Thank you for testing. Thank you @Michael Lane for fixing the bug promptly. Really appreciate it.Yay! I can confirm this solved the issues!!! Thanks to all the people contributing!
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Thank you for testing. Thank you @Michael Lane for fixing the bug promptly. Really appreciate it.Yay! I can confirm this solved the issues!!! Thanks to all the people contributing!
This is probably the third time im writing these steps down :-( , i really need some help to update the adafruit guides
This is awesome . Thank you so much for sharing. Welcome to reef2reef. We truly appreciate you taking the time to share your build, it will help fellow saltwater/freshwater hobbyists.Hey all I'm about to start my controller build(Ill star a thread as soon as the boards i had made get here)but i thought i would post this here so anyone could see it.
I purchased this light for my aquarium Phlizon-Dimmable-Decoration-Saltwater-Freshwater/dp/B074DRJK18/ref=sr_1_5?crid=1PWPDGSW7IQQ2 ( Freshwater at the moment) these are the long thin ones but they have the 16 inch ones as well and disassembled it to see what i would need to control it and low and behold after looking at the driver it uses 3.3 volt pwm to control dimming i also fed 3.3 volt dc into the control wire since they are just using a potentiometer and it works with straight dc as well i went up to 4.5 volts and no harm as far as i can tell.
I have hooked it up straight to the pca outputs and working great.
And it is immaculately constructed as far as wiring goes.
The 12 volt driver is being used for the fans.
The lights will also turn on and of with just the pwm signal they will turn on at 6% on my setup and they turn completely off below that.
u do seem to lose a tiny bit off brightness at the top end just going to 3.3 volt so i may look into trying it up to 5 volts after i find the data sheet on the drivers i have some level converters i may try to get it up a little
HugsWorking on a manual right now, it will be a PDF file that you can post on the GitHub, I'm doing what I understand and will be asking questions soon, going to start a new thread for that.
I think I have the hs300 covered.
welcome to reef2reef and thank you for trying out reef-pi.
Now, onto hs300 setup
- Go to Configuration -> Drivers section and add a new driver with type "hs300" and provide iport as addresss. Port should be 9999. IP you can get from your wifi router.
- Go to connector section and create 6 new outlet and analog inputs. You can name them whatever you want. I prefer to use Plug1 -> Plug6 to reflect Kasa's original naming. Associate them with pin 0 to 5 for plug1 to plug 6.
- After that you can create equipment and associate them with relevant outlets. You can also create fake ph probes and associate them with the corresponding analog input to chart current usage (in Amps)
This is probably the third time im writing these steps down :-( , i really need some help to update the adafruit guides
All the guides basically. They all have 2.0 specific details which are limited if not inaccurate now. I can share the summary points, backing images/details if you are intereseted. For example for power controller i was thinking of making a really good guide with following detailsWhat are you looking to update on Adafruit?
Big Trout is right that there is only one hot wire (black) and the other 2 are connected to ground.
Welcome to Reef2reef.
First off start a build thread as answers in this thread can get lost sometimes.
To keep my tank at 79 with a max temp of 79.2 degrees I set the heater threshold to 79 and hysteresis to .2
On these settings my 75 gallon stays between 78.9 and 79.2 degrees at a room temp of 70 degrees. This is with a 300 watt heater.
You may have to play around with this because of tank size...heater size and room temperature
Here in the US it is different.Maybe I'm misunderstanding some terminology there, but that post makes no sense to me at all.
AC wiring has 3 x conductors :-
Positive (+) usually Red
Negative (-) usually Black
Earth / Ground usually green and yellow
As I understand it, this convention can change depending on region, but the concept is the same.
The Positive is usually the switched leg, the Negative is usually the "return" leg (completing the circuit) and the Ground / Earth is completly separate and connected to any chassis / conductive material that creates a path back to your Earth Leakage unit. This way if either you Positive or Negative comes in contact with any part of the chassis or any conductive part, the Earth Leakage unit senses that something dangerous has occured and trips your power so that nobody gets electrocuted by touching equipment inadvertently. Connecting "the other 2" to ground will not achieve this. Well at least the way things are done here in SA. I stand to be corrected if it's different in other countries.
Here in the US it is different.
AC wiring doesn't have positive and negative
We run a 60Hz cycle
Black=line or hot if u prefer
white=neutral
green=earth(but not always it could be just a bare wire)
The black is the line coming in to the service panel the neutral is the return path the earth wire is technically not needed for things to operate that is also why alot of our 120 plugs have a larger blade on one side(polarized) especially when no earth terminal is used.
The neutral and earth are usually tied together at the service panel but should never be tied together before.
Just like a gfci outlet will function without a earth connection contrary to how some people believe,they measure the difference between whats coming in vs whats going out of the outlet.
This is exactly what I was trying to say but I don't have the gift of knowing how to explain things like this. Thank you for explaining it for us.Here in the US it is different.
AC wiring doesn't have positive and negative
We run a 60Hz cycle
Black=line or hot if u prefer
white=neutral
green=earth(but not always it could be just a bare wire)
The black is the line coming in to the service panel the neutral is the return path the earth wire is technically not needed for things to operate that is also why alot of our 120 plugs have a larger blade on one side(polarized) especially when no earth terminal is used.
The neutral and earth are usually tied together at the service panel but should never be tied together before.
Just like a gfci outlet will function without a earth connection contrary to how some people believe,they measure the difference between whats coming in vs whats going out of the outlet.
welcome to reef2reef and thank you for trying out reef-pi.
Now, onto hs300 setup
- Go to Configuration -> Drivers section and add a new driver with type "hs300" and provide iport as addresss. Port should be 9999. IP you can get from your wifi router.
- Go to connector section and create 6 new outlet and analog inputs. You can name them whatever you want. I prefer to use Plug1 -> Plug6 to reflect Kasa's original naming. Associate them with pin 0 to 5 for plug1 to plug 6.
- After that you can create equipment and associate them with relevant outlets. You can also create fake ph probes and associate them with the corresponding analog input to chart current usage (in Amps)
This is probably the third time im writing these steps down :-( , i really need some help to update the adafruit guides
GFCI detects sudden surge in usage (amp) and break the circuit if needed. It can be used in cases where Ground or earth is not available.Different, but basically the same. As per my previous post, yes, AC Positive and Negative are switching at the Hz cycle - 60 times a second, so both wires are essentially the same. Hot / Neutral / Positive / Negative = same-same Like I said - different terminology.
Your gfci is used as what we call "Earth Leakage Unit" over here. While I'm not 100% sure exactly how our units work, I was under the impression that they monitored the earth connection and tripped if a value larger than a certain milliamp reading was sensed. Hence the importance of connecting those wires to equipment chassis etc.
Thank you for the clarification.
As an electrician I will chime in here to hopefully clear a few things up. This is for the US and only applies to residential electric services. Commercial and industrial stuff can be much different.GFCI detects sudden surge in usage (amp) and break the circuit if needed. It can be used in cases where Ground or earth is not available.
There are subtle difference between the neutral and live wire. Though they both carry current, neutral will read 0 volt compared to ground, while live/hot wire will read 120V compared to ground. Most equipment will not be impacted by this difference, but some will. Its a very common question and you'll find plenty of stack threads and quora questions on this exact topic.
The ATO is running well and consistently for the last few days, but I was doing a water change the other day and it ran a lot, didn't alert or shut off as expected.. Is the alert # in seconds for any given hour? It ran 2 hours straight with no alert or shutoff. I also noticed someone asked about that the other day and I didn't see if there was a reply or anyone verified that it wasn't a bug in 3.3