When I first started setting up my home automation, I decided on Zigbee, and I very much dove in head-first. I set up dozens of Zigbee devices, and some worked a lot better than others. I have a fairly stable Zigbee network with well over 100 devices, but many of those have been replaced over time. To save others the wasted time and money, I wanted to give a short breakdown of what I’ve noticed across brands.

  • SONOFF: My Zigbee controller is made by SONOFF, and it works well. As far as their motion sensors, not so much (I even made a post about how bad they were about a year ago). Their motion sensors give such unreliable results that they’re borderline useless. Their plugs work generally okay, although they do drop off my network occasionally. Overall, they really wouldn’t be my first choice.

  • Aquara: They make some very slick-looking devices, but they’re horrible. Magnetic door sensors frequently just get stuck in an open or closed state, or just drop off the network completely. I used two of their leak sensors. One is still working well; the other just spontaneously decided to stop responding completely. I have a few of their pushbuttons; it took me at least a dozen tries to pair them, but they seem to work well after that. Overall, Aquara devices either quit responding or drop off the network more frequently than any other brand; I will never buy another Aquara device.

  • DOGAIN: I bought several of their plugs. So far, not a single issue. I assume they’re a white-label brand, so I don’t know who actually makes the hardware, but I have no complaints so far.

  • MHCOZY: Another white-label brand. I’ve purchased several of their relay switches. I haven’t had a single problem with any of them, and I’m using quite a few.

  • Haozee: Probably another white-label brand. I have several of their mmWave sensors. Occasionally they get stuck in a “detected” state, but rarely. They have never dropped off my network. I’d buy more.

  • Phillips (Hue): They’re exceptionally expensive, but for a reason. I have a lot of their smart bulbs, and a few outdoor motion sensors. They all work flawlessly. Don’t use the Hue app or a Hue bridge, though, unless you want to be locked into their app; just pair your device with a third-party Zigbee controller.

  • Leviton: I have replaced every single in-wall switch in my home with a Leviton smart switch or smart dimmer. They’re a well-known brand, so I would expect their products to work well, and they do. My only complaint is that occasionally one of the switches will drop and refuse to communicate unless I power it off (with a breaker); this is rare, though, and normally corresponds with a power outage.

  • Thirdreality: I saved Thirdreality for last because I have absolutely no complaints at all. They are my go-to for Zigbee devices. I have many of their temperature sensors, plugs, magnetic door sensors, motion sensors, soil moisture sensors, etc. I have never had a device drop off my network or stop working correctly. I have dozens of their devices, and my only issue was a climate sensor that got stuck at 99% humidity after I accidentally sprayed water into the case. That’s my fault.

So, in general, if I was to re-build my Zigbee network from the ground up, I’d go for Thirdreality devices first. If they didn’t make what I need, I’d go for Phillips Hue, and if I still couldn’t find what I need, then that’s what the list above is for.

I’m hoping to see some replies to this; what are your experiences with different Zigbee devices? Any brands you either trust or would never buy from?

Edit: As others have mentioned, your Zigbee integration (also also possibly your controller) may make a difference in reliability. I am using ZHA and a SONOFF controller. Your experience may be different.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    I have to say, I have dozens upon dozens* of generic “Tuya” ZigBee devices from Ali, and they all work flawlessly. The only ones I have issues with is a couple of GU10 bulbs that the devs decided should be routers when bulbs really shouldn’t route since they can be turned off at the switch. I really wished there was a way to prevent that.

    *96 total devices in Z2M, a handful are Sinopé mains voltage thermostats for baseboard heaters (great units absolutely recommend!), another 3 are inovelli switches (again no issues here, great stuff), a dozen are Aqara (I’ve seen the hate but tbh I never noticed any issues). Almost everything else is Moes/Tuya. I even have a generic tuya temperature/humidity sensor that has been outside for a year and a half in the harsh Canadian climate (from -30C to 30C).

    I will say, I have a couple of AIQ and mmWave sensors and I don’t like them because they produce a LOT of data and kind of spam the network, if I replace them I’ll do WiFi for those.

    I run a HamGeek POE Coordinator.

    • @[email protected]
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      16 months ago

      How often does your temp/humidity sensor report? I’ve also got a Tuya one from Aliexpress and had to shelve it because it was spamming the sensor data 5 times a second.

