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  3. 💬 Very narrow and minimal switch node

💬 Very narrow and minimal switch node

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mysensorsbinary switchesi2cnrf24l01
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  • GertSandersG Offline
    GertSandersG Offline
    GertSanders
    Hardware Contributor
    wrote on last edited by
    #25

    The latest member of my growing sensor family, a reedswitch sensor with wakeup from power down by change on pin 2, wakeup every 23 hours to report battery voltage, and of course a blinky light when these things happen :-)

    0_1456959867067_IMG_7804.jpg
    1_1456959867067_IMG_7805.jpg
    2_1456959867067_IMG_7807.jpg

    Just tested and found to be OK. Next board will be set up for using a I2C module (will be my smallest temperature sensor yet). Time for a glas of WestVleeteren and rest.

    alexsh1A 1 Reply Last reply
    2
    • carlierdC Offline
      carlierdC Offline
      carlierd
      wrote on last edited by
      #26

      Very nice !!
      I just started learning Eagles to modify your board for RFM69 compatibility. The road will be long ;)
      Could be good also to add ATSHA204A but in a second time !

      David.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • GertSandersG GertSanders

        The latest member of my growing sensor family, a reedswitch sensor with wakeup from power down by change on pin 2, wakeup every 23 hours to report battery voltage, and of course a blinky light when these things happen :-)

        0_1456959867067_IMG_7804.jpg
        1_1456959867067_IMG_7805.jpg
        2_1456959867067_IMG_7807.jpg

        Just tested and found to be OK. Next board will be set up for using a I2C module (will be my smallest temperature sensor yet). Time for a glas of WestVleeteren and rest.

        alexsh1A Offline
        alexsh1A Offline
        alexsh1
        wrote on last edited by
        #27

        @GertSanders said:

        Just tested and found to be OK. Next board will be set up for using a I2C module (will be my smallest temperature sensor yet). Time for a glas of WestVleeteren and rest.

        @GertSanders
        Westvleteren Blonde is very nice :)
        Can you please remind me the difference berwrrn v1 and 1-1?
        I think it would be good to add FTDI connection, but the space is very limited

        GertSandersG 2 Replies Last reply
        0
        • alexsh1A alexsh1

          @GertSanders said:

          Just tested and found to be OK. Next board will be set up for using a I2C module (will be my smallest temperature sensor yet). Time for a glas of WestVleeteren and rest.

          @GertSanders
          Westvleteren Blonde is very nice :)
          Can you please remind me the difference berwrrn v1 and 1-1?
          I think it would be good to add FTDI connection, but the space is very limited

          GertSandersG Offline
          GertSandersG Offline
          GertSanders
          Hardware Contributor
          wrote on last edited by GertSanders
          #28

          @alexsh1 FTDI would be nice to reprogram more easily, but in my case I have a stable sketch which is loaded 1 time, and then the node is deployed. No point in providing extra pins or using boardspace if it is only used once or twice.

          I saw that @AWI mentioned pogo-pins to make connections. Also a nice idea. In any case, my node is not designed to be flexible, and after programming I want to forget it. These nodes are sitting on doors and windows and need to do 1 thing only: show status of the reed-switched that are connected to them.

          But adding some pads so that pogo pins can make contact to RX, TX and !RESET would still be possible.

          It will be nice to see if a RFM69 radio can be connected by @carlierd . Looking forward to some pictures :-)

          AWIA 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • alexsh1A alexsh1

            @GertSanders said:

            Just tested and found to be OK. Next board will be set up for using a I2C module (will be my smallest temperature sensor yet). Time for a glas of WestVleeteren and rest.

            @GertSanders
            Westvleteren Blonde is very nice :)
            Can you please remind me the difference berwrrn v1 and 1-1?
            I think it would be good to add FTDI connection, but the space is very limited

            GertSandersG Offline
            GertSandersG Offline
            GertSanders
            Hardware Contributor
            wrote on last edited by GertSanders
            #29

            @alexsh1

            The difference between v1-0 and V1-1:

            V1-0:
            has 4 pins connected to VCC, GND, D2, D3 (in this sequence).
            LED is connected to D8

            V1-1:
            has 4 pins, of which 2 are fixed. Vcc and GND are at the outside (closest to board edge).
            The two pins in the middle (pin1 and pin2) can be connected to two different pins each by using the solder jumper.
            pin1 can be connected to SDA/A4 or to D2
            pin2 can be connected to SCL/A5 or to GND
            LED is connected to D6

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • GertSandersG GertSanders

              @alexsh1 FTDI would be nice to reprogram more easily, but in my case I have a stable sketch which is loaded 1 time, and then the node is deployed. No point in providing extra pins or using boardspace if it is only used once or twice.

