Back in the " old days ", CM11A/AH owners would program a "DIM to 1%" instead of an OFF to be followed by a "BRIGHTEN TO xx%" SoftStart instead of an ON.
I just plugged three 100 Watt incandescent lamps into an "old" LM465 and the latter into a "Kill-A-Watt" meter. The accuracy of this meter is specified as 0.2% of full scale (1875 Watts) and is therefore questionable at these low levels. But I read:
Module fully On - 294 Watts
Module turned Off - 0 Watts
Module dimmed to minimum brightness - flipping between 5 and 6 Watts
That would be closer to 2%.
Ah yes, the early days of X10. Before cell phones, CFL's, and electronic ballasts - I remember them well.
As usual, you are both absolutely correct. Leaving a module dimmed to 1% for 90% of the day, so that you can program a soft start for the 10% of the day that the device is in use, is horribly wasteful.
If the new LM465 is setup like my Leviton dimmers, you don't need to leave the device at the 1% level. The on ramp is controlled by the switch. From an off state (0 watts), you can issue an on command and the device will ramp to full on (or preset dim level). No current inrush to kill your filaments. No 1% off condition consuming power. No repeated bright and dim commands clogging up your power line.
Am I missing something here?
Charles - thank you for running the power vs level testing.