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Monitoring furnace and water temperature in a single application

syselpl 195 5
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Treść została przetłumaczona polish » english Zobacz oryginalną wersję tematu
  • #1 21789171
    syselpl
    Level 9  
    Posts: 109
    Rate: 11
    Hello, I have a monitoring hoplite, I like to have everything under control and I have created in one app a preview of the furnace, which is standard, and in addition a preview of the outlet water temperature.
    In the near future I would like to add the temperature on the return, but I don't know if I will have enough time for that.
    Feel free to discuss. I would like to point out that I am a total layman when it comes to smart-home systems, and I am slowly working my way through everything on my own. On the other hand, the idea was born out of laziness, because every now and then I go to the boiler room to check whether the furnace is ramping up or cooling down.Camera view in boiler room showing a thermometer reading 41°C on water pipes
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  • #2 21789273
    gulson
    System Administrator
    Posts: 29374
    Help: 148
    Rate: 6056
    Well great, what system are you using to monitor the furnace?
    The return temperature is basically a temperature sensor and that's it.
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  • #4 21789438
    syselpl
    Level 9  
    Posts: 109
    Rate: 11
    gulson wrote:
    Well, what system are you using to monitor the furnace?
    The return temperature is basically a temperature sensor and that's it.

    Mordko, I put this in HP to cheer the company up a bit before Christmas. I generally have a lot of work started and no time to finish. I promised to show a handmade drive for a chain excavator and I have no time to finish it.

    kmarkot wrote:
    Recommend suple
    Create an account


    I have my whole house on supli. I buy the ESP myself from a Chinese guy, put it together on uni boards and the 12 controlled devices are £10. Recently I bought a ready made one impossible to install supli, but change lines of code and it's done.

    Even the kettle is set up so that in the evening I pour water, press the button and in the morning at 6:30, when the alarm clock rings, I go downstairs and pour boiling tea for breakfast. The socket starts/switches on at 6:35am and guitar.
    Overall, doing the installation in the house, which is 270 m², I used about 4 kilometres of power cable and a kilometre of twisted-pair cable, the Wi-Fi only being to the laptop and to the ESP.
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  • #5 21789515
    kmarkot
    Level 31  
    Posts: 1370
    Help: 127
    Rate: 359
    syselpl wrote:
    I have my whole house on supli

    Now that you've got a solid foundation in place, maybe it's time to take it a step further and get interested in Home Assistant?
    Supla is great for getting started, but HA combined with ESPHome is a whole other level of initiation. It gives you almost limitless possibilities for automation and personalisation that Supla alone sometimes lacks. It's worth a try if you like to squeeze 100% of the possibilities out of your electronics!
    Devices running on Supli can be integrated with the Home Assistant.

    This is what it looks like for me
    Home Assistant UI showing central heating system and temperature readings
  • #6 21789595
    syselpl
    Level 9  
    Posts: 109
    Rate: 11
    kmarkot wrote:
    Since you already have a solid foundation, maybe it's time to go one step further and take an interest in Home Assistant?


    I've heard it more than once, not twice. Hardly - when we do someone's home installations we recommend HA installations ourselves.
    But as the saying goes, a shoemaker walks without shoes. What I have is enough for me. I had huge, huge plans and there is a lack of time.
    The only thing I can be happy about is that once I'm back on the job or go into unemployment and have the time both on the forum as a specialist and to complete all the bits and bobs in the house, I don't have to push any module into the boxes because literally every circuit goes down to the switchboard.
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