I just bought an armful of
used Leviton DHC HCM10 2-wire dimmer switches on eBay and just wanted to give the group a heads up that there are more. Be aware that they are almond colored, which is like a "cream" color and only slightly darker than white.
I still have a few fixtures in my house that are wired with single-pole switch loops and cannot easily be rewired without tearing out a wall due to the construction. These switches operate when wired that way, and very well. Wiring with neutral is recommended, but optional. Still, these switches perform very well for me with just a single-pole, 2-wire connection, even with most dimmable LED bulbs, and even perform better than a "dumb" 2-wire dimmer in some cases. They also have a handy LED bar on the side that shows the current or memorized dim level and an indicator at the bottom that lights when OFF to help you find the switch in the dark.
These are a unique item because:
- The solution from X10 (WS12A) kind of sucks.
- I haven't found any X10 switches from other manufacturers with this feature set. AFAIK, all of them (e.g. SmartLabs, ACT) require a neutral. Not to mention they're also discontinued.
- There is an Insteon 2-wire switch, but it does not support X10. AFAICT, it doesn't even support Insteon PLC and requires you to have a "dual mesh" module near it that speaks Insteon RF.
The solution from X10 sucks because:
- The WS12A has not a real rocker; it has a squishy half-rocker that is a single button that does everything, but that's not obvious to a new user. It's not intuitive to use. (The Leviton switch has a control that moves and works similarly to a real rocker.)
- None of my guests have ever been able to figure out the WS12A. They hit the rocker and it ramps up slowly enough that they think nothing happened and hit it again, which stops it at a low brightness and sets that to the new resume dim level. With no LEDs, there is no feedback from the switch and no other indication as to what went wrong. The new dim level cannot be bypassed with a single tap, and they don't know to hold it down. At that point, they don't know how to fix it and give up. (The Leviton switch doesn't exhibit any of these behaviors. It implements resume dim, but not stupidly; a second tap doesn't cancel brightening.)
- The WS12A ramps on very slowly (over 2 seconds). (The Leviton switch ramps up quickly and ramps down slowly.)
- The WS12A's resume dim cannot be bypassed one time by tapping the switch. (The Leviton switch's can.)
- I've had problems with both the WS12A and WS467 spuriously glitching to ON state without any X10 signal being sent (verified with an XTBM Pro and an XTB-232). This has happened with multiple units over multiple production periods, and I've tried a couple of mods to no avail. The Leviton switches don't do that.
- The WS12A can resume to a random state and brightness level after a power glitch. (The Leviton switches appear to use flash or EEPROM to store state so shouldn't do that.)
These design issues aren't limited to only the 2-wire X10 brand switches. I'd love to see X10 step up their game and redesign all the wall switches to compete better. As it is, they're just a few hacks on top of the old single-button WS467. For cases when users have a single-pole switch loop that can't be rewired, Insteon also offers Insteon-compatible LED bulbs. I don't know about everyone else, but the idea of an efficient LED bulb with an integrated receiver appeals to me more than a Socket Rocket. An all-in-one might be more attractive to others as well.
I wasn't planning for this to be a rant. The bottom line is: These things are nice and they're on eBay. They're discontinued and in short supply, so if you think you might want them, get them now. (BTW, I have no affiliation with the person selling them other than being a customer.)