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  3. Arduino 220V AC wattmeter

Arduino 220V AC wattmeter

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arduino ac watt
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  • M Offline
    M Offline
    MarkV
    wrote on last edited by
    #11

    @stofakiller said:

    poweroutlet ac wattmeter

    I'm also searching for something like this and it should be possible.
    Look at the fibaro wall plug [(http://www.fibaro.com/en/the-fibaro-system/wall-plug)]

    Thats exactly what i want aldo then for less money or a arduino based plug.

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    • daulagariD Offline
      daulagariD Offline
      daulagari
      Hero Member
      wrote on last edited by
      #12

      Look at the fibaro wall plug
      Thats exactly what i want aldo then for less money or a arduino based plug.

      That is quite challenging goal!

      If you do not mind the form size it should be possible and the component cost could be lower.

      ZWave devices are quite expensive (is that the Zwave license?) but companies have the economies of scale so they can spread fixed cost over more units and get volume discount on components.

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      • epierreE Offline
        epierreE Offline
        epierre
        Hero Member
        wrote on last edited by
        #13

        yes the zwave chip and license and dev kits are expensive and proprietary...

        z-wave - Vera -> Domoticz
        rfx - Domoticz <- MyDomoAtHome <- Imperihome
        mysensors -> mysensors-gw -> Domoticz

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        • daulagariD Offline
          daulagariD Offline
          daulagari
          Hero Member
          wrote on last edited by
          #14

          yes the zwave chip and license and dev kits are expensive and proprietary...

          Any idea what piece of the pricing is due to the zwave chip and license?
          Is that in the order of 2, 5, 10 or 15 Euro/Dollar?

          On implementing it using MySensors: As this is 230/110 Volts, I think a housing is essential. In that sense I think I would start buying a cheap energy/watt meter from Ebay, opening it and replace the electronics by your own electronics.

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          • M Offline
            M Offline
            MarkV
            wrote on last edited by
            #15

            Okay
            But isn't possible to make a similar device without the z-wave but with a arduino.
            instead of pussing the signals to a z-wave chip, push them to a arduino??
            Just a simple voltage en current measuring device and let the arduino calculate and store the wattage or kWh...
            That would be a nice and cheap sollution..

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            • daulagariD Offline
              daulagariD Offline
              daulagari
              Hero Member
              wrote on last edited by
              #16

              If you want something simple, see http://gizmosnack.blogspot.se/2014/11/power-plug-energy-meter-now-wireless.html.

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              • D Offline
                D Offline
                Dean
                wrote on last edited by
                #17

                @axillent looks like there are a few people like me who are interested in your set up... Would you mind sharing more details one what you did, actual hardware setup, sketch, issues, etc?

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                • axillentA axillent

                  I made one. It is not just wattmeter, it is a 3 channel power switch with meter function per each channel

                  in general you have just two solution while you want to keep your arduino be isolated from AC line:

                  1. using special chip like ACS712
                  2. using current transformer

                  in both ways you will need analog inputs to measure related voltage and you will be able to calculate current based on analog read

                  M Offline
                  M Offline
                  mainali
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #18

                  @axillent said:

                  I made one. It is not just wattmeter, it is a 3 channel power switch with meter function per each channel

                  in general you have just two solution while you want to keep your arduino be isolated from AC line:

                  1. using special chip like ACS712

                  in both ways you will need analog inputs to measure related voltage and you will be able to calculate current based on analog read

                  I have tried using ACS712 to check if current is passing through the circuit, from the sketch I am using, sometimes even though the switch is off I get readings, Is there a way to make it full proof so that if there is no current there should not be false reading.

                  Do you have any sketch related to the implementation?

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                  • Vladut GrecuV Offline
                    Vladut GrecuV Offline
                    Vladut Grecu
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #19

                    When you implement it with your relay you can call the readings only when the relay is on. That way you get accurate measures and don`t overload the mcu :D

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                    • M Offline
                      M Offline
                      mainali
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #20

                      I have a relay connected to a two way switch, I want to know when the switch was pressed. Basically I want to control the device via both the switch and the app which controls the relay. In case someone switches on the device from physical switch I want to update the app to show that the device is switched on. Hence using the current sensor to sense the current between the switch.

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                      • axillentA Offline
                        axillentA Offline
                        axillent
                        Mod
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #21

                        false readings from acs712 is a subject of electrical noise
                        I also faced it
                        coper&wires from acs712 to MCU have to be as short as possible

                        sense and drive

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