I’m looking to replace a few in-wall light switches for lights that are not easily replaced with smart bulbs. I currently use Home Assistant with z2m for all my smart lights and switches, so zigbee switches would be preferred. Does anyone have recommendations for smart in-wall switches?

  • @[email protected]
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    96 months ago

    I know you’re in zigbee, but I’ve tested many different wall switches and IMO Zooz Zwave switches are the best option.

    They’re cheap, reliable, and most importantly don’t cause LED lights to flicker like every other brand I’ve tested. They also have replaceable paddles so you can change the color of the paddles. I purchased black paddles and used a sand blaster to make them matte like the rest of the outlets and plates around my apartment.

    Inovelli is also great however those switches are overkill for most situations and very pricey.

  • @[email protected]
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    46 months ago

    Can’t believe no one has mentioned Inovelli yet. Developed with the community, with OTA support in Z2M, they are absolutely fantastic and incredibly flexible!

    https://inovelli.com/ blue series

  • λλλ
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    46 months ago

    I do in-wall relays so that I can use regular, off the shelf switches and it looks like nothing special is there. I like the idea of people not knowing it’s smart until I do something from my phone.

    • @[email protected]
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      16 months ago

      I can appreciate that.

      But does that mean if you phone it off, the physical switch is unable to do anything? Or does the switch just get inverted?

      • λλλ
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        36 months ago

        I apologize for the confusion.

        It makes it so that the direction of the switch doesn’t matter. Flipping the switch toggles to the off or on state that it’s not currently in. I like to think of it as a three-way switch that you may already have in your house where up doesn’t necessarily mean ‘on’ because there are two switches involved. The relay in the wall is the other switch. So if you have the light on in home assistant but you flip the switch, it’ll turn the light off whether it was up or down. I hope I made more sense.

        If my wifi goes out my switches function as normal too.

      • λλλ
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        26 months ago

        I love my Shelly relays. I don’t use the stock firmware though. I have them overwritten with ESPhome.

        I have heard that you can have full local control with them now and that it’s not really necessary to do a custom firmware. I just like having a configuration file that tells me exactly everything that it can do. That and I have a script running that updates all my ESPhome devices automatically.

      • λλλ
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        16 months ago

        I wish, thread just isn’t there yet. I currently use Wi-Fi for most of my smart home stuff. I have a really good Wi-Fi setup though and it could support a lot of devices. I have been slowly moving to zigbee though.

  • @[email protected]
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    36 months ago

    Been using enbrighten switches from Jasco. I use their Zwave but I think they have ZigBee too.

    I use the ones that look like toggle switches over the paddle style to match the rest of the house .

    I have them on all our bathroom fans too so they can be left on (steam / smell disposal) and auto shut off after 30 min.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      16 months ago

      I’m think about putting them on bathroom fans as well. It would be really nice to have them automatically turn on/off based on humidity.

      • @[email protected]
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        26 months ago

        I had a humidity switch in ours a while ago (not smart) and it would turn on too much even if a shower wasn’t running but our windows were open. And, enough humidity was in the air. So that didn’t work out great.

        It was a self contained deal not a smart switch though

        • @[email protected]OP
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          22 months ago

          I got the enbrighten switches set up on the bathroom fan. After a few months of observing the humidity changes I settled on triggering the fan based on the derivative of the humidity. I found that 2%/s with 2min of averaging works well, no false positives so far.

  • @SickDisturbence
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    36 months ago

    Another vote for the zooz zwave switches. I think I have 6 of them so far and plan to put in more.

  • SolidGrue
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    36 months ago

    I’ve been happy with the GE Enbrighten series, though they do require a neutral wire. I use the Z-Wave models, but I can’t imagine the ZigBee models would work any differently.

    Neat feature of the Enbrighten line is they recognize several gestures including short tap, long press, double tap, and I think even triple tap. I configured mine so that short taps on/off toggle the lights between off and 100% on, long press on/off brightens/dims, and double tap on activates the preferred evening lighting scene.

    I think Minoston are also a GE product line? Again, Z-Wave, but rated for higher wattage in my case. They also require a neutral wire.

    I had a pair of no-neutral ZigBee switches sold as ‘Martin Jerry’ brand, but they were super dodgy. Terrible feel to them, and they made a sort of electrical whine when the fixture was on. I pulled them right out and sent them back.

  • @[email protected]
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    26 months ago

    Anyone in Australia, as an electrician, the best option is Clipsal Wiser switches, dimmers, relays etc.

    Zigbee that defaults to standard push button operation when the network drops out.

    If using HA you DO NOT need to purchase the hub that they say is required to use the switches.

  • @[email protected]
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    16 months ago

    I like zooz 5 button scene controllers. They are z-wave.

    I also like kasa’s switches. They are wifi, but being on mains powered I’m not concerned with wifi draining batteries and I have them in a vlan with minimal access.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 months ago

        They have an app and they do connect up to it. But they can be put on a vlan and null routed to only work locally.

    • @[email protected]
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      16 months ago

      How do WiFi switches do when you have a lot? Is it an issue to put in 50 WiFi switches, wouldn’t that overload the network?

      • @[email protected]
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        6 months ago

        They don’t have a lot of traffic. I have over 40 kasa devices between switches, outlets, and bulbs with no issues.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          I was under the impression that WiFi could only handle so many devices connected. 20 years ago if you got more than 10 or 20 some would start getting kicked off. Maybe that was my short router. Is that never an issue with modern routers? Even adding hundreds?

          • @[email protected]
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            26 months ago

            You could have shitty routers. I use unifi access points, make sure I set the channels so I don’t have a lot of interference with any nearby wireless networks, and I should be able to handle a few hundred devices at once. You could also have a small DHCP scope that limits the number of devices on the whole network.

        • @[email protected]
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          26 months ago

          Interestingly. I was a bit worried about adding dozens of new WiFi devices but it sounds like it’s not an issue so I will consider the WiFi switches after all.

            • @[email protected]
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              26 months ago

              Oh I didn’t thing about access points. With something like ZigBee, the switches add to the network range. But for WiFi, each switch will need to be in range of an access point. We have pretty decent coverage but the benefit of using ZigBee is other devices can take advantage of the extended network.

              Others have talked about Zwave, I’m not sure which camp they sit in.