It would be helpful to pinpoint whether the "smart switch" is toggling the lamps or the lamps are doing that by themself.
Otherwise I would also suspect something fishy in the installation: The flashing may be a result not of the preheats being turned ON/OFF, but by the vibration in the wall when operating the switch because somewhere in some junction box is a loose connection, or something similar. Review where the wiring is routed, whether there isn't a common junction ox on the wall with the switch (so operating the switch shakes it), or above the preheat fixture (so the magnetic field from the ballast during preheat is shaking the wires with current in them,...). Or a loose contact, already nearly sparking, changes its characteristics when the passing current through it changes.
For how little I do the electrical work (not my main job) I've seen this problem way too many times. Even when I was initially refusing to accept a bad contact (because of "other symptoms"), I was proven wrong (again), it was exactly another case of a connection being loose.
Screw terminals are frequent offender, by far not exclusive in old aluminium wire installation Bad assembly (someone tried to fit two wires underneath one screw,...) Riveted joints in sockets/switches/... (when lying on the desk, the internal working springs tension the joints so the rivets appear tight, but when a bulb is screwed in, it becomes lose) Soldered joints in electronics (improper mechanical fixing of wires, abuse when assembling, abuse when handling the part before installation leading to fatigue cracks) Push-in terminals with fatigued springs (mainly when someone "fixes" a wiring mistake by attempting to remove the wire and then pushing in another one) Wires being cut by those springs because exposed to movement (mainly in drywalls beside door where slamming the door shakes everything there) Damaged "Wago" style terminals (because someone did not assemble the connection carefully) And many more...
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