      • @[email protected]
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        6 months ago

        Mostly on changes, otherwise every ~5mins or so? Probably less, I can’t check right now, but I’m certain I have never noticed spamming like that.

    • Maestro
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      96 months ago

      Bulbs are mains-powered and should be zigbee routers. The way to prevent that is to take out the switch, wire it closed, and stick a smart button over it.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 months ago

        If I turn off my Home Assistant, everything in my house still works like a normal house. Your bulbs won’t.

        • Maestro
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          16 months ago

          I have a few backup lights that are dumb led lights on a smart wall switch. But my HA is pretty much never down unless I am manually restarting it for updates. And my Zigbee network works even when the internet or wifi is down.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          You can bind switches to bulbs in Z2M. That way they still work whether HA is running or not

      • @[email protected]
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        6 months ago

        Yeah I disagree. And I’m not the only one, many bulbs from larger brands don’t route. The Sengled bulbs don’t for example. IMHO bulbs work fine with dumb switches when they revert back to the last setting which most do. Nothing in the spec says a device that is mains power MUST route.

        • @[email protected]
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          46 months ago

          Instead of replacing the switch with a button, you can replace it with a smart switch that doesn’t actually cut power when you press “off”. My Zooz ZWave switches allow you to configure them to either use the internal relay to turn lights on and off (which cuts power) or disable the relay and use the ZWave side to turn the lights on and off (maintaining power).

          It’s an annoying issue but this is what happens when you DIY things using parts from various manufacturers with differing design ideas.

          • @[email protected]
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            26 months ago

            I could, but have you considered that I don’t want to, because I don’t need it? All I want is the damn bulb not to be a router.

            • @[email protected]
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              6 months ago

              So then throw them in the trash and buy something else?

              I don’t see what can be accomplished by complaining about them while also refusing any workarounds unless you have chronically low blood pressure that’s cured by your constant anger toward these bulbs and their dumb design.

              • @[email protected]
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                6 months ago

                Did you even read the post you’re commenting on? This is literally a review of user experiences with ZigBee devices. I’m not looking for a work around. I have 96 active ZigBee devices and probably four dozen Wifi devices on my network, you’re not teaching me anything here.

                Unfortunately many many bulbs act as routers, a general issue I have with ZigBee devices, and it’s nearly impossible to know from just reading the description.

      • @[email protected]
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        36 months ago

        Or a relay switch and keep the existing mechanical switch on top. I like Shelly but there are tons of options.

          • @[email protected]
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            16 months ago

            There’s Qubino Z-Wave devices, and some Bluetooth ones though my experience with those has been a bit dubious. And integration outside of their own ecosystem is still via WiFi (except for sensor beacons which are BLE).

          • @[email protected]
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            6 months ago

            The issue was that using the old mechanical switch would shut down the router in the bulbs. A relay absolutely solves that.

            In any case, it seems to be possible to use a Shelly RGBW2 in CCT mode. Here’s an example of how to do it in Home Assistant’s native Shelly integration though OP says there’s also tutorials around showing how to do it via MQTT.

            https://community.home-assistant.io/t/converting-shelly-rgbw2-color-white-mode-into-a-cct-mode/589985

            • @[email protected]
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              6 months ago

              Yeah that doesn’t solve my issue at all though. All I want is for the bulb not to be a router. Nothing else. A Shelly RGBCCT isn’t going to control a GU10 bulb.

              • @[email protected]
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                16 months ago

                A Shelly RGBCCT isn’t going to control a GU10 bulb.

                Ok I’ll admit my ignorance. Why not?

                • @[email protected]
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                  6 months ago

                  An RGBCCT controller will control a strip of LEDs (or what ever individual LEDs you put together), a GU10 bulb is just that, a mains voltage bulb. It cannot be controlled externally and includes its own driver. It has input for mains voltage and that’s it. The same would hold true for an E27 or any other type of mains voltage bulb.

                  From the outside it looks like this:

                  On the inside:

  • @[email protected]
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    26 months ago

    Thank you for this! I haven’t started my network yet, but I just got the HA voice assistant, so this will be very helpful.

  • Ebby
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    16 months ago

    Ohh thanks! I just started with ZigBee stuff and reviews like this are perfect!

