ESP32 Battery Life Tips

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024

Комментарии • 16

  • @holodiscus
    @holodiscus 7 месяцев назад +1

    This was just what I needed! I'm building out some weather proof moisture sensors for our nursery and have had trouble with poor battery life in the past. Thank you!

  • @yroshan630
    @yroshan630 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for the tips! Great video. Will try to design something using the ESP32-C3 soon.

  • @rootdev8106
    @rootdev8106 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you, this is very useful!!

  • @jack91522
    @jack91522 Месяц назад +1

    What about a solar panel. Use it to top off.
    How do you turn off the adc?

    • @TechDregs
      @TechDregs  Месяц назад

      See this project: ruclips.net/video/Yttauf94A04/видео.html

  • @chamodhdissanayake9831
    @chamodhdissanayake9831 6 месяцев назад

    Informative video...is there any way to apply an energy harvesting application to this so that the battery itself can be charged without disassembling the whole thing?

    • @TechDregs
      @TechDregs  6 месяцев назад

      Some ESP32 boards come with built in battery management chips, and for those you can incorporate charging solutions. See:
      ruclips.net/video/Yttauf94A04/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/EeUG3Si9fZk/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/TFiI0tqjUzw/видео.html

  • @benjaminhobbs2923
    @benjaminhobbs2923 Год назад

    I've heard people saying I need to use a 'buck converter' when adding a LiFePO4 battery, as their voltage when fully charged is around 4.2V, and the ESP32 only allows up to 3.6V (max). Have you used a converter too? And if so do you have any advice on where to start? Thanks:)

    • @TechDregs
      @TechDregs  Год назад

      Unfortunately, I don't have any experience with that battery chemistry.

    • @mtraven23
      @mtraven23 7 месяцев назад

      firstly, the way you wrote that makes it sound like you were thinking you could just plug your battery directly into your board, there is no circumstance that allows for that(unless, maybe you have some special module with extra hardware). 4v is too low for the internal regulator to do its job.
      you have 2 options to solve that...buck the voltage up to ~5-7V and run that into Vin, for the regulator to drop it to the right voltage.
      OR
      you can use the 3.5-4v you get straight off the battery, run it through an LDO (low drop out regulator) and then directly into Vcc, bypassing the internal regulator.
      In my current project, I opted for the later as I suspect it to be more efficient. Its worked out well for me. The buck convertor would probably be a module you just add, the LDO approach probably requires a bit of soldering on a protoboard (it did for me).
      good luck with your project!

  • @tbandras
    @tbandras 6 месяцев назад

    Hey there! I came across this video after watching your take on the soil moisture sensor. I have tried to read up on the GPIO usage for powering the sensor, but I seem to have reached a dead end. Using a C3 Xiao I can't seem to utilize the GPIO for power for my moisture sensor that has the TL555 chip. I am getting consistent and good readings from the 3v3 output pin, but not from the GPIO. Do you have any advice? (I have the switch configured for GPIO21 and it turns on on boot)

    • @TechDregs
      @TechDregs  6 месяцев назад

      What does your code look like for it? Perhaps there's an error somewhere.

    • @tbandras
      @tbandras 6 месяцев назад

      @@TechDregs I am trying to post the (hopefully) relevant sections:
      esphome:
      name: wifi-moisture-sensor
      friendly_name: Lawn Moisture Sensor
      on_boot:
      then:
      - switch.turn_on: sensor_power
      on_shutdown:
      then:
      - switch.turn_off: sensor_power
      esp32:
      board: esp32-c3-devkitm-1
      framework:
      type: arduino
      switch:
      - platform: gpio
      pin: GPIO21
      id: sensor_power
      internal: true

    • @TechDregs
      @TechDregs  6 месяцев назад

      So you're not getting any voltage out of GPIO21 when you check with a multimeter? If you've already checked your wiring, I might try a different pin. I don't see any issues in what you posted.

  • @ericbommer2280
    @ericbommer2280 Год назад +1

    I have been working on a battery project for a while and having issues with brownout. I am powering my project using 2 AAA batteries and a step-up 3.3v switch supply, with a Lolin s2 mini. From my research my current fix is a 1000 uF capacitor on the power line. I went with the Lolin S2 mini because it doesn't need use a USB to UART converter and is a bug battery save. Anyway I see you don't seem to be using any bulk capacitance on any of your projects. Curious if you have experience this problem in the past on how did you get around it. Thanks. As a side note on your switch comment, I am also investigating using a magnetic reed switch as a power switch, that way i can contain my project better from the environment. So far seems to be working,

    • @TechDregs
      @TechDregs  Год назад

      No, never had to use any caps, but I've always used LiPo batteries rather than normal batteries, and I don't think anything I've done has required much power. Possibly the battery discharge capabilities could have some impact on requiring caps.