Thank you for all your help... now to see if I can tell what is non zwave
.
I think your method of watching the log and turning them on would be sufficient since zwave dont report state changes.
Good idea...
New hub update just released too in case you didn't see it. Looks like they fixed a ton of stuff.
about to install it now.
The Invoelli dimmers allow you to leave the circuit physically on and then use the physical interaction to control the state of a smart bulb. Is that right?
I don't have any but that's my understanding of them.
I believe one of the easiest ways to know this is to look at the clusters of the device on each device's details page. If there is a 0x5E value, it is Z-Wave Plus.
Only if you want the status to be correct. If you don't care about the current state/status being correct 100% of the time, then no need to replace them.
And, yes, anything routing through a non-plus device won't go faster than 40kb. So it can slow down your network (assuming the devices would have gone at 100kb otherwise - which isn't always true, but I digress).
So this one "Should" be a plus?
- deviceType: 18756
- inClusters: 0x5E,0x56,0x86,0x72,0x5A,0x85,0x59,0x73,0x26,0x27,0x70,0x2C,0x2B,0x7A
- deviceId: 12592
- MSR: 0063-4944-3130
- manufacturer: 99
Yes. Any device with a 0x5E inCluster is plus. That's true across all manufacturers - it is just part of how zwave works.
and this one would be a non plus?
- deviceType: 18756
- inClusters: 0x26,0x27,0x73,0x70,0x86,0x72,0x77
- deviceId: 12339
- manufacturer: 99
Correct