  • @[email protected]
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    66 months ago

    I have two Aquara door sensors and a thermometer and they all work flawlessly for me. I have automations with the door sensors to turn on some sengled lights for their respective rooms, and it happens almost instantaneously. The thermometer just tells me the temperature on the back deck, so not much going on with that. But I haven’t had any of them drop off the network.

    I’m also using a Sonoff usb for my controller and it has been solid for two years.

    I recently picked up some Thirdreality color bulbs, and i think they are pretty solid. The only gripe I have is that their colors seem to be kinda off. But it does white light very well, so they’re good enough for me.

    • @[email protected]
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      36 months ago

      I agree with the door sensors, they work great and sip battery.

      The thermometers (the square ones from a few years back) suck tho, they drop off the network all the time. I’ve replaced them with those generic Ali round ones with the display, they take AAA batteries which is a plus.

      • Claude Flammang
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        06 months ago

        @Damage
        I got the square ones a few years ago and they kept on dropping from the network. In the meantime, a few firmware updates later I migrated to HA and now they are rock solid, don’t know if it’s due to consolidating Ikea, Hue and Aquara Zigbee networks into a single ZHA mesh or the firmware getting better, but I suspect that it’s due to a single optimized mesh instead three colliding Zigbee networks.

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          I’ve started (admittedly years ago when implementations were less advanced), with a single Zigbee2mqtt network with Philips, Le grand, IKEA and so on, but they kept dropping off immediately.
          Some time later I got a new coordinator, migrated everything, everything else improved, those sensors did not, so I tried creating a different, Aquara only network for them with another instance of Z2M, that made things better but still had problems.
          This week I’ve installed an Athom Ethernet ZigBee gateway (great device btw, mine runs Esphome), and joined the networks again, but I’ve already had disconnections. I’ve only got a couple of those still in place, I keep trying to get them to work 'cause I have a bunch sitting in my drawer, but I’m just about to throw them in the recycling bin.

          • @[email protected]
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            6 months ago

            Any chance you guys have your zigbee radios plugged directly into your host device? I had a bunch of issues with mine until I plugged it and my ZWave dongle into USB extension cables. I think with the Pi specifically, you can wind up with interference. Another point of interference is your wifi AP as wifi and zigbee frequencies overlap one another.

            I’ve personally used Aqara window sensors, temp sensors, and switches for a few years now on my current Sonoff and previous HUSBZB radios without issue after eliminating any possible interference as noted above.

            Getting some repeaters couldn’t hurt either. I have a couple Ikea Tradfri shades and they both came with repeaters.

            • @[email protected]
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              16 months ago

              I’ve tried it all: short cables, long cables, stands… Most other stuff just works.

              I’ve got repeaters: every room has multiple light switches and smart plugs that act as repeaters.

    • Llamatron
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      6 months ago

      Aquara door sensors here too and they work great. I have one that turns on the kitchen light after sunset when the back door is opened and it works flawlessly.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        36 months ago

        That’s interesting. I first set up Aquara door sensors on all my doors. Every single one has dropped off the network and required re-pairing multiple times. I’ve started just replacing them with Thirdreality door sensors when they drop rather than re-pairing.

        I wonder if my controller or my Zigbee integration has something to do with it?

        • Llamatron
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          56 months ago

          I’m using a raspberry pi with a ‘sonoff universal zigbee 3.0 USB dongle’. But I’ve no clue what I’m doing. I originally got into it just so I could automate a bedroom light for the wife. Beyond that I’ve got a couple of lights and contact sensors and the recent attempt at controlling a dehumidifier. Googling and blind luck has got me this far.

          I wonder if it helps that the door contact sensor is in the same room as the zigbee dongle? Maybe 20ft away

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          Either that, or you have wifi interference.

          I had all kinds of issues with my zigbee network until I switched my wifi to use channels 1 and 6, and Zigbee to use 24 or something like that. Since then, it has been rock solid.

          • @[email protected]OP
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            16 months ago

            I wish it was that simple. I don’t remember channel numbers offhand, but I mapped out my WiFi and Zigbee networks to be non-ovrlapping. I don’t have any neighbors close enough to even register an SSID, either.

            The weird thing is that location doesn’t seem to matter. I have a few Aquara devices spread out across several hundred feet. The one that’s close enough to connect directly to my controller is actually the least reliable.

