Laundry Automation: insight and notifications
This is a guest post by Home Assistant user and contributor Nolan Gilley.
In our house, laundry has been a struggle for quite some time. Our washer and dryer both lack a buzzer which leads to forgotten laundry, and stinky mess that needs to be rewashed. I decided to create a solution by monitoring the washer and dryer myself with some cheap electronics.
As an avid user of Home Assistant, I decided it would be the perfect application to manage the UI and notification system. Now all I needed was a way to monitor the washer and dryer. I tried using sound sensors but found them unreliable. I ended up opting for an accelerometer attached to the back of each appliance. I also added magnetic reed switches on the doors of the washer and dryer to detect if the doors are open or closed. I connected the accelerometers and reed switches to a Moteino, an arduino clone with an RF transceiver. The Moteino can perform the logic to figure out which state the appliances are in and wirelessly communicate that data with another Moteino that is connected via serial to my Raspberry Pi. The Raspberry Pi reads the serial data and repeats it over MQTT for Home Assistant to use. This is great because I don’t have to run Home Assistant on the Raspberry Pi. I can run it on a faster machine and point the MQTT component to my Raspberry Pi.
After taking some sample data from the accelerometers while each appliance was in operation, I decided to plot the data to help determine the proper thresholds of when the devices were running or off. I had to do this in order to get precise ranges so the dryer sensor wouldn’t get tripped by the washer or vice versa. In the plot below you can see the acceleration in the x direction for the accelerometer connected to the washing machine. It’s easy to see when the washing machine is in operation here. I used the same technique for the dryer’s accelerometer.
Graph showing the accelerometer data
Next it was just a matter of integrating everything with Home Assistant. I was able to use the MQTT component to read the washer and dryer states from the Moteino and display it in Home Assistant.
Status of the dryer and washer in Home Assistant
Next I wrote scripts that are run whenever the washer or dryer completes a load. This is triggered by the automation component. When the laundry is complete I have the lights in the house turn red and notify me via PushBullet. Once the laundry is taken care of another script runs that sets the lights back to normal. So far it has been very helpful and very reliable.
Top left: reed switch. Bottom left: moteino. Right: Accelerometer.
Materials used:
Sketch for the Moteino is available here.
Home Assistant Configuration:
The automation and script syntax here is using a deprecated and no longer supported format.
mqtt:
broker: 192.168.1.100
port: 1883
keepalive: 60
qos: 0
sensor:
platform: mqtt
name: "Dryer Status"
state_topic: "sensor/dryer"
unit_of_measurement: ""
sensor 2:
platform: mqtt
name: "Washer Status"
state_topic: "sensor/washer"
unit_of_measurement: ""
automation:
alias: Dryer complete
platform: state
state_entity_id: sensor.dryer_status
state_from: 'Running'
state_to: 'Complete'
execute_service: script.turn_on
service_entity_id: script.dryer_complete
automation 2:
alias: Dryer emptied
platform: state
state_entity_id: sensor.dryer_status
state_from: 'Complete'
state_to: 'Empty'
execute_service: script.turn_on
service_entity_id: script.dryer_cleared
script:
dryer_complete:
alias: Dryer Complete Script
sequence:
- alias: Pushbullet Notification
execute_service: notify.notify
service_data:
message: "The dryer has finished its cycle, please empty it!"
- alias: Living Room Lights Red
execute_service: scene.turn_on
service_data:
entity_id: scene.red
- delay:
seconds: 1
- alias: Living Room Lights Off
execute_service: light.turn_off
service_data:
entity_id: group.living_room
- delay:
seconds: 1
- alias: Living Room Lights Red
execute_service: scene.turn_on
service_data:
entity_id: scene.red
dryer_cleared:
alias: Dryer Cleared Script
sequence:
- alias: Living Room Lights Off
execute_service: light.turn_off
service_data:
entity_id: group.living_room
- delay:
seconds: 1
- alias: Living Room Lights Normal
execute_service: scene.turn_on
service_data:
entity_id: scene.normal
Resources used: