greensha Posted Monday at 02:32 PM Posted Monday at 02:32 PM I would love to convert my old incandescent lamps to LED lamps, specifically Hue (because that's what I have a few of). I have exclusively Hue bulbs in my basement (set up as a bar and TV room) and they are currently recognized by the eisy via the Hue plugin. However, these lights are manually controlled as and when needed. We are renovating the kitchen on the main floor of the house and currently all the bulbs on that floor are incandescent and control via Insteon switches and plug-in modules. These lights are also on a series of timers that turn the lights on in the evening and then gradually dim as it gets later in the evening. As a test, I've tried replacing a couple with Hue bulbs linked directly to the eisy and while they work ok on the scheduled timers, I have difficulty controlling them manually if needed. I can set a ramp rate for each Hue bulb, but that only works when they are turned on. The ramp rate is instant when they are turned off. However, I can toggle them on and off and the off ramp rate works ok then. If they are controlled by the Hue plugin, the ramp rate works as expected. The other problem is that if I put then in a scene that is controlled by an Insteon dimmer, I can't get them to fade up or down. This is the case whether they are linked directly to the eisy or via the Hue plugin. I have a Zigbee CCT controller that I and going to use for under-counter LED lighting. I can link that directly to the eisy and it works just like another Insteon device when it comes to fading and ramp rates, so I know it can be done. Am I doing something wrong, or is this something that will be added down the road? Quote
Guy Lavoie Posted Monday at 02:39 PM Posted Monday at 02:39 PM (edited) Do you mean that you are trying to use Hue bulbs powered through an Insteon dimmer switch? That won't work, and can possibly damage the Hue bulbs. Hue bulbs contain electronics that need constant, full line voltage. Any functions like dimming need to be done by the bulb itself, through Hue commands. You could use regular LED bulbs, but then again some are dimmable, others aren't. Read the packaging carefully. Edited Monday at 02:42 PM by Guy Lavoie Quote
greensha Posted Monday at 02:48 PM Author Posted Monday at 02:48 PM 6 minutes ago, Guy Lavoie said: Do you mean that you are trying to use Hue bulbs powered through an Insteon dimmer switch? That won't work, and can possibly damage the Hue bulbs. Hue bulbs contain electronics that need constant, full line voltage. Any functions like dimming need to be done by the bulb itself, through Hue commands. You could use regular LED bulbs, but then again some are dimmable, others aren't. Read the packaging carefully. No, I should have said. The Hue bulbs have power 100% of the time. I am using the Insteon dimmers to control them via scenes (or programs if that will work, but so far I've not been as successful with programs). Quote
Guy Lavoie Posted Monday at 02:55 PM Posted Monday at 02:55 PM 2 minutes ago, greensha said: The Hue bulbs have power 100% of the time...... I am using the Insteon dimmers to control them That's contradictory... If you set the Insteon dimmers to anything less than 100%, then the bulbs aren't getting 100% power anymore. Try powering your PC through a dimmer and lower the level to control the screen brightness... You'll just blow the power supply, or dimmer, or both. The Hue bulb is a computer. It needs 100% sine wave AC power to operate properly and do it's thing, which is to receive commands to dim, change colors, etc. Quote
greensha Posted Monday at 02:57 PM Author Posted Monday at 02:57 PM I am using the Insteon dimmers to control them via scenes or programs. They will not be connected to the Insteon dimmers via the load wire, they will be connected directly to the line wire in the junction box. The Insteon dimmers will not be controlling the Hue bulbs directly. Quote
Guy Lavoie Posted Monday at 03:04 PM Posted Monday at 03:04 PM 4 minutes ago, greensha said: I am using the Insteon dimmers to control them via scenes or programs. They will not be connected to the Insteon dimmers via the load wire, they will be connected directly to the line wire in the junction box. The Insteon dimmers will not be controlling the Hue bulbs directly. Well that's better. It wasn't clear from your description. So you're using programs to detect the Insteon switch status, and then send Hue commands via the plugin? Quote
greensha Posted Monday at 03:11 PM Author Posted Monday at 03:11 PM I've tried using programs to control the Hue lights, specifically trying to get them to fade up and down, but this doesn't work (or at least I've not been able to figure out the correct commands to use). I've put them in scenes and again, this doesn't work. I've tried both with the Hue plugin and directly linking them to the eisy. If the bulbs were linked directly to the eisy, they were first deleted from the plugin so that there was no potential conflict. Quote
