![]() ![]() Time it and see if there is a regularity to the ons and offs or if they coincide with the fridge or next-doors generator or fridge. More likely to be another electrical appliance causing this. However, I am not sure that ghosties operate in the IR ranges ! :-) (Yes, I know no-one was suggesting it was ghosties) If your IR sensor WAS picking up ghosties I would expect them both to pick up the ghostie at the same time, not one independently of the other. Some components are lower tolerances than other and so if your electrical equipment is a cheapo variety, it may be made from cheaper components or the circuit may not be as sophisticated as it should be. I think I remember someone telling me that when the 'fridge kicks in, it sends a burst of radio frequency and also a spike along the mains which is why the other electrical circuits which are not protected from spikes get blasted. ![]() Would anyone be able to help shed any light? ![]() However, correct me if I'm wrong, but "RFI" seems to only affect wired garage motion sensors. I've already done some digging on Google, and it looks like Radio Frequency Interference is a possible cause. Beams Indoor/Outdoor Motion Sensing LED Ceiling Light If anything, a few customers complain that it's hard to trigger their lights ( ). I searched the customer reviews and all of them are very positive. We've never felt any weird sensations or feelings.įor reference, here are links to the two DIFFERENT motion sensor lights from Amazon. The house has no history of any deaths or unexplained activities. We live in a New England Connecticut suburb. We have a cat, but that cat is never near the motion lights when it is randomly triggered. In other words, Motion Light A would randomly go off, but Motion Light B would stay off. Note: once we placed both motion lights next to each other (physically), each of them would still randomly trigger but at different times. We also placed each motion light in different spots in the house (on a window seat in the mudroom, on top of the living room bookshelves, on top of the dining room, etc.) and it continues to exhibit the random triggering behavior. That second one was being triggered at random times, as well. However: My rationales were all debunked after we purchased a SECOND (different) motion sensor light. Or it may be small particles of dust that are triggering it. I tried to explain it rationally: it may be thick waves of heat coming from the air vents that trigger the motion. FYI, these motion lights only work in the complete darkness. My girlfriend and I started to notice that the motion sensor light would trigger at random times during the evening/night. I recently purchased a motion sensor light from Amazon and started placing it around the house (e.g. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |