
    Which is not needed and cranks up the electric bill!$!$!

    I could tear all the Romex wiring apart, install a water proof box,
    wire in a Time Delay Relay so that when the power comes back on the
    Motion Head is not powered for maybe 30 seconds or so.

    However, that seems like a lot of work and there should be a easier
    way!!!

    So, anyone have a thought or solution that would fit inside
    of a 4" Round Weather Tight Box that the Motion Head is mounted on??

    Or maybe some other thoughts that would make it a simple fix??

    Maybe some small Electronic Circuit thingie that would fix the problem.

    Thanks for any hints.

    Les

    Ok, just a FYI followup.

    I received the Omron Delay Relay and YES, it did NOT fit the round
    4" box. I then picked up a plastic 4" square box and wired all up
    and set the Omron for a 1 minute delay. Placed a black sock cap over
    the Motion Head (made it night time) Power up, placed the motion sensor
    in test mode. Light came on and placed back to 3 minutes on timer.
    After 3 minutes the lights went off.

    Then I did a short power blip test off/on.

    It took a minute for the light to come on and then off in about 10
    seconds which is what it does on normal a power up.

    Sooooooo the Omron Delay Timer does work as desired!! YEA!!

    Thanks to all for your hints, suggestions and "otherwise"!!

    Les

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  • From ehsjr@21:1/5 to All on Fri Aug 11 21:46:53 2023
    On 8/6/2023 4:39 PM, ABLE1 wrote:
    On 7/29/2023 10:21 AM, ABLE1 wrote:
    Hello,

    I thought I would post this question here to see if someone can assist.

    I have a outside flood light on the soffit at about 16 Feet AGL with
    a motion sensor that is mounted at about 8 Feet AGL that is powered
    24/7 from a 120VAC Switch inside the garage.

    That is until Mother Nature throws a lightning bolt ⚡💥and zaps the
    power off for a second or two. When that happens at night the motion
    sensor head powers the lights on until I happen to notice and flip the
    switch off for about 5 - 8 seconds and then all returns to normal,
    otherwise the lights stay on until the Sun comes up.
    Which is not needed and cranks up the electric bill!$!$!

    I could tear all the Romex wiring apart, install a water proof box,
    wire in a Time Delay Relay so that when the power comes back on the
    Motion Head is not powered for maybe 30 seconds or so.

    However, that seems like a lot of work and there should be a easier
    way!!!

    So, anyone have a thought or solution that would fit inside
    of a 4" Round Weather Tight Box that the Motion Head is mounted on??

    Or maybe some other thoughts that would make it a simple fix??

    Maybe some small Electronic Circuit thingie that would fix the problem.

    Thanks for any hints.

    Les

    Ok, just a FYI followup.

    I received the Omron Delay Relay and YES, it did NOT fit the round
    4" box.  I then picked up a plastic 4" square box and wired all up
    and set the Omron for a 1 minute delay.  Placed a black sock cap over
    the Motion Head (made it night time) Power up, placed the motion sensor
    in test mode.  Light came on and placed back to 3 minutes on timer.
    After 3 minutes the lights went off.

    Then I did a short power blip test off/on.

    It took a minute for the light to come on and then off in about 10
    seconds which is what it does on normal a power up.

    Sooooooo the Omron Delay Timer does work as desired!!  YEA!!

    Thanks to all for your hints, suggestions and "otherwise"!!

    Les


    I'm glad you got it working as you want it. It's a clever
    approach.

    There is another way, but it is limited to those who
    have experience in electronics, and it is limited to
    only those motion sensors that can be accessed without
    destroying the assembly. In addition it applies to a
    specific type of circuit that you must be able to
    identify based on inspection. (It would be a whole
    bunch easier if you had a schematic, but that is
    extremely unlikely.)

    The method: find the latch circuit and defeat it. In
    the one I have it is two transistors. Adding a 6.8K
    resistor from the base of one of them to ground was
    all I had to do. All functions work as normal, except
    that a brief power loss does not "program" the lights
    to be always on.

    If it was easy to do, I would recommend it.
    I do not recommend it.

    It was, however, and interesting challenge.

    Ed

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  • From ABLE1@21:1/5 to ehsjr on Fri Aug 11 22:00:47 2023
    On 8/11/2023 9:46 PM, ehsjr wrote:
    On 8/6/2023 4:39 PM, ABLE1 wrote:
    On 7/29/2023 10:21 AM, ABLE1 wrote:
    Hello,

    I thought I would post this question here to see if someone can assist.

    I have a outside flood light on the soffit at about 16 Feet AGL with
    a motion sensor that is mounted at about 8 Feet AGL that is powered
    24/7 from a 120VAC Switch inside the garage.


    I'm glad you got it working as you want it. It's a clever
    approach.

    There is another way, but it is limited to those who
    have experience in electronics, and it is limited to
    only those motion sensors that can be accessed without
    destroying the assembly. In addition it applies to a
    specific type of circuit that you must be able to
    identify based on inspection.  (It would be a whole
    bunch easier if you had a schematic, but that is
    extremely unlikely.)

    The method: find the latch circuit and defeat it. In
    the one I have it is two transistors. Adding a 6.8K
    resistor from the base of one of them to ground was
    all I had to do. All functions work as normal, except
    that a brief power loss does not "program" the lights
    to be always on.

    If it was easy to do, I would recommend it.
    I do not recommend it.

    It was, however, and interesting challenge.

    Ed

    Thanks ehsjr,

    However, with no actual easy access to the internal working of the
    motion head, not having any schematics, not having any thing to see
    or play with, none (I repeat, NONE) of that will ever happen!!

    Besides, my solution to fix the issue is working as I designed it.

    I am very happy with my back door fix!! :-)

    Thanks again for your nice comments!!

    I am glad your solution worked for you!!

    Les

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