ok thanks, as far as I understand, but every appliance must have its separate line or you can hold all the sockets together.
since I really don't understand anything we make a practical example:
we take only part of the apartment or the kitchen, the stay, the room and the bathroom. We put that I want to be able to control the oven loads, washing machine, micro and hairdryer, then I want to manage the temperature of the various rooms and be able to control the sockets on the ground. from the picture goes all in control (which is controlled by the monitor) and then from the control unit what comes out? a cable for each socket or the lines of the derivations? I need to understand how many pipes could go beyond gas and plumbing.
and if you want to divide by zones (night day and baths) can you do?
there are "slave" power stations decentralized in various areas (plans, rooms, zones) to which all "users" are connected (lights, sockets)
and "inputs" (changers, sensors, etc.) the various "area" control units are connected with the "master" via "network".
"slave" can be "intelligent" and have "local" or "stupid" inputs and all inputs go to the master who commands "passive" slaves.
Every brand uses its standards, often owners, and this is the limit.
theoretically they should "turn" less cables.
If the system is well designed you should have the "growth" cables that turn "in local" and only the network to dialogue between the power stations, then in practice the thing gets a little tangled. you have the beauty that you can schedule inputs at your liking (the same switch can do different things at different times).
decide the "system", choose bticino solid brands, gewiss etc. on their sites find all info, patterns examples etc.
if you have experience of anti-thefts, it is the same "pappa", all concentrated on one or more cnetraline and a console display for programming (also from pigs).
fun, but if you don't decide to create open standards, it'll be hard to see them really wide spread.
Hi.