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Load image into Gallery viewer, Lutron Maestro Motion Sensor Switch, No Neutral Required, 250 Watts, Single-Pole, MS-OPS2-ES, Eggshell
Load image into Gallery viewer, Lutron Maestro Motion Sensor Switch, No Neutral Required, 250 Watts, Single-Pole, MS-OPS2-ES, Eggshell
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Lutron Maestro Motion Sensor Switch, No Neutral Required, 250 Watts, Single-Pole, MS-OPS2-ES, Eggshell
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Lutron Maestro Motion Sensor Switch, No Neutral Required, 250 Watts, Single-Pole, MS-OPS2-ES, Eggshell
Vendor
Lutron

Lutron Maestro Motion Sensor Switch, No Neutral Required, 250 Watts, Single-Pole, MS-OPS2-ES, Eggshell

4.3
Regular price
€78,00
Sale price
€78,00
Regular price
€128,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€50,00)
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  • Tracked Shipping on All Orders
  • 14 Days Returns

Description

  • Automatically turns the lights on when you enter the room and off when you leave
  • Features XCT sensing technology which detects fine motion, such as typing at a desk or reading, ensuring lights do not turn off inadvertently
  • Optional: senses daylight so lights do not turn on when there is enough natural light in the room
  • Programmable time-out of lights - 1, 5, 15 or 30 minutes
  • Works with all bulb types; up to 250-Watt incandescent, halogen, electronic low voltage 200-Watt magnetic low voltage 150-Watt CFL/LED 2 Amp ballasts
  • Single-pole only; great for small rooms like kitchens, laundry rooms and closets
  • Installs in as little as 15 minutes; ground wire is required, no neutral required
  • Includes (1) maestro sensor switch; coordinating wallplate sold separately

Shipping and Returns

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  • All customers are entitled to a return window of 14 days, starting from the date of delivery of the product(s).
  • Customers are advised to read our return policy for details of the return process, eligibility, refunds as well as cancellations or exchanges.
  • In case of any issues or concerns about Shipping or Returns, please contact us and we will be happy to help.

