• Ebby
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    62 days ago

    Neat multi-sensor gizmo. I just started with ZigBee stuff in home automation and this seems like it has a lot of possibilities. However, I passed over Aqara in general as they seem to work only with their own hubs. If I’m wrong, let me know, but I try to avoid product lock-in.

    • @MoonlightFox
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      92 days ago

      I have about thirty Aqara sensors that work with the Zigbee dongle for Homeassistant. I just pressed the sync button on the Aqara sensor and it shows up in my HA when I try to add a new Zigbee device.

      I can confirm that the magnet sensor, temperature/ humidity sensor and vibration sensors work without an Aqara hub, and directly with the HA ZigBee dongle.

      • Ebby
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        32 days ago

        Oh thanks! That’s great news. Every box I’ve read says it needs the Aqara hub or doesn’t work with 3rd party hubs. Especially on Amazon.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 days ago

          Yeah, it threw me at first too, but its nonsense. I have about 20 Aqara sensors and switches without the Aqara hub. I use the Sonoff USB coordinator.

          I always use this great resource to check compatibility:

          https://zigbee.blakadder.com/

      • @Jakor
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        22 days ago

        Their ceiling light (T1M) works but you lose some functionality - basically can’t use animations for the ring light. Besides that it’s been solid for me.

        • @flying_mechanic
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          213 hours ago

          I think all the animations are executed hub side so they don’t show up on the ZHA/Zigbee2MQTT. Or they just aren’t mapped (yet)

          • @Jakor
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            17 minutes ago

            You’re probably right. Would be cool to have on z2m, but it’s a pretty minor feature that I don’t think I’d use in reality.

  • @asbestos
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    2 days ago

    “As the mmWave sensor enters a low-power state when no motion is detected, it allows the Aqara FP300 to have a 2 year battery life while being powered by a pair of button cell CR2450 batteries.”

    Reading through the marketing bullshit since this is the only number mentioned: It’ll last 2 years if there’s nobody ever in that room. In reality, it’ll last a few months at best and probably less than that if there’s people constantly in the room, as the mmWave sensor will need to be powered non-stop.