I’m using a run of the mill motion sensor in the living room that turns the lights off after a certain duration of no motion (unless the TV is on). Sometimes the lights turn off when I’m still in the room because I’m stationary.
I know people seem to like the mmWave sensors for this and I’m considering getting a Screek 2A from eBay.
I’m curious if anyone here has used one. Thanks!
- You watch TV with the lights on‽ What kind of a monster are you?? - Soft white (2700K), ~800 lumen bulbs. It’s pretty cozy with the lights on. Not harsh at all. 
- its the x-files tho - So show me yours, I’ll show you mine, “Tool Time” 
 You’ll Lovett just like Lyle
 And then we’ll do it doggy style
 So we can both watch X-Files
 
 
- deleted by creator - I already have this set up and it works well. Sometimes I turn the TV off and stay in the room on my laptop for a while, and the lights turn off. It’s easy enough to turn them back on but I’m wondering if mmWave could help. - deleted by creator - That’s exactly how I’d use it. It’d have a time delay, too. - Also, completely unrelated, but it’s odd seeing a totally normal, non-tankie user from lemmy.ml. - deleted by creator 
 
 
 
 
- I’ve got two of the Screek 2A sensors and think they’re good. Mmwave technology isn’t a magic bullet that automatically works every time, like all radio tech there are some limitations. - I use one to turn on a light in a hallway and the other to detect when someone approaches the front door and issue an alert via ntfy.sh. Once in a while it misses some motion, so I’d probably not recommend it if you were building a human life kind of scenario, but they’re fine for me. - More importantly, they’re well supported by HA/ESPHome, open source, inexpensive and compact. - Thanks, good info. 
 
- I am using one and I found it quite unreliable. Sometimes too sensitive, catches motion that happens far away. Often blind, just ignores the most obvious motion. - Plan on combining it with sensors of other technology to compensate that. - That’s a bummer. 
 


