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Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2024
I have a couple of these in our bedroom and bought this one for our family room as I recently upgraded all of our dimmers and switches. It's so easy to use and so nice to have this table top unit that's easier to use than pulling out my phone.The only hard part was coming up with which button and combination does what so that I remember it! However that's on me and not an issue with the product.
Gaetano Mingari
Reviewed in Italy on January 11, 2023
Nonostante la leggerezza e la "semplicità" sembra funzionante ed efficace, sia fisicamente maniera diretta che tramite wifi con l' app, peccato abbia potuto provarlo solo brevemente altrove e non nella mia abitazione in quanto ho commesso l' errore fatto da molti di non verificare prima se fosse necessario il cavo neutro, informazione tra l' altro presente in bella vista nel titolo nel prodotto. Non posso Farne uso, peccato. Mi sento di consigliarvi ma: VERIFICATE PRIMA LA COMPOSIZIONE DEL VOSTRO IMPIANTO ELETTRICO. Comunque sia Moes si sta rivelando un ottimo marchio in generale come rapporto qualità-prezzo (avevo già altri prodotti del marchio).RETTIFICA: molto brevemente, dopo alcuni mesi non si collega più in nessuno dei modi che dovrebbero essere possibili
Austin Block
Reviewed in the United States on September 11, 2022
The 4-button ZigBee Wireless Remote Control by MOES may just be the worst ZigBee product I have ever owned. In fact, I have (soon to be had) 2 MOES remote controls, and neither has ever met my expectations.Starting out with one, it appeared to work well, so I ordered a second. Everything only went down hill from there. Starting within a week or so, the remotes became unreliable. Triggering a button would take several presses--at least two, if not three attempts. In my experience, it appears to require one press to wake the device up, and another to send the button press. This is not required on any other ZigBee device I have, it is specific to this MOES product.After 2 months of use, both remotes are no longer usable. The first started flashing green LEDs and will no longer respond to any button presses--not even a reset command (holding the lower left button per MOES website). Measuring the battery voltage, I found the battery was low, but not 'dead.' Replacing the battery should not be necessary at only 60 days old given that MOES website states a battery life of 700+ days. However, 10 minutes after replacing the battery, the flashing green LEDs began again. Not just a few days later, the second remote stopped functioning completely with no hopes of working again.On the topic of batteries--this product does not include them. I have purchased many other ZWave and ZigBee products (many of them being cheaper) and they have all included batteries. For this simple reason, I would consider this product by MOES to be of poor value.Moreover, the build quality of this product is abysmal. After these remotes stopped functioning, I purchased a Philips Hue Tap Dial to replace one. That is when I realized just how cheap these MOES remote controls are. They are flimsy plastip, have cheap button switches (that even sound it), and do not include all require parts (batteries).I will never again buy a MOES product and do not recommend this to anyone. There are plenty of better products out there.
Kunde
Reviewed in Germany on August 8, 2022
Um einen weiteren Lichtschalter in meinem Haus „smart“ zu machen habe ich mir den Doppellichtschalter der Marke MOES bestellt.Der Schalter wurde sehr schnell und in einem einwandfreien Zustand geliefert.Der Schalter wird sicher in einer mehrfarbig bedruckten Pappschachtel geliefert. Neben dem Schalter wird eine leider nur in englischer Sprache verfassten Bedienungsanleitung und Befestigungsschrauben geliefert.Der Schalter selber ist soweit ganz ordentlich verarbeitet aber er ist doch um einiges leichter als ich es mir vorgestellt hatte.Wie lange der Schalter durchhalten wird kann ich aktuell natürlich nicht sagen aber sollten da Probleme auftreten werde ich das in dieser Rezession noch nachreichen.In der Überschrift der Verkaufsanzeige steht das für den Schalter ein Tuya ZigBee Hub erforderlich ist.In meinem Fall ist das so nicht richtig. Der Schalter arbeitet mit Tuya aber nur über WLAN im 2,4Ghz Bereich oder eben über RF-Signale im 433MHz Bereich.Der Betrieb in einem reinen 5Ghz WLAN-Netzwerk ist nicht möglich.Ich konnte den Schalter mit einer Fernbedienung für RGB-LED Streifen ansteuern aber mit meinem ZigBee USB-Stick wollte sich der Schalter nicht koppeln lassen.Auch ist mir die Aussage L&N-Kabel Kompatible völlig unbekannt aber gut man muss ja nicht alles wissen.Der Schalter lässt sich in eine übliche Schalterdose an Stelle eines analogen Schalters problemlos einbauen und kann zwei voneinander unabhängige Endgeräte schalten.Der