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I bought a couple of pneumatic switches for a corridor and my plan is to just wire them so that all the commons are on the same wire (which is permanently live) and all the "normally open" contacts are on the same wire, going to the load. You can then push any switch the light will turn on, you can push any other switches in the corridor and the lights will remain on.
The lights will extinguish when the last switch has popped out and returned to its resting position, so it's a way of extending the timer if you need to spend extra time opening the front door after you've travelled down the stairs; just push the switch next to the front door and the lights will stay on longer even if the switch upstairs popped back out. This seems like the most sensible logical way that you would wire these things.
The manual for the switch also describes a seemingly standard two way wiring scenario where the permanent live comes into the common of one switch. The two switches have their "normally open" of one switch wired to the "normally closed" of the other and vice versa, and then the load is wired to the common of the other switch.
I just don't understand why you'd wire this at all, because it means you can push one switch, the light will come on. you push the other switch and the light will go off. when the first switch pops out the light will come back on, when the second switch pops out the light will go off again. What was the point of this? If anything this seems dangerous in the communal sense because you could be travelling down the stairs, and push a switch halfway down the stairs, deactivating the lights until the top one's popped out. This potentially leaves you to navigate the stairs in darkness because there's literally nothing you can do other than wait until the timer of the oldest switch expires
The lights will extinguish when the last switch has popped out and returned to its resting position, so it's a way of extending the timer if you need to spend extra time opening the front door after you've travelled down the stairs; just push the switch next to the front door and the lights will stay on longer even if the switch upstairs popped back out. This seems like the most sensible logical way that you would wire these things.
The manual for the switch also describes a seemingly standard two way wiring scenario where the permanent live comes into the common of one switch. The two switches have their "normally open" of one switch wired to the "normally closed" of the other and vice versa, and then the load is wired to the common of the other switch.
I just don't understand why you'd wire this at all, because it means you can push one switch, the light will come on. you push the other switch and the light will go off. when the first switch pops out the light will come back on, when the second switch pops out the light will go off again. What was the point of this? If anything this seems dangerous in the communal sense because you could be travelling down the stairs, and push a switch halfway down the stairs, deactivating the lights until the top one's popped out. This potentially leaves you to navigate the stairs in darkness because there's literally nothing you can do other than wait until the timer of the oldest switch expires
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