You Won't Believe What You Can Do With Pico Remotes!

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These Lutron Remotes called Picos can solve your entire smart home remote needs. There are so many configurations and a ton of features. They can be used to control many different lights, light switches, fans, blinds and shades, and by the end of this video I'll show you how you can control anything!

Want to show off your smart home?

Check out the @Hubitat channel to see how to setup these remotes in your own home.

Also available at Home Depot, for scene controllers and multi-group Pico I recommend finding a dealer with inventory on eBay, you can contact any Lutron dealer directly to order a full custom pico remote for around $100/each
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The 4-button scene control are the only pico worth buying since they can do what all other pico remotes do plus so much more. They are the only pico remotes that allow to selectively control any light, shade or switch in the house in any desired combination of configuration. I have 25 of them across my house (with a RA2 select system).

Ganserndorf
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TY ...They have two types of Lutron Pro Hub ...one without Homekit and one with Homekit one is your model

supernova
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It seems the remotes are only good for turning a previous non 3 way switch into a 3 way switch. The actual dimmer switches that are wired into your junction box are $120/piece. If I have 10 dimmer switches in my house and I wanted to replace them with the Lutron version, I’d be paying over $1200 just for 10 dimmer switches. That seems outrageous. Or am I confused?

DieselZee
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Just something to think about. A switch/dimmer that toggles lights is useful only for lights controlled Only by that switch/dimmer. If the controlled lights are part of multiple scenes, automations or schedules then "toggling" is a quite meaningless concept. Just think - before you press the "toggle button" you have no idea what lights are already on - controlled by one of those other methods, so you aren't always starting from 'off'. After you've selected the new scene with the "toggle on" one of those methods can then subsequently modify it again. So if you were to later try to "toggle off" that scene - you don't know what the starting levels were before you first pressed the button and you don't even know what the current levels are... What should the "toggled off" scene look like?? all the scene lights off? - that wouldn't really make sense if they weren't off to start with... This is the reason scenes don't toggle - its really quite meaningless in a complete context.

alanmoore