Hey all! I’m looking for a mythical local-only (Wifi, Z-Wave, or Zigbee) smart light switch that has a good feel and user experience when manually switching on/off. What I mean by that: I think my ideal UX is some sort of hard rocker switch like the very much not smart Leviton Decora switches. You hit the top of the rocker for on or hit the bottom of it for off, and it has a good, solid feel with each state change.

The problem comes when making one of these switches “smart,” e.g. stuffing a Shelly or something behind it. The up/down directions won’t correspond to on/off anymore, because the smart switch can turn the light on/off without affecting the rocker direction. Maybe this is okay and I just need to deal with it? Does anyone with a similar setup find this annoying? I guess it’s no different than a traditional three-way switch.

Another option is to take out the dumb switches and replaces them entirely with smart ones. Almost all smart switches are single on/off toggle buttons (some have two buttons), sidestepping the up/down state problem described above. But I’m not sure I’d like the feel of a squishing a button into the wall instead of a tilting a rocker. I do have a few of an older model of this Eva Logik switch, which has two buttons and kinda sorta mimics the look of the Decoras—but it doesn’t actually rock like traditional switches. The up/down buttons are more like clicky mouse buttons, and not the best tactile experience IMO. Plus, newer models apparently are no longer Tuya-convertible to Tasmota…

So am I just being too picky here? Does anyone else experience similar issues?

EDIT: Here’s a TL;DR of the suggestions below, for anyone also looking to solve a similar probem:

  • Use a Jasco/GE Enbrighten series smart switch (Z-Wave, Zigbee, or Wifi)
  • Use a TPLink Kasa switch (Wifi via HA tplink integration)
  • Try an Innovelli Blue switch (Zigbee; there’s also a Z-Wave variant)
  • Just deal with your OCD and put a Shelly behind a dumb switch
  • witten@lemmy.worldOP
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    1 year ago

    Cool, thanks for the details. Avoiding both a cloud dependency and an HA dependency to switch lights on/off makes sense.