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  3. AK9753 - Human Presence Sensor

AK9753 - Human Presence Sensor

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  • hekH Offline
    hekH Offline
    hek
    Admin
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Have anyone tried the AK9753?

    https://www.sparkfun.com/products/14349

    Nca78N 1 Reply Last reply
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    • hekH hek

      Have anyone tried the AK9753?

      https://www.sparkfun.com/products/14349

      Nca78N Offline
      Nca78N Offline
      Nca78
      Hardware Contributor
      wrote on last edited by Nca78
      #2

      I saw the AK9752 on Arrow when searching for something else and had a look at the product line. I was very excited when reading about a "human presence detection" sensor but I felt disappointed after some reading.
      First disappointment is right in the introduction, you should not expect a great detection range from it :
      The AK9753 is suitable for several feet human detector by using external lens

      From what I see it's just a combination of 4 thermopiles, that each give you an average temperature in their field of view, so as soon as you're a few meters away the averaging in the area you are in will give a value too low to be sure there is really a human. And it's just not usable for me when temperature is often 30°C or more :)
      I guess it can be efficient for things like counting people passing a door as it's short range and it gives information about the direction. But at 25$ for a 2x2 array I would go for a 40$ GridEye and its 8x8 array.

      dbemowskD 1 Reply Last reply
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      • Nca78N Nca78

        I saw the AK9752 on Arrow when searching for something else and had a look at the product line. I was very excited when reading about a "human presence detection" sensor but I felt disappointed after some reading.
        First disappointment is right in the introduction, you should not expect a great detection range from it :
        The AK9753 is suitable for several feet human detector by using external lens

        From what I see it's just a combination of 4 thermopiles, that each give you an average temperature in their field of view, so as soon as you're a few meters away the averaging in the area you are in will give a value too low to be sure there is really a human. And it's just not usable for me when temperature is often 30°C or more :)
        I guess it can be efficient for things like counting people passing a door as it's short range and it gives information about the direction. But at 25$ for a 2x2 array I would go for a 40$ GridEye and its 8x8 array.

        dbemowskD Offline
        dbemowskD Offline
        dbemowsk
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        @nca78 sounds like it isn't that much better than a PIR detector, outside of the fact that it can detect direction of travel.

        Vera Plus running UI7 with MySensors, Sonoffs and 1-Wire devices
        Visit my website for more Bits, Bytes and Ramblings from me: http://dan.bemowski.info/

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        • gohanG Offline
          gohanG Offline
          gohan
          Mod
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          I think there is no way a cheap sensor can actually make a precise measurement to detect humans in a room, but a system with that kind of sensors and a image processing device it could make a more reliable solution, but would go in the expensive solutions.

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