Home Automation
Home automation is the residential extension of building automation.
It is automation of the home, housework or household activity.
Home automation may include centralized control of lighting, HVAC (heating, ventilation and air conditioning), appliances, security locks of gates and doors and other systems, to provide improved convenience, comfort, energy efficiency and security.
Warning: Working with electricity can result in injury, property damage, or even death if it is not done properly. Please keep this in mind while assisting others. If you are not sure about what you are doing, hire a licensed professional.
Rules
- No abusive behaviour. This is a forum for friendly discussion; personal attacks will not be tolerated and you will be banned without warning.
- Referral/affiliate links are NOT ALLOWED!
- NO POLITICS! There are plenty of other communities to discuss them; this is not one.
- When posting project details must be included. Posting a video or image without detail will result in a removed post and may result in a ban.
- Crowdfunding links are not allowed.
- Reposts, low-effort content and karma farming may be removed at the discretion of the mods. Posters may be banned without warning.
Panel seems fried. If you disconnect and reconnect to power with no response, its dead. Without the panel, those sensors have nothing to communicate with. It's either replace the panel, or replace the whole system.
For what you want, simplisafe or something sounds perfect. You don't even have to pay the monthly subscription to use the sensors or alarm.
Edit: Found a replacement panel on ebay, no guarantee you can provision the sensors to it yourself though. https://www.ebay.com/itm/125616888699?mkcid=16&mkevt=1&mkrid=711-127632-2357-0&ssspo=l1iaPyWwQFO&sssrc=4429486&ssuid=EXVRJ8MXR4O&var=&widget_ver=artemis&media=COPY
Can I reuse them and not have to pay for a subscription or buy an alarm service?
Reusing these sensors is not very profitable... It looks wireless in the photo, right? You would need to determine what type of transmission there is: RF433 or something else. Then you would have to recognize the codes it generates and build a whole background for it.
More or less... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jrto7hc4rtg
In 2023, it simply makes no sense, both financially and time-wise. There are ready-made solutions available and they don't cost a fortune.
The sensors themselves are the cheapest element of the alarm puzzle... so using the old ones doesn't make much sense because it only generates a lot of unnecessary problems.
Replacing such a sensor is also not a task that you will not be able to do on your own.
Thank you. Which ready-made solutions do you recommend?