![]() Mostly have read those don't really help, but didn't have much basis. LEDs have a tendency to do tricky things to digital dimmers without neutrals- lots of feedback issues causing flickering, pops, and such. The min loads are always for incandescent loads. The neutral dimmers have a 10W minimum load for incandescent, vs. Considering the incandescents dim fine with the PD-6WCL, you should see a lot better performance with the neutral PD-10NXD. Would be useful also if any of the PD-6WCLs start to flicker a bit or ghost when off. The LUT-MLC might help, and it isn't that expensive. Those bulbs are notorious for being super cheap inside- designed around commercial retrofits with standard switches. Should be fine with the PD-5ANS, but you might try and source an LUT-MLC and add that in. The PD-5ANS is actually a little different behavior, after turning off, one of the two recessed lights will blink/flash every minute or so (but will stop after a while).Also, these are on non dimmable 4-pin G24 bulbs rather than standard E26's on separate ugh, dimmable 4 pin fluorescent replacements. ![]() With the LED retrofits it will turn fully on then off, and then on again while incandescents will slowly rise to full brightness from dim when turning on.I have neutrals available, perhaps I'll need to replace my switches with PD-10NXD (seems double the price)? It doesn't happen with old GE incandescents, but there will be really loud buzzing even at full. Is the neutral wire being used for that switch? You may need to have an electrician come and look at your particular home to diagnose correctly- you may have some transient voltage coming from the neutral. What really peaks my interest is that you are having the same issue with the PD-5ANS neutral switch. ![]() One solution would be to replace the troubling dimmer with the PD-10NXD neutral Pro dimmer. All of Lutron's non-neutral digital dimmers can exhibit this behavior, it's not relegated to Caseta. Your problem sounds like an underwattage issue for the non-neutral PD-6WCL dimmers. I am using the 75W equivalent (Model try replacing the bulbs with regular incandescent and see if the problem goes away. It is for a 65W equivalent version of the EcoSmart R30 (Model 1003012803). If I could completely disable the fade on/off functionality on the PD-6WCL I would to workaround this problem, but it looks like it's not possible to change this.Here is the Lutron compatibility report for the EcoSmart bulb closest to the model I'm using. Around the same time it started happening with two other PD-6WCL switches in my kitchen that power a single pair of lights, each (which are also using EcoSmart LED bulbs).I do not notice this behavior with other, less frequently used PD-6WCL switches in my house.I've tried adjusting the low-end of the fade trim up on the lights that are flashing on then turning off. ![]() This behavior has been consistent since it started. When I turned the lights on by pressing the physical switch on the PD-6WCL the five ceiling lights would do nothing, then flicker on full brightness, then turn off and fade back on to full brightness. They also responded promptly when I adjusted the dimming levels using HomeKit, Alexa, and the Lutron app.In June, I started to notice some unexpected behavior. They faded on slowly to full brightness and they faded off as expected. I didn't even need to adjust the low- or high-end dimming levels. I installed EcoSmart 75-Watt Equivalent BR40 Dimmable LED lights (120 VAC, 60 Hz, 140 mA, 12.5 W, 2700K, 940 Lumens 2018GT) into each of the five recessed cans.When I first started using this in April it worked like a charm. I replaced my existing switch with a Caseta PD-6WCL switch. In my kitchen I have five recessed cans attached to one switch. It is important to note this capacitor is designed to eliminate ghosting not to fix a poor LED and dimmer combination that is producing flickering but it can help with that in some cases.I installed my first Caseta switches in April of this year. If there is no neutral at the dimmer location you will need to install this capacitor across the load (the light bulb socket). If you are not using a dimmer with a neutral, don't have a neutral available in dimmer location, or do not want to pay for a dimmer that uses a neutral this is a good solution. This capacitor provides a lower impedance return path for the dimmer to bypass the bulb when "off" which reduces or eliminates LED ghosting. Electronic dimmers without neutral connections need a return path when the light bulb (load) is off to power the circuit inside the dimmer. This is just a 0.47uF X1 310VAC rated capacitor. Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2019 5.0 out of 5 stars It's a simple capacitor and it works to eliminate LED ghosting
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