jrgilles
Well-known member
Go to the webpage.
Configureation pull down menu, select outlet setup
Select the pull down menu next to 'Outlet'
The last 8 are the outlets. Of the first 8, I never use the Variable Speed ones, I do have the sound alarms and email alarms setup.
Anyway, the last 8 will control the outlets. Select the very last outlet (this would be Outlet #8)
In the 'Control Type' pull down, select 'Advanced'
A window where you can paste in code will appear. That is where I program my outlets. You can use the premade settings from the 'Control Type' pull down to get started if you want. Such as, select 'light' instead of 'advanced'. It will give you some boxes to fill in and write the code for you. Then, if you switch to advanced you can see the code it made for you. Once they are mostly set up, I find it easier to just leave all the outlets on 'advanced' and use code. If you type in bad code, it will give you a debug error so you can fix it.
Make sense?
Configureation pull down menu, select outlet setup
Select the pull down menu next to 'Outlet'
The last 8 are the outlets. Of the first 8, I never use the Variable Speed ones, I do have the sound alarms and email alarms setup.
Anyway, the last 8 will control the outlets. Select the very last outlet (this would be Outlet #8)
In the 'Control Type' pull down, select 'Advanced'
A window where you can paste in code will appear. That is where I program my outlets. You can use the premade settings from the 'Control Type' pull down to get started if you want. Such as, select 'light' instead of 'advanced'. It will give you some boxes to fill in and write the code for you. Then, if you switch to advanced you can see the code it made for you. Once they are mostly set up, I find it easier to just leave all the outlets on 'advanced' and use code. If you type in bad code, it will give you a debug error so you can fix it.
Make sense?
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