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Another beginner project

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved My Project
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  • AstrofotografA Astrofotograf

    Thanks :)
    can't wait until the parts arrive..

    HenryWhiteH Offline
    HenryWhiteH Offline
    HenryWhite
    wrote on last edited by
    #9

    @Astrofotograf said:

    can't wait until the parts arrive..

    Hi! Which "Funklichtschalter (Sender)" are you going to use?

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    • AstrofotografA Offline
      AstrofotografA Offline
      Astrofotograf
      wrote on last edited by Astrofotograf
      #10

      @HenryWhite said:

      Hi! Which "Funklichtschalter (Sender)" are you going to use?

      I ordered this one: "Smartwares SmartHome Funk-Einzelwandschalter 1-Kanal, SH5-TSW-A"

      together with this one: "Smartwares SmartHome Funk-Einbauschalter 1000 W, SH5-RBS-10A"

      and this one: "Smartwares SmartHome Funk-Fernbedienung 4-Kanal, SH5-TDR-F"

      But didn't try them yet, so no further experiences with them yet

      HenryWhiteH 1 Reply Last reply
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      • AstrofotografA Astrofotograf

        @HenryWhite said:

        Hi! Which "Funklichtschalter (Sender)" are you going to use?

        I ordered this one: "Smartwares SmartHome Funk-Einzelwandschalter 1-Kanal, SH5-TSW-A"

        together with this one: "Smartwares SmartHome Funk-Einbauschalter 1000 W, SH5-RBS-10A"

        and this one: "Smartwares SmartHome Funk-Fernbedienung 4-Kanal, SH5-TDR-F"

        But didn't try them yet, so no further experiences with them yet

        HenryWhiteH Offline
        HenryWhiteH Offline
        HenryWhite
        wrote on last edited by HenryWhite
        #11

        @Astrofotograf nice, didn't knew they were that cheap nowadays. How are you going to get the (binary) code from these 433mhz switches? Do you have any useful links/tutorials for that? :smile:

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        • AstrofotografA Offline
          AstrofotografA Offline
          Astrofotograf
          wrote on last edited by
          #12

          With an arduino + 433 MHz receiver. The library is rc switch. There is a receive example sketch coming with it

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          • sundberg84S Offline
            sundberg84S Offline
            sundberg84
            Hardware Contributor
            wrote on last edited by sundberg84
            #13

            Are you sure this library are supported by openhab? Might be worth checking out first.
            A quick google shows atleast there are RFXCom bindings (protocoll for gateway to talk to controller) for openhab

            Controller: Proxmox VM - Home Assistant
            MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - W5100 Ethernet, Gw Shield Nrf24l01+ 2,4Ghz
            MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - Gw Shield RFM69, 433mhz
            RFLink GW - Arduino Mega + RFLink Shield, 433mhz

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            • B Offline
              B Offline
              BastienVH
              wrote on last edited by BastienVH
              #14

              When I used OpenHAB as a controller , I used the pilight plugin.
              If you setup a pilight-instance, you can connect it to OpenHAB and let that read out states and send commands.
              I didn't look dor a way to directly control an arduino from OpenHAB, seeing as pilight worked fine.

              EDIT: just to clarify: pilight has an arduino sketch you can upload to a nano (which is what I used) to act as a gateway.
              You won't need the expensive RFXCom.

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              • AstrofotografA Offline
                AstrofotografA Offline
                Astrofotograf
                wrote on last edited by
                #15

                So you add the 433 MHz modules directly to the rapberry GPIO pins and use the arduino just for the sensors?

                HenryWhiteH 1 Reply Last reply
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                • AstrofotografA Astrofotograf

                  So you add the 433 MHz modules directly to the rapberry GPIO pins and use the arduino just for the sensors?

                  HenryWhiteH Offline
                  HenryWhiteH Offline
                  HenryWhite
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #16

                  @Astrofotograf said:

                  So you add the 433 MHz modules directly to the rapberry GPIO pins and use the arduino just for the sensors?

                  Besides pilight there's also rcswitch-pi, basically rcswitch for the raspberry pi.

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                  • AstrofotografA Offline
                    AstrofotografA Offline
                    Astrofotograf
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #17

                    But in general, I could save the second gateway with that?
                    I'm not sure if I understand all of that correctly. Just spent a few hours to get the demo of openHAB running and still get some errors (persistence service not available) where I don't know whether it is normal to get these errors..

                    B 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • AstrofotografA Astrofotograf

                      But in general, I could save the second gateway with that?
                      I'm not sure if I understand all of that correctly. Just spent a few hours to get the demo of openHAB running and still get some errors (persistence service not available) where I don't know whether it is normal to get these errors..

                      B Offline
                      B Offline
                      BastienVH
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #18

                      @Astrofotograf
                      Pilight can use 433MHz senders and receivers connected to the GPIO-pins of the Raspberry Pi.
                      Problem with that is that the pi will need to filter all of the frequency noise which leads to higher cpu-usage and slower processing of other tasks (OpenHAB is quite resource-heavy in my opinion - on a RPi B+).
                      That's why they also have pilight-usb-nano which is a sketch/hex-file to upload to an arduino nano. This way the nano will filter out the noise and only feed recognizable commands to pilight, which in its way sends the commands to OpenHAB.
                      In that regard it acts as a gateway for your controller.

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                      • AstrofotografA Offline
                        AstrofotografA Offline
                        Astrofotograf
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #19

                        Okay, thanks. Seems I just have to experiment a bit with it.

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                        • AstrofotografA Offline
                          AstrofotografA Offline
                          Astrofotograf
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #20

                          Hm, I installed OpenHAB now on my RasPi, also Mosquitto. I think I begin to understand this. So MQTT is just some kind of "forum", and when in the thread "livingroom/temperature" something changes, OpenHAB recognizes it. The sensor sends just its data to the gateway and the gateway writes the MQTT thread?
                          Will the other way round work too, so OpenHAB writes data into a specific thread, the gateway recognizes it and sends a command so, say a servo node to move something?

                          If that all is correct, I sould be able to connect the 433 MHz things just like a normal sensor node. The receiver acts as a normal sensor and the sender could use the servo sketch to send some commands via 433 MHz band?

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