No Appliance Module has a 60 watt minimum load requirement.
The 60 watt bulb you used to test. Was swamping the noise or local control sensor current if it was the older type.
Lamp modules do have a minimum load requirement of 40 watts.
The older Appliance Modules with Local Control Sensing would cause some LED and CFL bulbs to flicker or turn back On. The 7 watt night light was able to swamp out the sensing voltage. Those also had the diode and jumpers that could be cut.
The newer appliance model only has a very small sensor voltage to determine if it is presently On or Off. The 33K or 47K resistor was able to stop the problem of noise sometimes sneaking back into the module. Through the On Off sensing circuit.
The newer ones have no diode or jumper to cut. As there is no Local Control sensing in them.
If you cut the one resistor used to see if it On or Off out. It then tries a few times to see if it is on or off. Sounding like a machine gun.
I have not seen the latest hardware so it maybe different now. The AC Prongs are usually a snug fit through the case with gentle pushing on them will slide them out of the plastic case. Prongs down pushing on a table holding the case has worked for me. One thing you have to watch is the House and Unit Code dials can fall out of the case.