🔒 Elevate Your Home Security with Smart Motion Detection!
The Zigbee Motion Sensor is a compact and efficient device designed for home automation, ensuring safety and convenience. Compatible with various Zigbee hubs and Alexa, it allows for customizable routines and smart light control, all while boasting an impressive detection range and long battery life.
Color | 1-Pack |
J**Y
Works With Samsung SmartThings, No Need For Separate Zigbee Hub
Works With Samsung SmartThings, No Need For Separate Zigbee HubI am going to save potential buyers, OUVOPO and Amazon from many more returns, bad reviews and problems by sharing some key info left out by other SmartThings reviewers (see Q&A below for examples). This is one of the smallest, nicest looking contact sensors.First, this does work as a motion sensor using only the Samsung SmartThings hub (it serves as a Zigbee hub too). HOWEVER, you must take a few additional installation steps beyond a typical device setup. This requires a bit more tech savvy, but don’t be scared about that. :)Reviewers state “it just works" with Samsung SmartThings for a number of OUVOPO products. Not really true. They just happen to have an existing/similar device and/or driver loaded on their hub. Most of the manufacturers of these devices use the same core components (e.g., Tuya, Aqara, Sonoff) and thus the same drivers auto-magically work. Here are the steps:1. Install device within the SmartThings app2. It should now show up as “Zigbee thing” (unlucky) or “Zigbee motion sensor” (lucky). For the former, proceed to the next step. For the latter, congrats you’re done.3. Go to mysmartthings (dot) com/advanced/devices and make sure you can login4. In parallel, find a Driver channel and join/enroll your hub. here: developer (dot) smartthings (dot) com/docs/devices/hub-connected/driver-channels/I used the first one I could find, which was “Mariano Shared Beta Driver” found here: callaway (dot) smartthings (dot) com/channels/c8bb99e1-04a3-426b-9d94-2d260134d6245. Once you enroll in a driver, give the process time to get to your hub. Some say its overnight. For others, every 12 hours. For me, it was ~15 minutes.6. You’ll know it worked/is ready once you can go back to your device list (step 3), find your “Zigbee thing” device, select the Driver drop-down field, and change it to “Zigbee Motion Sensor Mc”.7. Now go back to your mobile app (force close, reopen) and you should see the type change and more info for this device, as well as be able to trigger Close/Open status for routines/alerts.8. Congrats, you’re done.I am attaching a link to help. Further reading:community (dot) smartthings (dot) com/t/faq-i-have-no-idea-what-edge-is-is-that-a-new-developer-tool-2022/237775 Read more
M**L
Initial Impression is GOOD! But then...
Here's ANOTHER update. All three of mine are now dead. They worked for a few weeks, now they just don't work. I've replaced the batteries (which only last two to three weeks) but they still don't work. The Zigbee hub just can't find them.OK... this is an update. My initial review is below. First, I bought 1. It was great. So then I bought two more. Of those two, one was dead on arrival. I just wouldn't work. I couldn't get it to be recognized by Alexa. I sent it back and they sent me a 4th one. The 4th one has about a 90 second delay. It picks up motion, but I don't know about it until 90 seconds later. For example, I just came in from outside. This motion detector is on my side porch, and I walked right under it. I came inside, sat down in my recliner, and then Alexa said "Side Porch". I want to know when motion happens in real time, not 90 seconds later.Here's my initial review:I've only had this thing for about an hour, so I can't speak to how durable it is or how long the battery lasts. However, my initial impression is good! Really good! First of all, it's a lot smaller than I was expecting, which means it's not very noticeable. It's only about an inch across. It's barely bigger than the little button battery that's inside it.Speaking of the battery, I hope it lasts. I think it's a CR 2032. If I have to replace the battery every week or two, I'm not going to be happy with it, but that remains to be seen.So I was able to easily pair my motion detector to my Amazon Echo with a built-in Zigbee hub. Not all Echoes have Zigbee hubs, so make sure yours does. Once I connected it, I created a routine that makes an announcement that simply says "front porch". I mounted the motion detector on my porch, and now I'll get an announcement through all of my Echoes whenever someone comes onto my porch. It's working great at the moment.I'll come back to update this review once I know how long the battery lasts.
