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Departments — November/December 2006

Information Technology: Lightning Switch

Wireless signal turns electrical devices on and off

Lightning Switch uses piezoelectrical energy to send a radio signal to its companion receiver, which turns electrical devices on and off. The Lightning Switch wireless/battery-less switch control system has just been named a winner of the 2006 NOVA Award by the Construction Innovation Forum.

Think of a Stone-Age material gone high tech, of capturing little sparks of energy, of a commodity so ubiquitous you don't know it's there. Combine all of these elements and you get Lightning Switch: a wireless light switch that doesn't need a battery.

Brad Face, CEO of PulseSwitch Systems, Norfolk, Va., the maker of Lightning Switch, realized that he had a significant technology on his hands when he acquired the thin, piezoelectric material developed by NASA.

Piezoelectricity is produced by applying pressure to a material that takes the mechanical energy and converts it to electrical energy and back again. Face and his company found a way to use this energy to turn electrical devices on and off. "Basically, we are using piezoelectric material by taking a fragile ceramic wafer, bonding it between pieces of stainless steel, which gives it the compressive strength," Face says. "It's like a compressed spring. There's a lot of energy ready to go with just a little bit of movement. We like to say we have a wired switch that does not have any wires."

Under this simple concept, a radio receiver is attached to a regular light fixture or plugged into an electrical socket and taught to communicate with a remote-control transmitter that looks like a common household light switch. When the switch is flipped, the mechanical energy is converted to the right amount of electrical energy to send a unique radio signal to its companion receiver. This signal turns the electrical device on or off. The fixture has to have electrical energy flowing to it, but the switch does not have to be wired to the fixture.

The savings cost to a builder or homeowner is obvious-there is no need for rewiring by an electrician. For example, if a room is being rearranged to accommodate a child, a light switch can be put next to the child's bed. Landscape lighting can be turned on and off from inside the home. In flood-prone areas, these switches can be mounted where wired switches would violate building codes.

Face says his company has listened to its customers and made some modifications to accommodate industrial uses where there might be radio interference. "We have a professional-grade receiver that keeps out noise," he says. "And we have a system extender that extends the signal range. If you have a place with radio- frequency obstacles, then the signal can be reinforced or bounced around the obstacles." Unique codes make it nearly impossible to turn on the wrong item.

Bill Neustadt, sales manager for Electronics Supply Co. Inc., Kansas City, Mo., purchased Lightning Switches for a retail customer interested in controlling the lighting on product displays. Neustadt says he priced out wiring the displays using traditional methods and found it would have cost $500 for each of six displays in a store. Instead, the customer used Lightning Switches, which cost $300 for all six displays, had no installation costs and is more flexible.

"We've installed a total of about 150. They are all up and running and doing well," Neustadt says.
Sets start at about $50 and are available from the maker's Web site and some electrical supply companies. The Web site has an extensive video library with installation instructions.

Lightning Switch
PulseSwitch Systems
427 W. 35th St.
Norfolk, Va. 23508
1-888-954-4486 or 1-757-624-2134
www.LightningSwitch.com



 
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