As the only electronics engineer in my  =family and circle of  friends, it is some-times not possible to evade an appeal for help. This  time the request came from a friendly elderly lady in a retirement  home. In her room the light switch by the door  and the pull cord above  the bed operate the light fitting on the ceiling in the middle of the  room. However, she would prefer that her standing lamp was operated  by  these switches instead, since she does not actually have a light fitting  mounted  on the ceiling. This standing lamp has an  on/of f switch in  the power cord and is  plugged into a power point. However, it  stands  rather far from the bed so that she  always has to find her way in the  dark. A  wireless operated power point is not really  a consideration,  because it is just a matter of time before the remote is lost. Or maybe  not? 
Simple Remote Control Mains Switch Circuit Diagram :
Behold a feasible circuit. Buy a wireless power point and an  enclosure that is big enough for the remote control and a small piece of  prototyping board. On the proto-typing board build the circuit  according to the accompanying schematic and (care-fully) open the remote  control and solder wires to the push buttons for ‘on’ and ‘off’.   Measure if these are polarised and if that is  the case connect them to  the 4N25 opto-couplers as shown in the schematic, where  pin 5 has a  higher voltage than pin 4. 
The operation is as follows. The  lady operates the pull cord or light switch to turn the light on. This  causes the mains voltage to be applied to the transformer. The relay is  activated which charges C1. While C1 charges, a small current flows  through optocoupler 1. The result is that the ‘on’ button on the remote  control is pressed.  The remote control switches the corresponding power  point on and to which the  standing lamp is connected. The standing   lamp will therefore now turn on. Capacitor C2 is charged at the same  time. If the lady pulls the cord again, or if she operates the  switch  near the door, the relay will de-energise and C2 discharges across  optocoupler  #2. This operates the ‘off’ contact of the  remote control  and the light goes out. 
The remote control continuous to  operate from its normal battery and the white enclosure is attached to  the ceiling in place of the light fitting. Diode D1 ensures that C1 is  discharged when the relay de-energises. D2 ensures that C2 cannot  discharge across the relay, but only across optocoupler 2.
Author : Jaap van der Graaff - Copyright :Elektor
