Hi - Yes it could, at the moment i'm doing that in Node-red as its helping me learn that platform and i've also made it show me cost. I can have a look at adding that to the code. We just need to times it by the voltage and create another path
Hi, I will do a video on Node Red but it's likely to be a few months yet. I need to do some sailing while the weather is still good. I will come back this though 👍⛵️
Another interesting video, thanks... My latest project might interest you. I am using a Ecowitt weather system (uses ultrasonic for wind and direction) with its gateway and a esp with nextion display to show the information. I've also got ecotwitt wireless temperature and humidity sensors. The benefit with this, no raspberry pi required to be running!
Hi - Thanks for your comments. Your project sounds intestering, i'll have a look at these sensors. I would like something for the fridge thats wireless. Is that device talking direct to an ESP then?
You can buy an ecowitt gateway (little blue thing that can plug into usb for power) for the system and sensors then connect to it via rf. The gateway has a built web server to display the sensor data via a web page. However, it also has web api which output live json data. I coded the esp device to call this web service... So i guess out of the box you can monitor sensors from a web browser or use a esp to build an alarm device or somthing by having it monitor the live data
I'm confused, are you getrinf 115v AC in th3 U.K.??? I thought it wad 230v there, but the numbers you shown aren't mathing for me. They'd break out to 115v AC, unless I'm just braindead and missing something. 😵💫
Learning for all of us (for me for sure) so I really appreciate the time you spend to create these videos. Keep them coming if you can. Cheers. Jim
Many thanks - I will try and do some more work either converting another skech or a plan for monitoring the heater that we have onboard.
Thanks a lot for all the explanations!
Many thanks for your comments on the video.
Can you modify the code base to include the real-time watts usage as well.
Hi - Yes it could, at the moment i'm doing that in Node-red as its helping me learn that platform and i've also made it show me cost. I can have a look at adding that to the code. We just need to times it by the voltage and create another path
@@BoatingwiththeBaileys Thank you I am learning from your examples as well. Can you show us how you also did this in node red as well.
Hi, I will do a video on Node Red but it's likely to be a few months yet. I need to do some sailing while the weather is still good. I will come back this though 👍⛵️
@@BoatingwiththeBaileys Fair enough enjoy your time at sea. For the next round of videos can you also do a DC shunt voltage current and watts as well.
Another interesting video, thanks... My latest project might interest you. I am using a Ecowitt weather system (uses ultrasonic for wind and direction) with its gateway and a esp with nextion display to show the information. I've also got ecotwitt wireless temperature and humidity sensors. The benefit with this, no raspberry pi required to be running!
Hi - Thanks for your comments. Your project sounds intestering, i'll have a look at these sensors. I would like something for the fridge thats wireless. Is that device talking direct to an ESP then?
You can buy an ecowitt gateway (little blue thing that can plug into usb for power) for the system and sensors then connect to it via rf. The gateway has a built web server to display the sensor data via a web page. However, it also has web api which output live json data. I coded the esp device to call this web service... So i guess out of the box you can monitor sensors from a web browser or use a esp to build an alarm device or somthing by having it monitor the live data
I'm confused, are you getrinf 115v AC in th3 U.K.???
I thought it wad 230v there, but the numbers you shown aren't mathing for me.
They'd break out to 115v AC, unless I'm just braindead and missing something. 😵💫
Hi - We are 230v, we're supposed to be the same as Europe now however, today things are sat at 246v. Did i say the wrong voltage in the video?