Customer Reviews

BUYER BEWARE!! I purchased 4 of these for use in my garage and walk-in closets. The first install was in the garage. We frequently enter and leave the garage for minutes at a time in order to dispose of recyclables. It would be very convenient to have a light activated by motion when we enter and to automatically shut off after a minute or two once we leave. This light got left on a lot of the time. The install was simple for me as an engineer. The programming of the light switch was pretty simple too. It seemed to work at the onset after the install. But the next day I noticed the light would already be on when entering the garage. I thought something may be triggering the motion sensor so I began troubleshooting. It was then I noticed the switch wasn't working at all. In fact once it was turned on manually or with motion it would not turn off. I tried everything. It seems to be a relatively cheaply made switch. So I decided to return it and replace it with a better quality product.PLEASE NOTE: THIS PRODUCT IS NOT RETURNABLE. AS A PRIME MEMBER AMAZON WAS COURTEOUS ENOUGH TO REFUND MY PURCHASE BUT FOR THOSE WHO ARE NOT PRIME MEMBERS BEWARE. THE MANUFACTURER DOES NOT ACCEPT RETURNS OF THIS PRODUCT. 1Good job sensing This switch will allow your lights to turn on when a person's movement is sensed, or alternatively, turn it off when there's daylight. Its settings allow you to have the light stay on for 1,5,15, or 30 minutes after it no longer senses movement. It also has two levels of sensitivity and a test mode.Unlike many earlier sensor switches on the market, this one works with fluorescent, incandescent and LED lights. Although it requires a ground wire, which typical standard switches may not have, it doesn't need a neutral (white) wire, unlike many sensor switches.I placed this switch in a bathroom, where I needed one for two reasons. The light was frequently left on by mistake, and the room has fluorescent bulbs. Bulbs with CFLs inside do not favor well with short cycles, and are better off left on for a number of minutes than being switched off after a minute of being on.One concern with a bathroom switch is the level of sensitivity. I put the switch in test mode (15 seconds) and went behind a shower curtain. The light stayed on. Likewise, it stayed on while sitting on the room's seat. I haven't had any false responses, even when turning the ceiling fan on, although it's possible for air currents to trigger the sensor.UPDATE: I bought a second one for another room that gets light through windows during the day. The switch senses when a person is in the room and if it's dark enough, the light goes on. This is a much bigger room and I was concerned it might be a problem if the light went off with a person in it, but it seems to be working well. Another feature is that within five seconds of entering the room, you can turn it on or off, and it will learn from that. If you turn it on because it's already dark enough, it will learn to turn on earlier in the future. And if you turned it off, it would have recognized that there was enough ambient light that it should not have needed to still be on. Over time, it adjusts.Setting the time interval is simply a matter of holding in the button until it blinks the appropriate number of times indicated in the instructions. Other (less common) settings involve a small button that's normally hidden by the switch plate. That makes setting a simple task, and the defaults (5 minutes and movement sensor mode) might be sufficient.This uses a standard Decora switch plate, so depending on your current plate, you may or may not have to buy one. They are under a dollar at many hardware stores. I had a twin Decora plate from a previous sensor switch, but in one location I changed from a standard toggle switch and used a Leviton 2-Gang 1-Toggle 1-Decora Combination Wallplate.Overall, this works better and is more versatile than a number of sensor switches I've used in the past. It also has a lower sensitivity setting that I haven't tested, but if this causes lights to go on too easily, that's an available option.UPDATE: After using this switch for several months, I continue to be impressed by it, and it's the hands down winner compared to other brands I have tried. I have already bought an additional one and may buy more.UPDATE 9/2012: This switch allows you to set the amount of time after sensing no activity before the lights turn off. My wife decided that five minutes was too long for the bathroom and had me set it to a minute. I found that if I sit perfectly still, the light will go out. A simple turn of the head or wave of a hand will switch it back on. With a five minute setting, any movement within the past five minutes will have been enough to keep things on. So if you use one in a room where you sit very still such as while working at a desk with your back to the switch and a high chair back, a short setting could leave you in the dark until you wave your arm around. Ultimately it means that it senses small movements well, but in situations where small movements might not happen for a while you will do better with a longer period before it times out. So it's not just a matter of how long you want it to stay on after you leave the room, but a matter of how much you move around in short periods of time.UPDATE 8/2017: In December of 2016, I upgraded the fixture controlled by this switch and it now uses all LED lamps. It works perfectly. 5Everyone needs a few of these. I installed these in my laundry room, stairway and garage. It is so nice to walk into a dark room and have the light come on automatically. It stays on as long as you are there and then shuts off by itself. Easy install. Cover plate is included. 5Easy Hands Free Lighting Control I presently have (5) sensors installed; 4 recent and 1 since last Spring. All sensors control LED or LED/CFL lighting, in some cases less than a 10 watt load. The 3-way sensor includes a helpful diagram and clear directions, plus they offer 24/7 phone support, in case you need it. To date, the sensors have performed flawlessly and put my old (~20 yr old) Heath sensors to shame! They are relatively simple to install (with basic electrical skills) and offer easy programmability, which should satisfy most folks' needs. They do make a soft but discernible "pop", when they actuate, though it's really not objectionable and they do not glow in the dark.You might want to carefully consider your color selection(s), so that your choice matches your present switches/outlets/plates. Frankly, I think they need to expand their color line (I'm joking, of course).Update 01/08/17:Recently, I arrived home and noticed that a light, controlled by a Maestro, was on, even though no one was home. The only way to prevent the ghost activations, was to put it in Vacancy Mode, which means you turn it ON manually, then it turns OFF after the preset time following no one being detected within the sensor's zone. So far, no more ghosting! 