He's got a loose screw!My guess would be a neutral wire is loose.
Licensed electrical engineer here, not all dimmer switches are compatible with LED, let alone the different manufacturers.
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He's got a loose screw!My guess would be a neutral wire is loose.
Loose wires also cause miniature arcs that will heat up and can cause a fire.Sounds like a loose connection. Common practice for lights to be wired 'downstream' of receptacles. Most likely suspect in residential
wiring is the 'stab lock' receptacle connection. The neutral or hot connection could be loose at the receptacle. If you remove or replace
a receptacle 'Pigtail" the connection to the receptacle as is done in commercial wiring. The current for the entire circuit downstream
will not depend on the receptacle 'stab lock' connections. Retired electrician.
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Troubleshooting 101: I made a single change and got an unexpected result...
What happens when you unscrew the replacement bulb?
What happens when you replace the new bulb with a known working bulb?
What happens when you put the new bulb in a different area.
Does the problem follow the new bulb or does it follow the bathroom fixture?
If it follows the bulb, then use a different one.
If it follows the fixture then it could be switches, fixture, or wiring as others have pointed out, Before you start swapping parts out or hire an electrician make sure it's not something simple like a defective bulb.
LED bulbs are not a glorified piece of wire in a vacuum like an incandescent bulb.
LEDs run on DC and your house wiring provides AC. In the base of an LED bulb is an AC to DC converter, and this is where 90% of the heat and energy is used and 100% of problems happen. They use the cheapest single chip device they possibly can. A bad DC converter chip could also cause the other lights on the same circuit to flicker.