![]() ![]() Designed to boost your mood, improve your sleep, enhance your focus, and kickstart your energy, HappyLight® Luxe safely brings daylight indoors by emitting a bright white light that mimics sunlight. If power when out then the fan would be off anyways.Enjoy the uplifting power of bright light therapy with the HappyLight ® Luxe Light Therapy Lamp. So I’m unsure what you mean about down time. I use PLEG and timers and such all function when vera comes back up if it had an unsuspected reboot. A non techy doesn’t even have to touch the fan switch and it will work. It will auto run after its turned off for 5 min also. I have two on/off switches one for lights and one for fan, but the fan will auto turn on if the bathroom door is closed with the light on for more then a few min. Either they turn it off when they leave and it needs more ventilation or they take a shower and never turn I on. I’ll add this one to the list along with “why are there no z-wave toggle switches?” Is it just me, or is there a conspiracy among manufacturers to only offer one solution?! ?Ī non-techie end user in my house won’t even turn on the fan when its supposed to be on. But, as you say, this product does not exist, so I guess I’m just dreaming. IMHO, the hub should trigger the preset countdown operation of the in-wall switch, such as a preset 15 minute button, for example. The non-techie end user should be able to press a preset timed countdown button. Similarly, the in-wall switch should not be simply on/off. If the hub triggers “fan on”, and for some reason the hub goes down, it should not leave the fan in the “on” state. The same should hold true for a countdown timer. During downtime, at the very least, someone can walk across the room and still turn off the lights by pressing the in-wall switch. My concern with a scene-controlled timer-to-off solution is hub downtime (which…happens). Having two separate switches to control the fan, seems excessive to me, but your needs may differ. The Z-Wave switch could not turn Off the timer and the timer could not turn Off the Z-Wave switch. This way either switch could turn on the fan, but the switches would not interact with each other in any way. If you chose to, could use both a Z-Wave switch and a HET06A to control the fan in parallel. It’s a strange description, but it doesn’t mean that there is any real relation to Z-Wave. ![]() ![]() Their reference to, can fit in any standard wall box and can be multi-ganged with other devices, such as Z-Wave devices only means that they can be in the same gang box. The HET06A that you linked to is not a Z-Wave switch and cannot be directly connected with a Z-Wave switch so that either switch can control the other. The scene has a delayed action to turn the switch Off after 15 minutes. ![]() Then on Vera, you create a scene that is triggered by the switch being turned on. The typical method of implementing this type of scenario with Z-Wave is to use a standard On/Off Z-Wave switch to control the fan. So far as I am aware of, no such Z-Wave timer exists. What’s the best product or solution here? If z-wave turns the fan on automatically, there should always be a way to turn it off at the in-wall switch. But, I also have a humidity sensor in the bathroom, and I want z-wave to automatically turn the fan on when humidity is above say 70%, and automatically turn it off again (if it was triggered by the scene) when it’s below 70%. They should also be able to press an “Off” button and it always turns off. The reason I want a specific timer switch in the wall is so any non-technical bathroom visitor can still control the fan by simply pushing a button that’s labelled for example “15 min”, and the fan will stay on for 15 minutes. I’m not having any luck finding a z-wave controllable in-wall countdown timer switch. I want to replace my in-wall mechanical 15-minute countdown timer switch that controls my bathroom exhaust fan with a z-wave controllable digital timer switch. ![]()
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