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Co-authored-by: Jesse Hills <3060199+jesserockz@users.noreply.github.com>
171 lines
7.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
171 lines
7.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
DIY Light switch using a Sonoff Basic
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=====================================
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.. seo::
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:description: An example of how to integrate a light switch into Home Assistant using ESPHome
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:image: sonoff_light_switch.png
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:keywords: Relay, Sonoff Basic, Sonoff Dual Dual R1, Light, HASS, Home Assistant, ESPHome
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.. note::
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This is a DIY solution, and you will need to have some knowledge of electrical wiring and enough
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capabilities to do this work safely.
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The author, and the ESPHome team, take no responsibility for any actions, injuries or outcomes
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from following this guide.
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In some countries you may need specific qualifications before you can carry out such work in
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a residential property.
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Background
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----------
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Moving your entire house to smart lighting can end up being very expense, for instance if you have a
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light fitting with 5 lamps in it that's 5 expensive smart bulbs to buy just for one room! Smart bulbs
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clearly have some great advantages, dimmable, colour temperature or even full colour changing. What
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if all you're after is a cost effective way to turn them on and off?
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The ideal solution would be to replace the light switch with one that can be controlled by home
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assistant, whilst retaining the ease of use of a standard light that would also continue to work if
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the network went down, or Home Assistant failed etc.
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It turns out Sonoff do exactly this product, it called a T1-UK (other country options available),
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however you soon found the touch aspect of them might not 'feel right' and certainly might not get the
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approval of other members of your household. However if this solution appeals to you, check out the
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:doc:`Cookbook guide for T1/T2/T3</cookbook/sonoff-t1-3>`
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The other option to consider is a standard '2 way' light switch (like you might have on an upstairs
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/ downstairs control in your house) but using relays for the second switch. For many this will have
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the disadvantage that if you remotely changed the light status the switch is then 'upside down'.
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The Solution
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------------
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Use a 'retractive' style light switch. That is one that is spring loaded and so always returns to the
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'off' position. It's effectively a push button, that looks like a light switch. Combining this with a
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Sonoff Basic gives you the ideal solution for somewhere around £5. That's much cheaper than buying lots
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of expensive smart bulbs, but of course you only get on / off control.
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You will have several potential hurdles to overcome:
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1. The first is that you do need to have a neutral at the location of the Sonoff. Many houses will not have
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this as standard at the light switch.
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2. You need enough space to accommodate your Sonoff Basic at your chosen location.
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If you're lucky most of the locations will have plasterboard walls, and you will be able to simply drop a neutral
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wire down the inside of the wall to the lights switch (where you locate the Sonoff).
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Also, if you have plasterboard walls, most of the light switch back boxes are the plastic dry lining style boxes.
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This can come in useful because if you remove the PCB from the plastic case it actually fits in the back box nicely.
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.. warning::
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If you plan to take the PCB out of the plastic case you need to make sure it's properly insulated, and that the back
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box is deep enough to hold the PCB as well as the switch. You should also insulate the PCB, for instance by dropping it
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in a heavy duty glue lined heat shrink sleeve.
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**The PCB has mains electricity flowing through it, if you are in any doubt about your capabilities do not attempt to do
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this.**
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If you have a light switch in a brick wall, an option might be to place the Sonoff Basic above the light in the ceiling void,
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and use the cable that ran from the light to the switch as a low voltage cable to connect the Sonoff GPIO.
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.. warning::
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If you are going to reuse existing wiring to connect to the GPIO, you must make sure it's connected directly to the switch
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and does not have mains voltage on it from another circuit.
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Implementation
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--------------
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So having established the pitfalls that you need to overcome lets crack on with making this work.
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Please make sure you have read up about :doc:`the Sonoff Basic and how to flash it with ESPHome </devices/sonoff_basic>`.
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As that won't be covered here.Also make sure you know your way around a soldering iron and can find the relevant information
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about the location of the GPIO pins on the Sonoff Basic if you need to.
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If you have a Sonoff Basic V1 devices GPIO14 is already presented on a pin header on the PCB next to the programming pins.
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On the V2 and V3 PCBs, there is a solder pad underneath the PCB that will let you get at this GPIO.
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You have 2 choices when it comes to picking which GPIO to use. GPIO0 or GPIO14. GPIO0 is used by the push button switch on the
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the PCB so you will need to locate the right pin on the switch and solder a wire onto it if you're going to use that one. Whichever
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one you pick, you will also need to use the ground or 0V pin for the other side of the switch. Once you have soldered your wires
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into place, a handy tip is to add a drop of glue over the wire, a little way away from the solder joint, so give some strain relief
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to the joint.
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Now you have a pair of wires from the GPIO and 0V to your retractive switch lets look at the code.
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.. code-block:: yaml
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esphome:
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name: my_ls
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platform: ESP8266
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board: esp01_1m
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wifi:
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ssid: !secret wifi_ssid
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password: !secret wifi_password
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logger:
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api:
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ota:
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binary_sensor:
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- platform: gpio
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pin:
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number: GPIO14
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mode: INPUT_PULLUP
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inverted: true
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id: button_1
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on_press:
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then:
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- light.toggle: light_1
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- platform: status
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name: "My LS Status"
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output:
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- platform: gpio
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pin: GPIO12
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id: relay_1
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light:
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- platform: binary
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name: "My Light"
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id: light_1
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output: relay_1
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status_led:
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pin:
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number: GPIO13
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inverted: yes
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In the above code block, there is a *secrets.yaml* file so that you have just one place to change WiFi
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details for all your devices.
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Although not visible day to day, there is also the status LED configured so that it can be used when setting
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up / debugging. Also a configured binary sensor to give status in case you want to perform an action / alert
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if the light switch disconnects for any reason.
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.. note::
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If you wanted to use a pull cord switch (in a bathroom for instance) that works like a standard switch and
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changes state each pull (as opposed to a retractive switch that you press and let go) then you can change
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a single line *on_press:* to *on_state:* which will trigger the light toggle every time the state of the
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switch changes.
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If you do this it's important that you do not use GPIO0, otherwise if the device reboots and the switch happens
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to be in the closed state the Sonoff will boot into flash mode and not work.
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See Also
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--------
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- :doc:`/cookbook/sonoff-light-switch`
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- :doc:`/guides/automations`
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- :doc:`/devices/sonoff_basic`
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