            • @[email protected]
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              16 months ago

              Hmmm that is really odd. Since I addressed the interference issue, the only major issue I’ve had with any Aqara device (including door sensors, temperature sensors, one vibration sensor, one water presence sensor, and a few wall switches) is the vibration sensor, which I damaged the battery cover, so it doesn’t close properly and keep the battery in place correctly. So that one is my fault. I have had a door sensor and water presence sensor drop off the network occasionally, but that’s rare.

              Heck I even have a second network set up in my RV (sensors only) and it seems to be reliable as well. But the metal shell keeps much of the signal contained, I’m sure.

              I wonder if there’s something else in your area that’s interfering with it.

  • @[email protected]
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    16 months ago

    I have a decent setup for my apartment, I only use Philips Hue, both as a bridge and for lights.

    I am currently considering switching the bridge as I want to add radiator thermostats and I don’t believe that the Philips Hue bridge can handle those well.

    I have thought about getting a bridge from Homey, but haven’t done anything yet…

  • @[email protected]
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    76 months ago

    I’ve been using Aqara door sensors, temp sensors, buttons, and others, and have had great luck with them.

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      Same here. I’m using the Nortek z-wave and sigbee usb adapter with zigbee2mqtt + home assistant (both on docker). They are sometimes annoying to pair, but never had one drop for anything other than low battery (original battery sometimes craps out after a few months, but replacements go for 1+ year). I did hear their second gen motion sensor was kind of a miss when compared to the original one, so I stuck to the v1s. Not sure if they’ve addressed the reported issues. People also say that they don’t follow the protocol to the letter, so it seems possible that depending on the hub, they might not work as expected.

      We also have some third reality smart switches that turn a switch “smart” with a physical mechanism on the outside, while not as good looking, they are awesome for renters when you want yo automate things like kitchen lights without having to replace anything on the circuit itself. The batteries last forever (aaa). I found that adding some vinyl matching the color of your outlets makes them more stealth if you also don’t have white outlets.

      Edit: one of our third reality switches was placed on the porch light, which we wired the Christmas lights to this year using one of those $1.50 light socket to socket adapters (LED Christmas lights use very little energy - should be ok to power with a light socket which can do 100w for porch lights just keep it below 60w if unsure). It made automating them on when the sun set and off after midnight or so a breeze.

  • Llamatron
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    36 months ago

    Looks like there’s no DOGAIN UK plugs. Which is a shame. I have an INNR plug running a dehumidifier and it’s not great. It will turn off and on as per my Home assistant schedule and I get to see how much power is being used which is cool. However, it has a habit of turning itself off and back on randomly while as far as home assistant is concerned there’s been no interruption. It’s frustrating.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      16 months ago

      Does Thirdreality make a UK plug? I can’t find one on Amazon but that might be because I’m US-based. Out of all the plugs I’ve tried, theirs have been the best in terms of reliability.

      • Llamatron
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        16 months ago

        Sadly I can’t find a UK Thirdreailty plug. Their website only shows US, doesn’t even detect I’m coming from the UK so I’d guess US only. Surprising seeing as the company is based in China.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 months ago

        That was my gateway into automation, but it seems that they’ve essentially abandoned the range.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          Ah thats a shame! The lights were amazing with cold and warm leds seperate. Plus decent uk sockets

  • @[email protected]
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    66 months ago

    For switches / dimmers try Inovelli. Very very very tweakable. Can program things like minimum dim level, so even when you command 1% it still puts out enough power to start the LED bulb. And it will report taps and multitaps up to five taps as scene control actions. They also have a fan canopy module which can receive zigbee commands directly from a switch so the main paddle controls the light bulb and the secondary button above the LED bar controls the fan speed.

    • @[email protected]
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      26 months ago

      +1 for inovelli. Now that they’re generally in stock (got mine refurbished at a discount) I would use them across the board in a heartbeat.

      • @[email protected]
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        26 months ago

        Oh yeah they fixed that. I remember what you’re talking about, they went out of stock for like months or years at a time. That is no longer the case. Their flagship switch is in stock on their website all three flavors (Z-Wave/ ZigBee / Thread)

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    While I don’t have the number of devices you do, I can add two observations:

    Kwikset Zigbee Door Locks have been rock solid since the day I installed them. No issues dropping off the network. The only downside is occasional delay in reporting state (locked/unlocked) to HA. Getting it to respond to a command to lock/unlock is near instantaneous.