Schaltzustand des jeweiligen Schaltkreises wird an jedem Taster mit einer blauen LED angezeigt.Für den Betrieb ist unbedingt ein Neutralleiter nötig der nicht unbedingt in einer reinen Schalterdose vorhanden ist. Ist in der Schalterkombination eine Steckdose enthalten gibt es auch einen Neutralleiter und man kann den Schalter problemlos nutzen.Die Kabel werden über ordentliche Schraubklemmen am Gerät angeschaltet die die Kabel auch sicher halten.Die Kopplung mit der App über WLAN ist in wenigen Sekunden erledigt und verlief ohne Probleme.Nach der Kopplung kann man den Schalter über die App oder eben den lokalen Taster schalten.Ich habe den Schalter zusätzlich in mein SmartHome-System eingebunden und so kann ich den Schalter auch ohne die Tuya-Cloud steuern.Auf dem Schalter wird eine maximale Schaltleistung von 10A angegeben. Diese Angabe trifft aber nur bei einer reinen ohmschen Last zu wie z.B. eine normale Glühbirne.Schaltet man mit dem Schalter induktive oder kapazitive Last wie z.B. ältere Leuchtstoffröhren mit vorgeschalteter Drosselspule darf die Last maximal 2,5A betragen.Da die Relais im Schalter eh sehr klein sind bin ich gespannt wie sich der Schalter über eine längere Nutzungszeit schlagen wird.Da mein Schalter keine ZigBee-Funktion hatte die aber angegeben war ziehe ich einen Stern in meiner Bewertung ab.Da der Schalter bis jetzt tut was er soll kann ich eine Kaufempfehlung aussprechen.
Casa Rei
Reviewed in Mexico on June 21, 2022
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Giles Robinson
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 2, 2022
Got a couple of these switches now, had to send this one back as it requires a neutral wire at the switch (my fault for not checking before ordering) so make sure you check which type you require before you order
D. McEntire
Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2022
UPDATE 2023:When using with Home Assistant, I had several of these that exhibited the "blinking" then battery dead problem, and I was able to fix it all by moving them away from the zha integration and into the zigbee2mqtt setup. I am using a second zigbee interface, a Conbee for it, so I am running the two systems in parallel (zha for supported devices and the zigbee2mqtt for these MOES controllers).Using that method, via mosquitto as the broker, the moes units have been working perfectly for months now without any battery problems. For me, using them a handful of times each day, so far they are all still above 80% battery levels. The events fired for triggers is a little different, and sometimes requires you to edit the automation via the yaml interface, but it's easy and you'll figure it out pretty quickly.My next project is to try and laser engrave the buttons with a laser engraver I am getting sometime soon. If that works out I'll post pictures of the results. Currently I am just using labels or stickers. Also I added a photo of one in a 3D printed desktop stand, which you can find at the usual sources.ORIGINAL POST BELOW....Wasn't sure if this would work for me with HA, but they worked out great with the zha integration. I first tried them with deconz/conbee and ran into issues, so I removed it and went with the zha integration with my Nortek z-wave/zigbee interface and it ended up being the solution I needed. The controller just fires off zha_events which are easy to use for triggering automations.Two things to note that might be helpful to new users:1) Hold button #3 down for 10 seconds until all LEDs flash to get into pairing mode.2) Once it's paired, be sure to then hold #2 and #4 until LED #3 blinks to get it out of the default on/off mode where #1 and #3 and on/off triggers for ALL lights. LED #3 will blink once to indicate it's switched modes to individual buttons.In HA, you'll be looking for a zha_event with this data: device_id: xxxxx (long string from the note below) endpoint_id: {1..4} (button #) command: remote_button_short_pressThe button options are:remote_button_short_pressremote_button_double_pressremote_button_long_pressTo get the device ID, go into Developer Tools, events, then listen for "zha_event". Pressing buttons will fire events that will give you the data you need, including the device_id.Random notes - When I first tried to use this I realized that NONE of this is needed:1) MQTT/mosquitto broker2) Any zha quirks installed manually (it's already built in)3) Custom blueprintsJust using it as an event controller with zha seems to do the trick for me.Hope this helps someone!
Vicente SP
Reviewed in Mexico on December 20, 2021
Usando un controlador hecho por la comunidad, no tuve ningún problema para que fuera detectado e integrado con la red mesh para un hub Hubitat Elevation. Lo uso para crear escenas para cada cuarto se puedan ir a dormir a diferente tiempo.... Y si. Me quedan muchas combinaciones libres.
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