Was the nightlight an LED? Make sure the nightlight is at least a 7W incandescent. You can also try a 10W "golf ball" E27 base (standard size base) incandescent.
The second was an LED specifically because it consumed more energy. The first was one of those electroluminescent/LEC night lights.
I think the only incandescent bulb anywhere in the house is in the lava lamp boxed up in the garage and I don't want to go beyond shuffling
existing loads around the house (eg. trading different types of night light as I did here) because I want my energy consumption to trend
down over time.
(eg. Anything without a true off-switch that doesn't need to be remote-controlled, like my TV and "1 watt idle, 3 watt playback" home theatre PC, is on one of the many switched power bars I've received with scrap computer equipment over the years.)
Do you know if it is a TM751 Transceiver with a retail or maybe private vendor part number?
It looks like a TM751 and, as I remember, it was sold to me as a TM751 back when I had my only RR501 fail and jumped to the conclusion that TM751s were more reliable.
Is there a small white sticker on the WTM75 with a Date Code.
There are two small stickers on it. The smaller round one says 01C10 and the larger rectangular one says P10485B.