Last week I set up and posted about my bath sensors. https://feddit.uk/post/4377577

A week on and I’m so happy with the results.

I’ve had to tweak my original automation to have a dwell in the input so it doesn’t fire unless the leak sensors have “detected a leak” for a minute, and made an input Boolean that turns on when the automation fires and off again 2 hours later. This Boolean is checked before the automation fires.

Also someone in the comments condescendingly noted that I would have to let water out when I displace it getting in, but of course my sensors are low enough that I have plenty of room for myself and some cold water. The sensor is on a length of wire about a meter long so it’s just a case of tightening the wire so it dangles at the right height.

Why I love it:

I’ve just been sat in my bedroom while my bath runs. The kids are leaving me alone and Wifey is enjoying some peace on the sofa. While I’m sat, I’m strumming through Bob Marley “No Woman No Cry” on my guitar and singing along. Then my lights start flashing and I hear “The ensuite bath is run” from the speaker on the floor below, so I put my guitar down and sort it out…

Then write my appreciation post from the bath. I appreciate the time the bath runs as much as the bath itself, and the lack of that little stress of “ooh, better check on the bath” is well worth the £10 I spent to get em (I think they were £4 each plus shipping). My Wife told my son to check on his bath earlier and he replied “I don’t need to Mum, remember?” without looking up from his Switch.

The only downside is I have a wire wrapped around my taps, but 🤷‍♂️ worth it!

  • @coffeebiscuit
    link
    English
    31 year ago

    Yes and no. Your water supplier can alter the pressure of your water. This happens, for example, when there is a water shortage. But mostly yes.