On a standard 110 volt AC line there are two wires used, not counting the ground. The white wire is the neutral and the black or red is the hot. There are two hots from the electric company. Therefore you can get 220 volts to your home if you used both hots. UPB devices only use one side, i.e. the black or red hot wire, the neutral and a ground. The phase coupler makes sure that the signal being sent on one phase i.e. the black wire gets sent to the other phase, i.e. the red wire. The device is installed either at the meter or a sub panel in a separate box. You connect both hot wires to the coupler. You know you need one if you have a problem getting a signal to a device and discover that the sending device is installed on the opposite phase. Make any sense?What exactly does one of these devices do and how is it installed? How do you know if you need one?
The device is installed either at the meter or a sub panel in a separate box.
The device is installed either at the meter or a sub panel in a separate box.
There are also dryer outlet couplers available. While maybe not as good as a coupler installed at the panel, the dryer outlet offers a quicker and easier install. A dryer outlet is typically 220v.
The device is installed either at the meter or a sub panel in a separate box.
There are also dryer outlet couplers available. While maybe not as good as a coupler installed at the panel, the dryer outlet offers a quicker and easier install. A dryer outlet is typically 220v.
That all makes perfect sense! Thanks you for the information. Hopefully everything in the house is pulled off the same "side" of power.
Is an electrician required to install the phase coupler? I've never done any work in breaker boxes.
Is an electrician required to install the phase coupler?
You might also need more than one. In my house, it took three inverting couplers to get the signal up to a 5 in the weakest devices.
I only have one pane, so the answer is, all in the same panel. If I had more, I'd spread them out between panels.
I only have one pane, so the answer is, all in the same panel. If I had more, I'd spread them out between panels.