I have a couple of the older Sonoff SNZB-02 sensors, but my preference are the Govee Bluetooth sensors H5075 or H5102. They also run on AA or AAA batteries. With a couple of ESP32 BT proxies around the house, the data is easily fed into HA.
Zooz has changed the operating temperature for ZSE44. It's now 40 - 90 F. The lowest tempeature ZSE44 will report is 0 F. If the scale is set to Celsius, the lowest reported temperature is 0 C (32 F).
Hope this doesn't come across too negatively, but the reliance on uncalibrated/potentially-unreliable baseline measurements makes me question the validity and value of the results. I would like to have seen something like a Thermoworks RH Spot or Hygrobug used that are both fairly affordable and professionally calibrated rather than an off-the-shelf cooking thermometer, et al. That said, I do appreciate the feature set breakdown and pricepoint comparison, fascinating to see that sometimes the more expensive options seem to be outliers relative to the control, would just like to have a better established baseline to better to able to evaluate the results. My critiques aside, thanks for all the great content you put out!
I bought 2 pack of Sonoff SNZB-02D sensors with an LCD display - I didn't get as far as connecting the to Home Assistant because it was obvious that they were inaccurate, with them sat next to each other they both showed different temperatures and humidity readings (2C difference, 10% difference)! They belong in the bin - returned as not fit fo purpose
You forgot 433MHz wireless. It's my favorite, for range, cost of sensors, and its ease in passing through barriers that attenuate the 900MHz and 2.4GHz signals you tested. I'm running LaCrosse brand outdoor sensors. Their range is fantastic and they're US$15 every day at a local big box hardware store. And they're specifically made to be outside.
I use 433 MHz sensors. Zigbee and Z-Wave drain the battery fast if the reporting interval is eg 60 seconds. 433 MHz sensors are very simple and mine with two AA batteries have been working over three years reporting temp and humidity every 60 secons. Many 433 MHz sensors have a resistive humidity sensors which are not very accurate. Because the 433 MHz sensors are so simple, they don't know if the measurements are transmitted succesfully or not. Two sensors might transmit at the same time causing interference. Frecuencies at 433 MHz are not very clean.
good video, Michael! I wonder... you have all these data in HA, now how to set as input to the thermostat? climate.set_temperature is to set a TARGET; not the sensor temperature, so... what kind of automations do you do to change the input in your thermostat? as you said, each room has different temperature :P
The automation I created for regulating our home's air conditioning and heat is one of my more complex ones. For example, in the summer, it checks a temperature sensor upstairs instead of the thermostat's sensor to dial-in the air conditioning just right since it gets super hot upstairs.
I was surprised that the Aqara temperature and humidity sensors weren't on the list. Any reason why I should avoid them? I just bought a bunch on Amazon, but I think I'm still within the return window. Thanks for the great video.
I have a few Aqara devices, but not the temperature and humidity sensors. No reason to return them, but I have had mixed experience with Aqara products.
We are looking for a battery operated heat sensor that we can monitor the temperature in our pump room from our cottage to our home. We recently had a baseboard fail, freezing our system causing over 1k in damage. Can you please let us know which sensor would work best in this situation. We only need it to monitor the heat, thanks
If you’re looking to monitor the air temperature in that room, any of my top picks mentioned in the final thoughts section of the video should work. The cottage would need to have a Zigbee or Z-Wave network to work with my top picks.
👉 Let me know if any of these results surprised you, and what temperature sensors you prefer in Home Assistant, or how you use them in home automations. You can find links to my top picks plus exclusive discount codes in the video description.
If you already have a Zigbee adapter, I recommend one of the SONOFF sensors. If you already have a Z-Wave adapter, then I recommend the Zooz sensor. If you have both Zigbee and Z-Wave adapters, the SONOFF sensors offer a good value.
Thanks for reviewing so many different sensors, that's very helpful. I have a question about your terminology. For the two Sonoff sensors you say they have no "temperature offset" capability, but in the screen the Calibration text says "Yes". Is calibration different from offset? Also, for the Zooz sensor the screen says "Calibration: Yes" but you dont audibly say anything about adjusting the reading.
You can calibrate the temperature of the SONOFF sensors in Zigbee2MQTT. Zooz provides documentation on their website. Apologies for any confusion, and thanks for watching!
I have a couple of the older Sonoff SNZB-02 sensors, but my preference are the Govee Bluetooth sensors H5075 or H5102. They also run on AA or AAA batteries. With a couple of ESP32 BT proxies around the house, the data is easily fed into HA.
