A low-angle shot looking up at a small, round, white motion sensor flush-mounted on a drywall ceiling bulkhead, positioned next to a square metal air register.

The Geometry of Regret: Why Wall Switches Fail in Open Basements

Placing motion switches on the walls of an open basement is a common design flaw. Structural columns and furniture create blind spots, causing lights to turn off unexpectedly. The solution is to move the sensor to the ceiling, providing a top-down, 360-degree view that eliminates these ‘shadow cones’ and offers a more reliable, hands-free lighting experience.

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A white motion sensor is mounted on a cinder block wall inside a warehouse, aimed directly at a large, closed, corrugated metal loading dock door in the background.

Loading Dock Doors: Preventing False Triggers from Wind and Debris

False alarms at your loading dock are often caused by standard sensors reacting to wind drafts and swirling debris. These environments create thermal and physical disturbances that trick PIR and Microwave detectors. The only reliable solution is installing Dual-Technology sensors that require both a heat signature and physical motion to be detected simultaneously, preventing costly and frustrating false dispatches.

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