I’ve wanted to illuminate my kick plates for a long time, starting with my master bathroom, and rolling out to my secondary and kitchen

Finally started today, with a 100w 24v converter, and a gledopto ZigBee controller

Installation was easy, and the controller was quickly picked up. I previously installed a GFCI protected outlet under my sink, so I just plugged it into there.

I don’t have a motion sensor yet, so it’s just a timed automation:

Day: bright white, about 40% brightness Evening: warm white, about 20% brightness After 10: almoast amber, and about 1% brightness, just enough to pee by.

  • @rowinxavier@lemmy.world
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    95 months ago

    Very nice, I love the overall effect. Once you have motion sensing are you planning on local reaction or more of a persistence approach? Like a motion sensor and then a timer for turning off or once someone enters the room keeping them on until they leave the room?

    • CorhenOP
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      35 months ago

      yea, havent decided if it will always be on, and brighten, or only turn on when someones there.

      The energy cost should be nearly nill, a watt or two (it 12 watts at max, and im using it at 5% for standby!)

      • @rowinxavier@lemmy.world
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        25 months ago

        Nice. I would recommend measuring the usage not from what the device reports but from actually measuring at the wall socket. The conversion is likely meaningfully under the 95% efficiency of some tools and that waste is felt as heat. If you convert to 24V from 120V you will have a significant amount of heat as waste which is unreported in home assistant. If you have the option to use a relay it can actually turn the thing all the way off, allowing almost zero usage when not on, but it can be a little slower to respond.

        • CorhenOP
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          15 months ago

          Yea, my guess is just based on what the strip says (12+12 watts per meter)

          Only wattmeter I have is an Ikea ZigBee plug, which does draw reporting. Could use that and measure it’s wattage