Leviton vs Legrand Switch: what the datasheet hides
Leviton vs Legrand switch — Scenario: You manage 240‑room extended‑stay hotel, mid‑2000s build, no neutral at most switch boxes. You need smart dimmers that work today and don't force a rewire.
Installation guides, product selection tips, and compliance updates from our engineering team.
Leviton vs Legrand switch — Scenario: You manage 240‑room extended‑stay hotel, mid‑2000s build, no neutral at most switch boxes. You need smart dimmers that work today and don't force a rewire.
Leviton vs Lutron switch — Popular claim: “Any smart switch that lists 600 W incandescent will handle a similar real LED load for the same runtime – the rating is the rating.” Reality: the two ratings live in different failure domains.
Leviton vs Legrand switch — You’re in a spec meeting. The lighting load is 440 W of dimmable LED — a high-bay retrofit, or a long corridor with 40 fixtures. The contractor says: “Both dimmers are rated 450 W LED.” That sounds like a tie.
Leviton vs Lutron switch — You’re replacing a bank of halogen track lights (8 × 50 W = 400 W) with 24 W LED floods (8 × 24 = 192 W). Load drops 52 %.
Leviton vs Legrand switch — The common advice — “any name-brand smart switch is fine on a portable generator” — is exactly wrong at the scale of a sustained 240 V feed with 5 %–8 % total harmonic distortion (THD).
Leviton vs Lutron switch — The shelter has one wallbox, no neutral, a 3.5 A LED load, and a ventilation fan that must share the same smart switch without tripping the branch breaker. The ambient hits 45 °C.
Leviton vs Legrand switch — A common claim you’ll hear in the smart‑switch aisle: “Legrand adorne Tru‑Universal dimmer can handle 450 W of LED — that’s the best in class.” And it’s true — if you look at the forward‑phase rating.
Leviton vs Lutron switch — I watched a contractor spec Lutron Caséta across a 25-switch new build because “it’s the gold standard.” The invoice on switchgear alone was $2,175 list.
Leviton vs Legrand switch — You have a 300 W LED retrofit in a multi-gang box, or a 350 W halogen track in an older home without a neutral in the wallbox. Which switch fails first? The answer isn't in the VA number alone.
Leviton vs Lutron switch — Myth: “For a panel that rarely sees a maintenance visit, the most convenient smart-switch ecosystem is the safest bet—everything else is secondary.”.