You cannot just use deCONZ or similar with HomeKit. Doesn't work that way. It's just an antenna. You will need Home Assistant or similar to make the dongle work.
Home Automation
Home automation is the residential extension of building automation.
It is automation of the home, housework or household activity.
Home automation may include centralized control of lighting, HVAC (heating, ventilation and air conditioning), appliances, security locks of gates and doors and other systems, to provide improved convenience, comfort, energy efficiency and security.
Warning: Working with electricity can result in injury, property damage, or even death if it is not done properly. Please keep this in mind while assisting others. If you are not sure about what you are doing, hire a licensed professional.
Rules
- No abusive behaviour. This is a forum for friendly discussion; personal attacks will not be tolerated and you will be banned without warning.
- Referral/affiliate links are NOT ALLOWED!
- NO POLITICS! There are plenty of other communities to discuss them; this is not one.
- When posting project details must be included. Posting a video or image without detail will result in a removed post and may result in a ban.
- Crowdfunding links are not allowed.
- Reposts, low-effort content and karma farming may be removed at the discretion of the mods. Posters may be banned without warning.
Cheap Rpi, with Zooz single and Zwave2mqtt
Your first two options listed are simply ZigBee coordinators, not "hubs": you'd need to run ZHA or ZigBee2mqtt on a computer (could be as simple as a Pi) to use them. Home Assistant is usually what people pair this with for automations, but I prefer the combination of ZigBee2mqtt + mosquito (MQTT broker) + nodered.
Your first two options listed are simply ZigBee coordinators, not "hubs": you'd need to run ZHA or ZigBee2mqtt on a computer
So a coordinator requires a software to interface it, whereas a hub is standalone (given that it has an app or something)?
You cannot just buy a hub like deCONZ, ConBee, Sonoff etc and it just magically work with homekit. If it isn’t homekit certified it will not work without something like home assistant or homebridge as an intermediary.
Ah yes, it needs to be HomeKit certified. Would there be a generic Zigbee bridge that's HomeKit certified?
Home assistant works perfect in HomeKit, plus you have the benefit of advanced automations in home assistant
TubesZB + HA user here. It's been a flawless experience for me
By any chance, would you have a Sync Box that's working too?
I don't have any Hue products
I have the Tuesday ZB PoE version,and would never consider anything else. I had nothing but issues with 2 Sonoff gateways and was ready to trash my whole ZB setup. Paid the money and that was over a year ago. Now I rarely get any devices randomly disconnecting. I also get power redundancy due to my switch being on UPS
If you are using hue through HomeKit, you should be able to pause / block the hue hub from the internet and still use it through HomeKit. This is a work around to hue wanting to access your devices.
Alternatively, Home Assistant is amazing if you ask me. I’m an amateur and found it really easy to uses. The only reason I’ve kept the hue hub is because I already have it set up, otherwise if I was starting from scratch I’d use a Zigbee dongle or home assistant yellow for all my Zigbee devices
I like Smartthings. Is it the best? No. Is it the most functional? No. But it supports a lot of devices and it's really easy to use. And coupled with Alexa, there's very little you can't do. For more complicated things where it might seem impressive, the key is often virtual switches and sensors.
Is the local API expected to stop working?
I use a sonoff bridge flashed with Tasmota. I use the system with HomeAssistant which can also do HomeKit.
The best bit of the sonoff bridge is as it’s WiFi you can put it anywhere and not be near your server. My server is in the basement and my hub is plugged into a usb socket in an upstairs cupboard.
Everything I have is zigbee. Bulbs, switches, plugs, door, window sensors, blind rollers. I use to have zigbee trvs on all the rads.
System has never let me down yet.
Seconded. Same setup, solid as a rock, with a few additional wifi bases devices on top of zigbee
Does it work well? No disconnection or anything?
All of these devices and hubs use the same chips from Texas Instruments.
There are basically 2 defacto chips. The "older cheaper one" and the "newer expensive and powerful one."
The ZZH is the later. Most others (do check) are the lesser chip.
Issues with the lesser chip are:
* Limited number of devices supported (something like 16?).
* No support for "direct binding" close proximity binding - required to re-bind re-join a Phillips hue bulb.
- Lower signal strength.
I have 4 Hue smart bulbs acting as routers around the house, which helps, but honestly it's far more reliable than the Wifi setups.
I would guess CC1352 is the older cheaper whereas CC2652 is the more powerful one?
Hubitat.