J**K
Tiny. Works well, tricky to install w/ Hubitat
This device, despite the product description is NOT recognized by Hubitat out of the box. You need to download the driver for it Tuya Multi Sensor 4 in 1. And then need to install that (via the Hubitat Package Manager or manually). I could not find it to install within HPM. THEN search for it in HPM if installed manually in HPM. Then update it with HPM. the original driver I found was ver. 1.5.3 and did not work at all. The 'search' for drivers in HPM found it and, update, did update it. The latest as of today is 1.68. Once downloaded, if you have installed the device, remove it and reinstall it. It may or may not pick up the driver. Mine picked up just "device" which did not work at all (at least it saw the device via Zigbee). The change the driver to the TUYA which you will find at the bottom of the driver list with USER drivers. Then click the initialize and save button to push the new driver to the unit. It saw it and it works. It's tiny and has a 60 second reset time. No way to change that with these drivers - yet. It is VERY quickly responsive. Less than 1/2 second. Battery life looks promising. After adding/removing and tinkering for 45 mins, battery still reads 100%. Don't know about false motion triggers. Watching it for 1 hour while working and didn't see any false 'active' reports. All in all, a good little device. I have it in a confined space and it is working well so far.
N**6
Compact Motion Sensor that works well with Home Assistant
Just got this sensor a few weeks ago, and I gotta say, it's doing a pretty solid job. Pairing it with Home Assistant was a breeze – no headaches there. What I really like about it is how quick it responds. Nearly instant detection on motionAs for the battery, it's still early days, but so far, so good. Home Assistant is fairly low battery usage so far in a high traffic area. But hey, let's see how it goes in the long run.Overall, if you're looking to add to your smart home setup, I'd definitely recommend giving this sensor a shot. It is small enough to easily hide and that is what I wanted most out of it.
B**O
Détecté comme un SONOFF SNZB-03 dans Z2M
Agréablement surpris par ce produit, il est reconnu comme SONOFF SNZB-03 dans Zigbee2MQTT.Il est de petite taille et fonctionne correctement pour une detection de mouvement à proximité.Il est parfaitement intégrable dans les automation de Home Assistant.
G**I
Versatili, efficienti ed economici, a condizione di conoscerne i limiti
Nella domotica le periferiche che costano di più, nonostante un generalizzato calo dei prezzi, sono proprio i rilevatori di movimento wireless. Quelli di marchi famosi non si trovano a meno di 40 / 50 Euro l'uno. Dunque se si è pienamente consapevoli di come questo prodotto può essere utilizzato, direi che si tratta di un buon affare (a fine ottobre 2023 costano circa 27 Euro la coppia).I limiti a cui faccio riferimento sono due. Il primo è il sistema di standby che li lascia sospesi per un minuto dopo il primo rilevamento. Questo significa che se li avete posizionati in un corridoio per attivare l'illuminazione, e ci passate più volte in un breve lasso di tempo, la luce si accenderà la prima volta e non le successive. Poco male, ma è bene saperlo.Il secondo limite è nel protocollo utilizzato. Lo standard Zigbee - che peraltro sembra destinato ad essere soppiantato da altri sistemi - non è poi tutto sommato diffusissimo. Per esempio solo alcuni diffusori Alexa ne sono dotati, e credo siano pochissimi quelli di ultima generazione anche di altri marchi. Perciò, se decidete di acquistarli assicuratevi prima che i dispositivi che gestiscono la domotica in casa vostra siano compatibili.Ma se i limiti ci sono, a mio avviso vengono superati tanto dalla convenienza quanto dall'efficienza. Io uso i sensori proprio per attivare l'illuminazione negli ambienti di passaggio (corridoio e ripostiglio): la reazione è immediata, ed il raggio d'azione più che sufficiente. Inoltre, essendo piccolissimi e leggeri, possono essere sistemati ovunque ed in modo discreto, senza l'obbligo di fissarli con gli adesivi forniti.Usandoli da poco meno di un mese non posso essere sicuro dell'autonomia, ma per esperienza con periferiche simili - che adottano le batterie "a bottone" di tipo CR2450 - direi che per un anno si dovrebbe stare a posto (a meno di installarli in un ambiente frequentatissimo).
G**D
Sensore IR Zigbee molto affidabile
Premetto che per poter utilizzare questo sensore che rileva con estrema precisione la presenza umana è necessario disporre di un hub zigbee, il funzionamento risulta impeccabile purché utilizzato all'interno poiché in esterno ha dato qualche imprecisione.Facilissimo da configurare ed installare svolge al meglio la sua funzione ed è perfettamente integrabile in un sistema domotico, l'ho installato sulle scale per accendere la luce e temporizzata, che dire perfetto, è alimentato a batteria.
H**S
Funktioniert problemlos an einem Echo mit ZigBee Hub!
