Desert_AIP
Senior Member
Assumption here - I am told the fireplace is a standard decora, and not an LV/relay type thing - though I need to doublecheck w/ the electrician after New Years.
My fireplace in my last house used two standard wall switches, one was LV wirirng from the switch to the FP control, the other was 120V for the fan.
The standard switch is just a contact device. There isn't a relay in the wall, but the switch is acting like the contacts of a manually operated relay.
The LV control operated the solenoid valve and the other gizmos inside the fireplace to turn it on.
If you have LV control you can't just wire in a 120V UPB switch, you have to isolate the HV/LV through a relay.
So I'd ask about the control voltage, signal path of the fireplace.
Are these statements relatively true with these SA switches - Every Load essentially needs a rocker somewhere? Max 2 loads to a switch, and all the other extra rockers and buttons are scene/controller based?
By load, I assume you are talking about a group of lights, not single fixtures.
With the exception of the 2240, the SA switches can only control a single load per switch.
There's only one dimmer and set of control circuitry inside the 240 and 1140.
That load can be a combination of fixtures up to 600-900W (depending on ganging).
On a 240, all of the rockers or buttons, in whatever combination, are essentialy link transmitters only.
You set the local load to respond to one of the links transmitted.
So the rocker "appears" to have local control, like an 1140, but it is using local links to operate the load.
I would say every load needs a receiver, not necessarily a rocker.
So a 240, 1140, lamp module, appliance module or wired in dimming or relay module is needed for each load.
Some of those loads can be setup to respond only to UPB links over the powerline, with no dedicated rocker.
Like my Master Shower Fan.
However, I would recommend having rockers (on 1140s) for as many loads as possible for the reasons we've stated above.
This can create a wall space issue by having a huge bank of switches. Which would be a case for using a scene controller and wied in modules or virtual 3 way circuits.
I'm curious about your diagram.
Why are the 3 loads separated into 3 loads?
What are the individual fixture wattages?
I assume a standard 65W PAR30.
So 9 of those is 585W, which can be controlled by a single SA switch.
So I was wondering if there is an electrical reason for separating the loads like that.
Is there an asthetic purpose to have the 3 banks of lights?
Do you anticipate only turning on one set or using them all on together all the time?
Trying to picture myslef sitting in and using the room on a daily basis, of course I don;t know what your furniture layout is so I'm making gross assumptions.
It looks to me like you may use load 1, by the TV, by itself, and loads 2 and 3, over the sitting area, together.
Or 1 and 2 combined and 3 by itself.