              I saw that @AWI mentioned pogo-pins to make connections. Also a nice idea. In any case, my node is not designed to be flexible, and after programming I want to forget it. These nodes are sitting on doors and windows and need to do 1 thing only: show status of the reed-switched that are connected to them.

              But adding some pads so that pogo pins can make contact to RX, TX and !RESET would still be possible.

              It will be nice to see if a RFM69 radio can be connected by @carlierd . Looking forward to some pictures :-)

              AWIA Offline
              AWIA Offline
              AWI
              Hero Member
              wrote on last edited by
              #30

              @GertSanders A bit off a hassle, but I don't need pads... ;-)

              0_1457102582398_upload-7fc04aa0-f360-48dd-b170-601e208392ee

              GertSandersG 1 Reply Last reply
              2
              • AWIA AWI

                @GertSanders A bit off a hassle, but I don't need pads... ;-)

                0_1457102582398_upload-7fc04aa0-f360-48dd-b170-601e208392ee

                GertSandersG Offline
                GertSandersG Offline
                GertSanders
                Hardware Contributor
                wrote on last edited by
                #31

                @AWI very nice, where did you buy the pins ?

                AWIA 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • GertSandersG GertSanders

                  @AWI very nice, where did you buy the pins ?

                  AWIA Offline
                  AWIA Offline
                  AWI
                  Hero Member
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #32

                  @GertSanders I used these pins. These work for me but there are many other types in the same store which could serve your needs better.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • alexsh1A Offline
                    alexsh1A Offline
                    alexsh1
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #33

                    @GertSanders - my idea to use exactly for windows. I was thinking about z-wave ones, but £32 a pot is just way too expensive given I need quite a few. How do you power them?

                    GertSandersG 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • alexsh1A alexsh1

                      @GertSanders - my idea to use exactly for windows. I was thinking about z-wave ones, but £32 a pot is just way too expensive given I need quite a few. How do you power them?

                      GertSandersG Offline
                      GertSandersG Offline
                      GertSanders
                      Hardware Contributor
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #34

                      @alexsh1 I power them similar to @m26872 , but with AAA batteries. They fit the 16x16mm cable guide by Legrand (which is a known brand for this in Belgium), available is most DIY stores.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • Dombo71D Offline
                        Dombo71D Offline
                        Dombo71
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #35

                        Dear
                        I ordered a few...:-)
                        Do you have a working sketch that is using less power?
                        Perhaps wit a motionsensor and a DHt ore something
                        I hope i get you hardware working..

                        alexsh1A GertSandersG 3 Replies Last reply
                        0
                        • Dombo71D Dombo71

                          Dear
                          I ordered a few...:-)
                          Do you have a working sketch that is using less power?
                          Perhaps wit a motionsensor and a DHt ore something
                          I hope i get you hardware working..

                          alexsh1A Offline
                          alexsh1A Offline
                          alexsh1
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #36

                          @Dombo71 said:

                          Dear
                          I ordered a few...:-)
                          Do you have a working sketch that is using less power?
                          Perhaps wit a motionsensor and a DHt ore something
                          I hope i get you hardware working..

                          @Dombo71
                          You can find a few working sketches in the 'Build' section of the website. However, don't you have an idea what it is exactly you'd like to build? I would be useful to know before throwing any sketch.

                          FYG DHT is by far not a favourite one for a battery use in my view. There are others - SI7120 or BME280

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • Dombo71D Dombo71

                            Dear
                            I ordered a few...:-)
                            Do you have a working sketch that is using less power?
                            Perhaps wit a motionsensor and a DHt ore something
                            I hope i get you hardware working..

