I needed that LOL WB hahahahahahahaha
Gotta get on this soon
I needed that LOL WB hahahahahahahaha
Does it actually need two sensors to determine if the fan is working? Couldn't you just record a known pressure range when not running and then see the pressure difference from the previously known value. Reason I ask is that I currently only have a single BME280 (I could use one of the other sensor types if needed). Just wondered if you tried a single sensor before moving to both?
How did it fail? Are you using I2C or SPI to talk to the sensors?
That's what we want to hear ;o)
Thanks Man, I don't have it written up as yet but I will try and do that tonight (while chilling with a few beers).
I have tried that but the atmospheric pressure changes are much higher than the changes due to the fan!Minty wrote: ↑Thu Apr 30, 2020 3:11 pmDoes it actually need two sensors to determine if the fan is working? Couldn't you just record a known pressure range when not running and then see the pressure difference from the previously known value. Reason I ask is that I currently only have a single BME280 (I could use one of the other sensor types if needed). Just wondered if you tried a single sensor before moving to both?
I tried using I2C but gave up after a few attempts! Would definitely be the more elegant solution but I had another esp8266 lying around anyways as they came in a pack of 3. I will have to try it out again at some point!
No rush - but it's a very cool project and looks stunning - very neatly done and everything is labelled! I should probably finally solder things rather than using the breadboard!
and then I see they have a 50% sale on some probes which is tempting me!
I did very little soldering to be fair, most of it is done with the motor shields that just stack on top of the Arduino and the top hat Grove connector shield. Pretty much plug and play. I would say if I had gone the soldering route it would have probably been half the price.