I'm looking for some good zigbee or thread wall dimmers for some hall lights, and I'd rather not use wifi if I can avoid it. The only thing I've been able to find on Amazon has been the Embrighten switches. Any suggestions?
I use lutron (dimming), they are older ones I think the newest one I have is 4 years old, I get a ton of flickering in my LED bulbs. Do you experience that? I've tried a variety of bulbs and it's the same issues if not worse. I was planning to switch to a different brand when I have the time to commit to it.
Lutron is great if you have an old home like I do because of the wall mountable remotes. I've added lamp dimmers and 3 way switches in multiple spots in my house where I'd otherwise have to do a bunch of rewiring. The bummer about them is that since the buttons are flat they can be hard to find in the dark.
Tasmota is a very clever open-source custom firmware that runs on any smart home device, which uses the ESP Wi-Fi chip. It provides local control of the smart devices through MQTT, HTTP, Serial, or WEB UI.
I just learned about it and now I'm really interested in it as well
CE Smart branded ones. Tasmota is open source firmware that's compatible with home-assistant and can be flashed over various ESP or Tuya chips (see my longer answer to another post in this thread)
The 'platform' for the FEIT ones at costco are really well built. They make the Insteon units look like they were a one off hobby project. That's the part that has the power circuitry, screw terminals, etc. The wifi module used to be ESP based but they switched about a year ago to a newer BK723 chip, these can be reflashed with a 'OpenBeken', which is a newer project that has similar functionality to Tasmota but for these newer chips.
The only downside I've seen with these is OpenBeken is not as mature and the units 'hang' now and then requiring a power cycle (like 2-4 weeks). I have some of the older ESP based units that are otherwise identical and they never hang, this has been getting better with upgrades so likely will eventually be fixed.
If you are OK with soldering you can buy the ESP controller modules on Amazon for about $1 each and just replace them and run stock Tasmota (you have to unsolder the module to reflash it either way, so its not a big deal to just put a different one on). The module pinout and electrical interface are identical.
I've been using these as well - they gave more configuration options than the ones I previously used and are less expensive, too. I highly recommend them if you have a Z-Wave setup.
Do NOT use enbrighten zigbee dimmers if you have LED lights. I installed a half dozen with Halo LED cans and they make the lights flicker at best and not dim at all at worst. And when I say flicker I mean like strobe light flickering. I had other dimmers installed before that were new but not smart and didn’t have any issues.
YoSmart/YoLink also has a smart dimmer for $30. Those use a 900Mhz frequency to communicate and the hubs are usually $25 or they add about $10 ina a bundle.
The normal Hubs have Ethernet. The "voice" hubs are wifi only (to connect to your network, still 900MHz to talk to their devices).
I initially started using them because they were cheaper than Z-Wave (at the time) and the smaller sensors (leak, door/window, temp, etc) use normal AAA batteries.
Up voted for this. I have a bunch of Yolink products. It all works seamlessly. I've got motion lights setup. I have my bathroom exhaust fan set to turn on at a specific humidity level. I've got their door locks, garage door opener. Hell, I've got the float switch set to tell me when my dogs need more water.
They have so many products and they all work together very well. It truly feels like a smart home now and it's all the same brand so I don't have to worry about compatibility problems or using a third party software. I do have them linked to home assistant for the few things I have from other brands. But I can't reccomend Yolink enough
I have 3x Eco-Dim.07 installed. Connected to Zigbee2MQTT and never skipped a beat. I'm very happy with them. My partner complains that when the light is dimmed it makes her nauseous because of the flickering. However, I think that has to do with the either the bulb type or dimming technique. Let me know if you want to know more!
I’m in the UK and using Zigbee dimmer modules from Samotech, which match the style of traditional dumb dimmer switches in my country. There are similar models available from Candeo and others.
I’ve also been experimenting recently with a Shelly Dimmer2 module.
I just ripped out my insteon system and replaced it with Caseta. I wanted the "device-to-device" response speed.
It doesn't work unless you want those MadKatz looking remotes on your wall. The two button remotes send all linked devices to full power, so I process them in Home Assistant. Home assistant is fast enough to process the commands, but the lutton protocol doesn't have any sort of acknowledgement on the wireless side, it just keeps on blasting for 1.4 seconds. Good for reliability, awful for latency.. So for 1.4 seconds after an action, the hub waits for the first device to stop transmitting before it sends commands to the rest of the devices.
I'm going to try some "scene" remotes and maybe get it to be acceptably quick but there are still limitations.
ZigBee is so good, they made thread. Z-wave is so good, there are 4 versions. Matter over thread is what I wanted but that's vaporware for now. Considering what I know now, I would probably have gone with esphome or tasmota dimmers. I was worried about them mucking up my wifi, but they're the only things I have on 2.4 and the scene controllers and garage controllers have been solid.
This is good to know, I have a whole home Insteon setup now, will probably have to replace it at some point since they went under...
I replaced a few switches with a Zooz Z-Wave switch. It's fast enough but it's paired with ZigBee lights, so I have to use a #HomeAssistant automation to sync up the dimming. Not ideal so I didn't replace any more switches yet.
I use the 4 button Philips hue dimmers. Mostly mostly because I already had some from before I started using home assistant, and then because it's easier to add more or replace when needed. All reconfigured in node-red, all behave the same:
quick press of the on button toggles the room's ceiling lights
quick press of the up button toggles the room's lamps
quick press of the down button toggles the room's fans
quick press of the off button turns everything in the room off
long press of the on button toggles the room's curtains
long press of the up button brightens any lights that are on in the room
long press of the down button dims any lights that are on in the room
long press of the off button turns off all downstairs devices and locks the doors