Does Zigbee have the same issues that other smart bulbs do with loss of Internet connection, and voltage drops/brown outs/black outs?
They all turn on the full brightness for “safety”
4 AM my voltage drops from 120 to 110 - not even noticable to a human being, and every light in my home turns on. Happened with Hue more than a few times and I got rid of every single bulb. I ain’t got sleep to lose.
No. They aren’t controlled via Internet (they can be, but it’s not vital). You have Zigbee switches that control them through radio. Or you control them with your Zigbee controller which is hooked up to your network, but works locally so even if your Internet is down it works on LAN.
voltage drops/brown outs/black outs … They all turn on the full brightness for “safety”
Depends on the brand. Some do this. Most do out of the box but you can go into the settings of your Zigbee controller and disable that. Some don’t let you configure it. I’d read reviews first.
Well zigbee has nothing to do with internet, the bulb just communicates locally to your hub. You can then connect that to your own local Homeassistant for example. What the bulb does with viltage drops is on the manufacturer I guess
I think this is the bulb I bought. I want to redo the lighting in my house and I was considering putting these tiny bulbs in the ceiling. It’s pretty bright though, so I was worried it would be annoying to look up at. You are using it now, does that seem accurate?
Imagine having a bulb that doesn’t require an account, that “just works”
Imagine having both
ZigBee baybeee. Fully local, offline, forever. Nobody can stop them working.
Does Zigbee have the same issues that other smart bulbs do with loss of Internet connection, and voltage drops/brown outs/black outs?
They all turn on the full brightness for “safety”
4 AM my voltage drops from 120 to 110 - not even noticable to a human being, and every light in my home turns on. Happened with Hue more than a few times and I got rid of every single bulb. I ain’t got sleep to lose.
No. They aren’t controlled via Internet (they can be, but it’s not vital). You have Zigbee switches that control them through radio. Or you control them with your Zigbee controller which is hooked up to your network, but works locally so even if your Internet is down it works on LAN.
Depends on the brand. Some do this. Most do out of the box but you can go into the settings of your Zigbee controller and disable that. Some don’t let you configure it. I’d read reviews first.
Also Phillips Hue is actually a Zigbee bulb, which can be used with non-Hue Zigbee controllers. If I’m reading right this setting can be configured. https://community.hueessentials.com/t/how-to-set-up-power-on-behaviour-for-my-lights/720
Zigbee is a communication protocol. The way your bulb reacts to a powercycle is up to a bulb. Mine remember last settings for example.
Well zigbee has nothing to do with internet, the bulb just communicates locally to your hub. You can then connect that to your own local Homeassistant for example. What the bulb does with viltage drops is on the manufacturer I guess
Zigbee or Thread does this. Example (
nownot that I use this one): https://us.aqara.com/products/led-bulb-t2-gu10I think this is the bulb I bought. I want to redo the lighting in my house and I was considering putting these tiny bulbs in the ceiling. It’s pretty bright though, so I was worried it would be annoying to look up at. You are using it now, does that seem accurate?
Sorry, typo - I do not use these lol
Also anything that runs Tasmota or ESPHome.
Yeah, I bet those grapes are sour af and require account to actually eat