433MHz (aka RF) sensors and devices are good value

2 Responses

  1. Oyvind says:

    Hi, I flashed my Sonoff RF Bridge successfully with Tasmota 9.4.0 and I can access it using Chrome and the IP address of the bridge. It also shows up in Home Assistant via my Mosquitto MQTT. SO far, so good. But I am unable to make it detect and read any of the RF devices I have (and I have tried many). In the console of Tasmota, there is absolutely no indication of any ativity when I press a button on various brand RF devices. If I press one of the 16 keys in the Tasmota menu, the red light on the bridge lights up, and the console reports the key# pressed.
    I suspect that there are no such thing as 433MHz standard. On my devices, I have to set channel numbers and group numbers via switches to make to connect (and to avoid interference to my neighbours devices). Should I expect the Sonoff Bridge to be able to read the RF commands no matter what channel and group setting a device has?

    • roger says:

      Hello and I’m sorry to hear of the bridge not responding to anything yet. As I see it, flashing the bridge with Tasmota gives you more features – but it doesn’t much increase the types of signals that the bridge can decode. I know for sure that the Sonoff RF Bridge neither natively or ‘Tasmotised’ like yours doesn’t decode signals from some RF doorbells, Friedland kit and Home Easy kit. You should get a response from door contact sensors; PIR sensors, water sensors, push buttons, RF remotes of the unbranded kind found on Aliexpress. You should also be able to ‘learn’ those device codes into the 16 memory spaces in Tasmota. I hope that helps work out what should or shouldn’t be working with your flashed RF bridge.

      Are there different standards? Yes there are but there are also enough similarities between manufacturers to make it useful. Look at it like this: a Sony TV doesn’t decode a Panasonic remote control signal … even if it senses the signal.

      If you want to sense more 433MHz transmitters you’ll need different software and/or hardware such as RFLink or Portisch. After getting to where you are I used Rflink to sense my Home Easy kit and send codes to Friedland doorbells. It was useful up to a point but I was overwhelmed with options. I hope you do find some sensors that trigger your RF bridge and create a use. If you do mod the bridge to make it useful I’d love to know.

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