                            GertSandersG Offline
                            GertSandersG Offline
                            GertSanders
                            Hardware Contributor
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #37

                            @Dombo71
                            What do you mean with "using less power"?

                            D 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • Dombo71D Dombo71

                              Dear
                              I ordered a few...:-)
                              Do you have a working sketch that is using less power?
                              Perhaps wit a motionsensor and a DHt ore something
                              I hope i get you hardware working..

                              GertSandersG Offline
                              GertSandersG Offline
                              GertSanders
                              Hardware Contributor
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #38

                              @Dombo71
                              Motion sensors are also not so low power and as mentioned before, DHT are power hungry. SI7021 is much better for low power/low voltage use.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • GertSandersG GertSanders

                                @Dombo71
                                What do you mean with "using less power"?

                                D Offline
                                D Offline
                                Dylano
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #39

                                @GertSanders said:

                                SI7021

                                I hope i can make a 3 in 1 sensor
                                Motion / contact.
                                temp and humanity
                                Better should be a multisensor, with a lot of option so we can choose .
                                The examples on my sensor are most 1 sensor...

                                And then work on a battery[s] for a year

                                Thanks for the SI7021 tip..

                                Domoticz, with a lot of working hardware, include mysensors :-)
                                OpenPLI, RuneAudio, Solarmeter, etc......

                                Not a great builder of software and hardware, more a user...
                                Only i try to do my best :-(

                                GertSandersG 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • D Dylano

                                  @GertSanders said:

                                  SI7021

                                  I hope i can make a 3 in 1 sensor
                                  Motion / contact.
                                  temp and humanity
                                  Better should be a multisensor, with a lot of option so we can choose .
                                  The examples on my sensor are most 1 sensor...

                                  And then work on a battery[s] for a year

                                  Thanks for the SI7021 tip..

                                  GertSandersG Offline
                                  GertSandersG Offline
                                  GertSanders
                                  Hardware Contributor
                                  wrote on last edited by GertSanders
                                  #40

                                  @Dylano

                                  This board is not meant for more then 1 function.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • alexsh1A Offline
                                    alexsh1A Offline
                                    alexsh1
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #41

                                    @Dylano Have a look at this board - this would let you program via FTDI and connect several sensors.

                                    http://forum.mysensors.org/topic/2744/battery-based-atmega328p-sensor-no-smd

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • alexsh1A Offline
                                      alexsh1A Offline
                                      alexsh1
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #42

                                      @GertSanders How snug is your enclosure? I saw @m26872 used 17x20mm for his slim node, but I was able to find in the UK 16x16mm trunking, which I think maybe a little bit small.

                                      GertSandersG 2 Replies Last reply
                                      0
                                      • alexsh1A alexsh1

                                        @GertSanders How snug is your enclosure? I saw @m26872 used 17x20mm for his slim node, but I was able to find in the UK 16x16mm trunking, which I think maybe a little bit small.

                                        GertSandersG Offline
                                        GertSandersG Offline
                                        GertSanders
                                        Hardware Contributor
                                        wrote on last edited by GertSanders
                                        #43

                                        @alexsh1
                                        I also use a 16x16mm cable guide and it just fits, the batteries are in batteryholders and therefor they stick out by 1mm. Without the batteryholder they fit perfectly.
                                        The board is 13mm wide at the base which allows passing a few wires next to it. So 16x16 is ok for my narrow board.

                                        D 1 Reply Last reply
                                        1
                                        • alexsh1A alexsh1

                                          @GertSanders How snug is your enclosure? I saw @m26872 used 17x20mm for his slim node, but I was able to find in the UK 16x16mm trunking, which I think maybe a little bit small.

                                          GertSandersG Offline
                                          GertSandersG Offline
                                          GertSanders
                                          Hardware Contributor
                                          wrote on last edited by GertSanders
                                          #44

                                          @alexsh1

                                          Here are some images of the very narrow node in a 16x16mm cable duct. The batteries are AAA type.

                                          0_1457556053405_IMG_7814.jpg

                                          0_1457555980720_IMG_7812.jpg

                                          0_1457555993984_IMG_7810.jpg

                                          0_1457556003354_IMG_7809.jpg

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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