I have two inovelli switches on the same circuit that are functioning as far as z-wave and local control works, but the actual lights aren't coming on. It started sometime overnight. One of these have been installed for about 3months and the other about 1month. My wife turned them on this morning and they wouldn't come on. The LED indicator is going on/off and I can hear it 'clicking'. The logs also show that it's responsive. When I got up (night shift) I turned them on and the breaker tripped. I reset it and they're still acting the same as they were. Any ideas?
Edit: I have one of the switches tied to another set of lights in the same area via z-wave association tool. That second set of lights is correctly being triggered by the first switch that's not turning on its' own set of lights. The second switch that isn't functioning isn't tied to anything via that tool, but it is mirroring the behavior of the other non-working switch.
If I'm understanding you're situation correctly, you're hearing the relay switch, but no power going to the load. Probably indicates a problem with your wiring. It could be your common or ground is shorted, which would cause the breaker to pop, but certainly nothing going to the load sounds like device failure or wiring problem.
It only tripped once and it didn't trip this morning when my wife first tried turning them on. It also hasn't tripped since and I've been turning them on/off a lot trying to see something happen. I won't have time to pull anything form the wall since I'm going to work soon, but I will tomorrow. They've been wired up for 1 and 3 months, but I guess it makes sense.
I've had Homeseer WD200 exhibit similar behavior two times. I installed the dimmer, it worked fine for a while, then stopped actuating the light. The LEDs would light up as if it was working normally. I pulled the switch and investigated, the wiring was fine, each time. Something was going wrong with the device. Never blew the breaker though.
It's only happened twice of over two dozen, but maybe that's what you're seeing here.