I’m assuming everyone has Zigbee2MQTT, but what do you all have beyond that?

  • walden@sub.wetshaving.social
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    11 months ago

    I’m assuming everyone has Zigbee2MQTT

    I’ve managed to avoid Zigbee, except for some Ikea blinds which have their own Ikea integration. When I was deciding what sort of switches and stuff to get I ended up with Z-wave for all of my in-wall needs, and WiFi for everything else. I have 3 wifi AP’s so the wifi stuff doesn’t get too crowded – plus a bonus of good wifi coverage in the house.

    To name a few:

    • Z-Wave JS UI
    • Ambient Weather Local
    • Fordpass
    • Homekit Device (for local thermostat control)
    • Ikea Tradfri
    • IQVIA (allergy info)
    • Logitech Harmony Hub
    • Met.no
    • MQTT
    • Node-RED Companion
    • Oncue by Kohler (generator monitoring)
    • Redfin
    • Tasmota
    • TP-Link Kasa
    • UniFi

    Add-ons:

    • AdGuard Home
    • Grafana
    • Home Assistant Google Drive Backup
    • InfluxDB (for long term storage of certain sensors)
    • MariaDB (for everything else, takes the place of home-assistant_v2.db)
    • Mosquitto broker
    • Node-RED (does all of my automation, I love it)
    • Studio Code Server
    • TasmoAdmin
      • walden@sub.wetshaving.social
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        10 months ago

        Good question. I think it boiled down to reading lots of “will x-brand work with x-brand?” questions, and it seemed like a bit of a mess. If I bought a certain Zigbee hub, not all zigbee stuff was going to work.

        It’s my understanding that Z-wave “fixes” that by having a standard, and if a company wants to sell Z-wave stuff it has to be certified and licensed. This increases the cost which is passed on to the consumer, but the end result is that anything called Z-wave works with any Z-wave hub.

        It’s still not perfect, but my experience has been pretty good overall. I have quite a few Z-wave devices and most of them are extremely stable. I have one or two devices that are problem children, and I have to “ping” them to wake them up sometimes. Compare that to WiFi, which my house is also heavy on – and I currently have two devices that simply won’t connect to WiFi after updating the firmware. I’m going to have to take them apart and physically flash them again.

        Every protocol has it’s own problems, but overall I’ve been happy with Z-wave and WiFi.