Thanks TinavuThe thing with Shellies is, that you do not need to flash their firmware to disconnect them from the cloud. That's right, out of the box it has a setting to disconnect from the shelly cloud. That there alone makes it perfect to not worry about the longevity of the company at all.
And that is also how I run mine. They are all disconnected from the cloud automatically by just enabling MQTT, which can then integrate with any local LAN home automation software you prefer. Mine ofcoarse is Home Assistant.
As for the wifi being down. For me that just is not an option with both me and wife working from home. So we have a solar setup, but on top of that, the network equipment also have a small 600w inverter backup, so that if the house's earth leakage trip (and it happen more than you know/expect), the house can go down but the wifi and internet stays up! In fact, I would say this is something you should plan for right now. With home automation, the wifi is super duper important and you should run it like it is part of a business.
That said, the shellies for me in this setup, has been super reliable, they are basically the most stable component in my whole home automation eco system. I only tinkered with them when I installed them in 2020. From there I only added auto firmware updates through Home Assistant and basically forgot about them.
The sonoffs, even with tasmota flashed have had their fair share of problems, losing wifi config etc. Although I rate more stable than people still using ewelink. Zigbee, my setup aint bad but the experience is far from ideal.
Thats my 2c![]()
The plan is to install hybrid solar in the home and to take this into account.
Great to hear about the reliability, I am also planning to run the system using HA.
I was actually thinking of disabling auto firmware update just to ensure it stays rock solid, sometimes these updates seem to break things