410 stars! I love my occupancy switches so much that I would give these 10 stars if I could!!!We just moved into a new house (new construction), and apparently CA code now requires vacancy switches in places like bathrooms and laundry rooms. I've learned a lot since we moved in - I had no idea what the difference was between a vacancy switch and an occupancy switch (or that there were two kinds of switches). I worked in an office where they have occupancy switches in the conference rooms and the light will turn off since everyone was sitting around a table without moving much, and a whole room of professionals in suits and ties will start waving their arms in the air to get the lights to go back on ... it's pretty funny! So I assumed that when there is a motion detector on the switch, that it is an occupancy switch ... I had no idea there was such a thing as a vacancy switch. So we moved into this house with these vacancy switches, and they never seemed to work - they never came on unless you pushed the button, and they never seemed to go off without using the switch. So I started googling, and learned all about vacancy vs occupancy - quick overview: vacancy will turn off a switch after a certain amount of time with inactivity, but it will not turn the lights on; an occupancy switch will turn the lights on when it detects motion, and off after a certain amount of time with no activity. These Lutron occupancy switches can be set up to act as vacancy switches if you want. Since we have no kids, and it is just 2 reasonably responsible adults living in the house, turning off lights is not an issue for us, so vacancy switches don't really make sense in our house ... in fact the ones we had were extra useless because they waited for 30 minutes of inactivity before turning the lights off, so we had lights on much longer than if we turned them off ourselves. Plus, the guest bathroom motion detector faced the mirror, which faced the door, so every time someone (or a dog) walked by the open door the motion detector saw the activity in the mirror, so the switch never turned off ... totally impractical.So ... I switched out the vacancy switches in the bathrooms and laundry room for regular toggle switches ... what a relief! But, all of this put it into my head that occupancy switches would be really nice in several other locations, so I checked the reviews and found these switches, and got 4 of them (2 orders of 2-packs):- I now have one installed in our walk-in pantry ... the light pops on as soon as you step into the room, and it shuts off after 30 seconds (the minimum you can set these switches to).- One installed in our master walk-in closet ... my husband's robe actually hangs on a hook right next to the switch, and tends to cover up the motion detector a little bit, but the side of the motion detector still catches the motion as we walk into the closet, and if it doesn't, we just have to touch his robe and the motion makes the light go on :-) The only issue I have found is when I'm folding laundry in the closet, and the robe is hiding me from the motion sensor, the light goes off ... not that big a deal. I have this one also set to go off after 30 seconds.- The third one is in the laundry room ... this was the hardest to install because it was a 3 way switch, and these occupancy switches are single pole. Since the two switches in the laundry room are literally so close to each other that you can touch them both at the same time, it made no sense to have 2 switches, so I googled it and took out one of the switches and set it up so that the other switch was now a single pole, so that I could replace the switch with the occupancy switch. It worked perfectly, and now when I go in the laundry room with a load of clothes I don't have to find the switch, and when we come in from the garage through the laundry room, the light also comes on, so we can see where we are going. I also have this one set to 30 seconds.- The 4th switch is in the garage ... the location of the switch is such that you actually have to step into the garage to hit the switch, and with the required "automatically closing" garage door, the door closes as you go for the switch leaving you in darkness until you find it. The motion detector has fixed all of that. And a bonus is that when the overhead garage door opens that garage light also comes on, so it is nice and bright in the garage. I've got this one set up to do the daylight sensing, so the lights only come on when it is dark in the garage. I've also got this one set to turn off after 5 minutes.Now I need to put one in the coat closet ... and I'm sure there are other places :-)Loving them!! (Sorry for the long review ... I guess I got carried away) 5Options for 3-way (2-switch) setup. Here are two ways you can use this in a 3-way circuit, assuming the location of the motion sensing switch is satisfactory to you.Option 1 will allow you to override the light to stay ON, ignoring the motion sensing switch (which will continue to do its thing). So basically, the light is ON or under motion sensor control. Disclaimer: although highly unlikely, if something goes wrong with the 3-way switch causing the two traveler wires to short together, something bad could happen to the sensor switch. I don't think anything bad would happen to it, but not knowing the exact construction of the sensor switch, I can't be certain. It's also highly unlikely for the 3-way switch to become defective in that fashion.Option 2 will allow you to override the whole thing OFF. You're basically able to cut power to the whole setup as you wish. So basically, the light (and the sensor switch) is OFF or under motion sensor control. You can leave the existing 3-way switch on the LINE side and just tie off one of the traveler wires at the other side, or replace it with a standard 1-pole switch and tie off one of the traveler wires on both ends. I went with this option because I wanted to be able to keep the light OFF when I want to.I did not draw in any of the ground connections to keep the illustration as simple as possible. You'll obviously need to hook up all the necessary ground connections. 5These are not eligible for return, even if they don't work I want to give this 5 stars, but I cannot because of the return policy. I purchased 4 of these, 3 worked great, one was broken right out of the box. I went to return it, and I couldn't, these are not eligible for return, so be aware. 1Unreliable after only 5 months! I am an accomplished DIY'er and have installed many types of switches. This particular one went in easily and worked fine at the start. Now after 5 months of use it is extremely unreliable. I have it in my garage and it turns on and off by itself with no motion. The switch to turn off the lights works only about half the time. This makes it impossible to turn off the lights. The motion sensor turning it on works even less. I am going to have to replace it with something that has a longer operating life. It most likely will not be anything Lutron. 1Defective and not returnable Defective and not returnable. Avoid this product. 1A well built, long lasting switch with plenty of adjustable options. [Original review 1.3.2018] - Love these switches. I have one in the garage which automatically turns the overhead lights on when we pull into the garage or open the door from the house to walk out into the garage. It has been functioning for over a year now without any hiccups.I have two in the kids bedrooms as punishment for leaving the lights on all the time (he he he). The only drawback / bonus to that is the angle of motion it will receive. From the light switch location on the bedroom wall, the motion sensor will pickup any movement in the hallway if the bedroom door is left open. So a bit of masking tape across half the sensor fixes that nicely. Just don't hang a mirror on the door as the sensor WILL pickup motion via the mirror.These switches are very adjustable & have a learning algorithm in them as well.In the garage, I have the time set for 30 minutes on this switch as there are many times I'm doing something in the garage for an extended period of time & can't have the lights going out in the middle of a project if it doesn't pick up any movement.When I initially installed the switches in the bedrooms three months ago, I set the time to leave the lights on after there was zero motion for 10 minutes. Drives the kids nuts having to get up from their desk to turn the lights back on (he he he). In the morning hours the bedrooms have sunlight streaming in through their windows. Initially, when I would walk past the switch into the bedroom the light would come on. But if you quickly hit the switch within 5 seconds of turning the light on, the switch will remember the environment (how light it currently is in the room) & the next time you enter the room with the same environment (or lighter even), the switch will leave the light off.If you're looking for a well built, long lasting switch with plenty of adjustable options, this is your switch. 5
Lutron Maestro Motion Sensor Switch, No Neutral Required, 250 Watts, Single-Pole, MS-OPS2-ES, Eggshell

Lutron Maestro Motion Sensor Switch, No Neutral Required, 250 Watts, Single-Pole, MS-OPS2-ES, Eggshell

4.3
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.
Regular price
€78,00
Sale price
€78,00
Regular price
€128,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€50,00)