Cool, thanks for sharing that!
Zooz has changed the operating temperature for ZSE44. It's now 40 - 90 F. The lowest tempeature ZSE44 will report is 0 F. If the scale is set to Celsius, the lowest reported temperature is 0 C (32 F).
Thanks for sharing that!
Hope this doesn't come across too negatively, but the reliance on uncalibrated/potentially-unreliable baseline measurements makes me question the validity and value of the results. I would like to have seen something like a Thermoworks RH Spot or Hygrobug used that are both fairly affordable and professionally calibrated rather than an off-the-shelf cooking thermometer, et al. That said, I do appreciate the feature set breakdown and pricepoint comparison, fascinating to see that sometimes the more expensive options seem to be outliers relative to the control, would just like to have a better established baseline to better to able to evaluate the results.
My critiques aside, thanks for all the great content you put out!
Thanks for the feedback and for watching!
I bought 2 pack of Sonoff SNZB-02D sensors with an LCD display - I didn't get as far as connecting the to Home Assistant because it was obvious that they were inaccurate, with them sat next to each other they both showed different temperatures and humidity readings (2C difference, 10% difference)! They belong in the bin - returned as not fit fo purpose
Working great for me. Sorry to hear they didn’t work out for you.
@@michaelsleen perhaps I just got dodgy ones ...
You forgot 433MHz wireless. It's my favorite, for range, cost of sensors, and its ease in passing through barriers that attenuate the 900MHz and 2.4GHz signals you tested. I'm running LaCrosse brand outdoor sensors. Their range is fantastic and they're US$15 every day at a local big box hardware store. And they're specifically made to be outside.
Very cool, thanks for sharing!
I use 433 MHz sensors. Zigbee and Z-Wave drain the battery fast if the reporting interval is eg 60 seconds. 433 MHz sensors are very simple and mine with two AA batteries have been working over three years reporting temp and humidity every 60 secons. Many 433 MHz sensors have a resistive humidity sensors which are not very accurate. Because the 433 MHz sensors are so simple, they don't know if the measurements are transmitted succesfully or not. Two sensors might transmit at the same time causing interference. Frecuencies at 433 MHz are not very clean.
good video, Michael! I wonder... you have all these data in HA, now how to set as input to the thermostat? climate.set_temperature is to set a TARGET; not the sensor temperature, so... what kind of automations do you do to change the input in your thermostat? as you said, each room has different temperature :P
The automation I created for regulating our home's air conditioning and heat is one of my more complex ones. For example, in the summer, it checks a temperature sensor upstairs instead of the thermostat's sensor to dial-in the air conditioning just right since it gets super hot upstairs.
I was surprised that the Aqara temperature and humidity sensors weren't on the list. Any reason why I should avoid them? I just bought a bunch on Amazon, but I think I'm still within the return window. Thanks for the great video.
I have a few Aqara devices, but not the temperature and humidity sensors. No reason to return them, but I have had mixed experience with Aqara products.
The Aqara temp/humidity sensor is very good. Accurate and reports easily eg. -14 F temperatures.
We are looking for a battery operated heat sensor that we can monitor the temperature in our pump room from our cottage to our home. We recently had a baseboard fail, freezing our system causing over 1k in damage. Can you please let us know which sensor would work best in this situation. We only need it to monitor the heat, thanks
If you’re looking to monitor the air temperature in that room, any of my top picks mentioned in the final thoughts section of the video should work. The cottage would need to have a Zigbee or Z-Wave network to work with my top picks.
👉 Let me know if any of these results surprised you, and what temperature sensors you prefer in Home Assistant, or how you use them in home automations. You can find links to my top picks plus exclusive discount codes in the video description.
Nice tests. I'm in the market for a set of these; deciding between zwave or zigbee.
If you already have a Zigbee adapter, I recommend one of the SONOFF sensors. If you already have a Z-Wave adapter, then I recommend the Zooz sensor. If you have both Zigbee and Z-Wave adapters, the SONOFF sensors offer a good value.
Thanks for reviewing so many different sensors, that's very helpful. I have a question about your terminology. For the two Sonoff sensors you say they have no "temperature offset" capability, but in the screen the Calibration text says "Yes". Is calibration different from offset? Also, for the Zooz sensor the screen says "Calibration: Yes" but you dont audibly say anything about adjusting the reading.
You can calibrate the temperature of the SONOFF sensors in Zigbee2MQTT. Zooz provides documentation on their website. Apologies for any confusion, and thanks for watching!