I just wondered if anyone had any tips for testing an irritating design.
It's a large self-storage facility, several RCBO protected lighting circuits serving two floors, no light switches anywhere, just PIRs on radial circuits controlling about 4 lights each and there's about 30 such setups.
Emergency lighting comes from a separate branch near the origin of each circuit.
(The exceptionally irritating thing thing is that klik roses have been used for everything EXCEPT the PIR sensors!)
I can think of multiple ways to test CPC continuity and confirm polarity.
But when it comes to IR testing...options seem to be:
-link out each PIR (only one per group of lights but a LOT of them) and test normally
-test from the board to the PIRs, then test backwards via kilk rose on each set of lights
-agree a limitation with customer unless they want to pay extra
-declare an operational limitation due to design
The first two will obviously will be time consuming, and like a fool I quoted per circuit without knowing the setup.
What would you do? It feels unsatisfactory in the first place that you can't test it without jumping through many hoops...!
It's a large self-storage facility, several RCBO protected lighting circuits serving two floors, no light switches anywhere, just PIRs on radial circuits controlling about 4 lights each and there's about 30 such setups.
Emergency lighting comes from a separate branch near the origin of each circuit.
(The exceptionally irritating thing thing is that klik roses have been used for everything EXCEPT the PIR sensors!)
I can think of multiple ways to test CPC continuity and confirm polarity.
But when it comes to IR testing...options seem to be:
-link out each PIR (only one per group of lights but a LOT of them) and test normally
-test from the board to the PIRs, then test backwards via kilk rose on each set of lights
-agree a limitation with customer unless they want to pay extra
-declare an operational limitation due to design
The first two will obviously will be time consuming, and like a fool I quoted per circuit without knowing the setup.
What would you do? It feels unsatisfactory in the first place that you can't test it without jumping through many hoops...!