Ich suchte aktuell nach einigen weiteren Bewegungssensoren für mein Home-Automation Setup. Ich versuche hierbei soweit ich kann ohne einen Blumenstrauß an Hubs bzw. Bridges auszukommen. Da ich Alexa zur Sprachsteuerung nutze, habe ich auch Echos mit integriertem Zigbee Hub (Echo der 4. Generation und Echo Studio).Ich nutze außerdem gerne Zigbee-Geräte weil mir die Nachhausetelefoniererei der Wifi Geräte suspekt ist, gleiches gilt für die Bridges/Apps der diversen chinesischen Hersteller. Deshalb ist für mich Pflicht, daß Zigbee Geräte direkt an den Echos anlernbar sind.Bisher hatte ich Hue Bewegungsmelder benutzt, die auch ohne Hue-Bridge an den o.g. Echos funktionieren. Die sind aber recht teuer, inzwischen deutlich jenseits der 30€... ich hatte zuvor schon einmal Glück mit einem billigen Bewegungsmelder, der meldet jetzt im Briefkasten die Post :) Leider funktionierte ein weiteres Modell des gleichen Herstellers damals nicht, wohl eine andere Revision oder Firmware-Version o.ä. Es ist also mehr oder weniger Glück, ob ein Zigbee-Gerät am Echo geht oder nicht. Am Ende bin ich dann doch wieder bei Hue gelandet, die funktionieren halt ohne Probleme.Mir wurde dann dieses Gerät zum Test angeboten. Leider ist die Produktbeschreibung wenig aufschlussreich, so ganz war mir nicht klar ob er wirklich direkt an einem Echo geht, oder nicht. Ich hab's dann halt zum Test bestellt.Und was soll ich sagen: der geht! Geliefert wird der Bewegungsmelder in einem kleinen Karton, es liegt eine gut verständliche Anleitung u.a. auf Deutsch bei, die Einrichtung ist aber fast selbsterklärend: mit dem beiliegenden SIM-Tool bringt man den Sensor in den Pairing-Modus, und lässt Alexa suchen. Bei mir wurde er direkt im ersten Anlauf gefunden. Madame hat zwar wieder ein bisschen rumgesponnen, meldete "nix gefunden" und gleichzeitig dass ein neuer Sensor eingerichtet wurde... aber das kenne ich schon von anderen Geräten, und liegt wohl eher an Alexa selbst. Danach ließ sich der Sensor ohne Probleme in Routinen etc. einbinden! Die Cooldown-Zeit (minimale Dauer zwischen zwei Auslösungen) habe ich leider nicht genau ermitteln können, für meine Alexa-Routinen ist sie aber ausreichend. Auch die Reichweite ist für meine Zwecke (Indoor-Use) ausreichend. Evt. lasse ich ihn nochmal direkt gegen den Hue antreten, und reiche das Ergebnis nach. Die Sensoren detektieren ausschließlich Bewegung, weitere Sensoren, wie z.B. der Temperatursensor beim Hue, sind nicht verbaut. Ich brauchte das aber auch nicht, mir ging es nur um Bewegungserkennung.Weiteres Zubehör ist ein doppelseitiges Klebepad. Das ist gut gemacht: der Bodendeckel lässt sich recht einfach abdrehen um die CR2450-Knopfzelle zu tauschen. Das geht dann auch recht einfach wenn der Sensor irgendwo hingeklebt ist, man dreht dann einfach den Sensor von dem an die Wand geklebten Bodendeckel.Schön finde ich auch dass der Sensor recht klein, kompakt und unauffällig ist, deutlich kleiner als der Hue.Zur Batterielaufzeit kann ich noch nichts sagen, ich bin auch nicht sicher in welchem Zustand die beiliegende Knopfzelle war. Es ist wie üblich eine Folie aus dem Bodendeckel zu ziehen damit sie nach dem Auspacken Kontakt bekommt. Der Sensor im Briefkasten läuft ebenfalls auf einer CR2450, und das schon seit knapp 8 Monaten. Löst aber natürlich auch nicht allzu häufig aus. Ich gehe schon davon aus, dass die Hues auf ihren jeweils zwei AAA länger halten.Preislich kann ich diesen Sensor leider aktuell nicht einsortieren, da zum Zeitpunkt der Rezension nicht mehr lieferbar. Und natürlich habe ich mein Modell kostenlos zum Test zur Verfügung gestellt bekommen. Ich habe aber äußerlich identische Modelle gefunden, die teils ein drittel bis ein viertel von einem Hue kosten! Wow, hätte ich das vorher gewusst wie gut die funktionieren, hätte ich mir das Geld für die teuren Hues wohl eher gespart...Von daher: volle Empfehlung!
L**A
non compatibile col mio zigbee
nonostante mille rassicurazioni, non compatibile col mio zigbee
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