    Ikea Zigbee devices have also been rock solid. The only issue is that none of them seem to report battery level reliably. Other than that, there are zero issues.

  • @[email protected]
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    16 months ago

    Thank you for this. I don’t have a smart home but I was thinking about doing a home assistant. This will come in handy if I decide to do it.

  • @[email protected]
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    86 months ago

    Are you using zigbee2mqtt or ZHA? I’ve found a massive performance difference in Aqara devices between the two.

    • @[email protected]
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      46 months ago

      I started using zigbee2mqtt so I could use Aqara devices. They are the items I’ve had the least issues with since setting it up.

      It also seems like zigbee2mqtt just has a wider net of compatible devices in general.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 months ago

        Most likely coded work around and quirks. Where as ZHA is I guess more “it’s a standard people, follow the standard. If we have problem with you due to your non-compliance, it is a you problem. It is not an us problem, oh and users… how about you patron the standard following device makers”.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          That tracks, Z2M got popular when things were still pretty wild in the ZigBee world, they HAD to work around.

      • LifeBandit666
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        26 months ago

        I tested both out years ago when I was first starting with ZigBee and preferred Z2MQTT, it was just way better. I’ve been using it ever since.

    • Maestro
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      16 months ago

      Which of these is better for Aqara? I recently switched from Conbee to Zigbee2mqtt but I don’t have any aqara devices (yet…)

    • Kushan
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      16 months ago

      I tried both and my aqara temperature sensors still regularly fell off the network.

      Swapped for genetic tuya devices from AliExpress and not had an issue since.

        • Kushan
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          16 months ago

          I started on ZHA with a sky connect and switched to Z2M with a SMLight PoE dongle thing (which is really good btw).

          Same result with the aqaras.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      16 months ago

      I don’t think it’s so much that Zigbee is a gamble, but that buying off-brand cheap Chinese devices is a gamble.

      Like another commenter said, you get what you pay for. I have some Phillips bulbs that have seriously been working well for a decade, long before I even knew about HomeAssistsnt or even knew what Zigbee was, other than that’s what the Hue bridge used.

      Part of the problem is that more obscure Zigbee devices can sometimes only be found from companies with names that look like somebody just mashed their hand on the keyboard. For something like a relay or a mmWave sensor, you’re likely going to be trying to pick the best of a few questionable options unless you build it yourself. Alternatively, sometimes it just doesn’t really matter. I have a cheap temperature sensor in a storage space. I don’t care if it occasionally drops off the network; it’s just there to satisfy my curiosity.

    • @[email protected]
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      36 months ago

      You get what you pay for. Pretty much every Zwave device I’ve tried has worked as advertised and even had a surprising amount of extra useful features I had never considered.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    Adding to the list, I’ve got several IKEA lightbulbs (the dimmable white colour temperature ones) and a few sensors (door/window, climate) that work well. Can’t recommend the IKEA remote control thingy because it just stopped working and nothing could bring it back up. The support didn’t sound surprised and refunded it no questions asked though so that’s good.

    And I’ve got plenty of generic tuya switches and sensors (door/window, climate, water leak etc), both old WiFi ones that are flashed with ESPHome and newer ones on ZigBee from Ali. So far they all work great.

    (With the exception that I killed one and then a replacement switch by having them power a tiny LED light. Counterintuitively it seems like a thing that can wear a cheap design smart switch out if the load is too small and something something I got it explained to me by someone that understands electric circuits but now it is gone again.)

    I have everything running in Home Assistant on a repurposed old NAS with a Sonoff USB ZigBee stick.

    • @[email protected]
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      26 months ago

      I love all the ikea stuff, but true that the remote controls are absolutely garbage. I have multiple and they all are either slow, or not responding half the time. I think they have some debounce build onto the firmware and it is way too agressive.

    • Claude Flammang
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      26 months ago

      @whaleross
      Strange, I have four different kinds of IKEA remotes, the oldest being over five years old and they all work happily with ZHA.

      • @[email protected]
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        26 months ago

        Could be different revisions or something. At the time I discovered other people having the identical problem.