If you’ve elected to convert your dual connection radiant panel to a hardwired connection, the radiant panel should be wired to a hardwired control option like a switch, […]
and they offer a Wifi wall switch but of course, I want to use the Inovelli’s
Looking at the wiring diagrams for the panel, and their switch, I’ll say no. The panel is controlled by having its power input switched directly. That would expose the switch directly to that load, which the 2-in1 is not designed to handle.
It’s a bit borderline, but isn’t this actually supposed to work? The heater is rated at 600W, and the max load for the 2-1 is also 600W.
And a 600W incandescent load would be slightly more taxing than this 600W resistive load?
The Blue 2-1 is a LIGHT switch. It was designed and tested as a LIGHT switch. It is rated as LIGHT switch. A heater is not a LIGHT. No one at Inovelli is going to say it’s OK to use a switch they designed and got rated as a LIGHT switch for any other purpose.
Hi Bry,
I completely agree. It’s that whole Inovelli supported vs. NEC approved vs. “works” discussion.
Asking from the “works” perspective, I was thinking of an incandescent bulb as basically a heater (though with some extra startup current requirements), this sounds like a heater probably without the startup issues.
But yes, using these “off-label” (as the drug companies would say) and particularly that close to the rates limits might not be the best idea.