Guy Lavoie Posted Monday at 03:21 PM Posted Monday at 03:21 PM Fading up and down in real time isn't very likely to work with programs because when you dim an Insteon switch manually, it only sends the new, final dim level when you let go of the paddle. This means you'll be limited to detecting a dim level (more like a range) with one or more programs, and/or detecting fast on/off commands, and then sending equivalent Hue commands. Things like that. You'd need to post your program(s), to see what it's trying to do. Quote
greensha Posted Monday at 03:28 PM Author Posted Monday at 03:28 PM That's why I gave up on the programs. I had originally tried that with the CCT controller but found that putting it in a scene worked very well. I don't seem to get the same behaviour from the Hue bulbs. Quote
Guy Lavoie Posted Monday at 03:37 PM Posted Monday at 03:37 PM Since translating your intentions from an Insteon dimmer to a Hue bulb requires using programs, there is no easy solution. You could try creating a bunch of programs, each one for a range of desired dimming, but you're still stuck without real time control, because of the way Insteon sends the final dim level as previously mentioned. Quote
lilyoyo1 Posted Monday at 07:34 PM Posted Monday at 07:34 PM Do you actually use different light levels when you dim or tend to stick to the same settings (IE: dim to 30% each time). If its the latter, you could use the fade command to trigger your program to set the light at that level. Outside of that, you would need to use programs and set the bulb based on the insteon range which will be a poor experience Quote
greensha Posted yesterday at 12:39 PM Author Posted yesterday at 12:39 PM 17 hours ago, lilyoyo1 said: Do you actually use different light levels when you dim or tend to stick to the same settings (IE: dim to 30% each time). If its the latter, you could use the fade command to trigger your program to set the light at that level. Outside of that, you would need to use programs and set the bulb based on the insteon range which will be a poor experience I don't often use the dimmer feature, but it's important that it works when needed. I do have some other lights that just transition from one level to another based on a schedule, I can probably use Hue bulbs in those. It just irks me a little that it works so well with the other Zigbee devices that I have and not with the Hue bulbs. I can't help but think it's a programming issue with IoX rather than a intrinsic limitation of the Hue devices. Quote
Guy Lavoie Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago 1 hour ago, greensha said: I can't help but think it's a programming issue with IoX rather than a intrinsic limitation of the Hue devices. It's the fact that you need to use a program at all that's the limiting factor. Dimming is usually a realtime thing that you do manually and intuitively, and doesn't lend itself well to translation. Take someone who speaks English fluently and someone else who speaks French fluently, and now add a translator between the two. The fluency is lost. Quote
oberkc Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago On 2/24/2025 at 10:37 AM, Guy Lavoie said: Since translating your intentions from an Insteon dimmer to a Hue bulb requires using programs I am not sure that I understand this entire thread. I have Insteon devices as scene controllers and hue bulbs (via PG3 node server) as responders. They brighten and dim just fine when so commanded by the switch. Am I missing something? Quote
Guy Lavoie Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago 1 hour ago, oberkc said: I am not sure that I understand this entire thread. I have Insteon devices as scene controllers and hue bulbs (via PG3 node server) as responders. They brighten and dim just fine when so commanded by the switch. Am I missing something? Well how are you doing it? Triggering scenes? That would work. But he wants real time control, manually. Quote
oberkc Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago I have an Insteon device (keypad, in this case) as scene controller, and hub bulb as scene responder. If I press-and-hold the keypad button, the hue bulb dims/brightens. No programs. Nothing but a scene. Works great for me. Is this not "real time control, manually"? Quote
Guy Lavoie Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago 3 hours ago, oberkc said: I have an Insteon device (keypad, in this case) as scene controller, and hub bulb as scene responder. If I press-and-hold the keypad button, the hue bulb dims/brightens. No programs. Nothing but a scene. Works great for me. Is this not "real time control, manually"? Well, could you explain how the keypad (a Keypadlinc?) button is configured. We might learn something here. Quote
oberkc Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago I know of nothing unique about the configuration of the keypad button. It is, in this case, button F of an eight button dimming device. Perhaps more telling is the configuration of the scene. I have attached a shot of the scene definition, from the keypad controller viewpoint. I use an "set xy color" rather than "default" or other action in response to the keypad scene initiation. I wonder if this makes a difference. Quote
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