Has anyone found an easy solution for connecting a smoke machine to HA?
I’m in the process of setting up my Halloween experience, which includes motion sensors. audio and ESPHome-controlled LEDs.
I have a smoke machine that is controlled via an RF remote. I built an ESP8266 relay for it but it wasn’t reliable. Malamaker has a good one but it requires a PCB.
I only know about the USB RFXTrx433 stick, for sending commands to RF devices. It will depend on what frequency the RF remote runs on to start with, then you would need to look at options like the Sonoff RF Bridge maybe?
Why aren’t you just using something like one of the Broadlink RF Hubs to control it. Learn the RF buttons from the remote and then you’ve got complete control.
Thank you both. Yes, I’d considered a Broadlink and similar but they’re double the price of the smoke machine itself.
The Sonoff RF would be perfect but unfortunately doesn’t support the smoke machine’s frequency. It took me two devices and many hours before I figured that out!
Have a look on eBay. I’ve picked up a few of the older model Broadlink RM Pro’s on there for $20 and they’ve been brand new sealed in their original packaging
Funny - I looked online to see if anyone had done a similar thing - converted a cabled remote controlled cheepo fog machine into a wifi controlled one. Then I discovered that the cable remote is in effect AC thus not easily modded.
(answering Andrew in a bit more detail - as per the malamaker device, these fog machines have two circuits - one to heat the fogging element which is powered all the time, and one to run the pump that pumps the fog mixture through the element and then out the nozzle. The pump circuit of course only runs on demand)
I just got a cheap off-brand fog machine from eBay with the same controls and am trying to determine options as well. If you have a smart plug lying around that can monitor power consumption you could use that to determine when the machine is ‘ready’ as the wattage should drop from around whatever your machine is rated at to near zero once the machine reaches the desired temp. I’m going to throw together some sensors in Home Assistant today and test that against when the light on the machine turns on indicating that it’s ready just to make sure it’s reliable.
I ended up buying a Broadlink Universal Controller. The RM4 model I think. I learns RF codes from pretty much all devices and then can be easily integrated into Home Assistant to control them.