I've had Homeseer for many years, because it too checks your boxes. The reason I went with it is there were plugins for everything I wanted to connect/automate. I've been very happy with it. Literally zero issues. It just runs.
I think @Denwood would be an excellent inductee to the Prusa cult!...er club I mean.
Can I use a Hubitat to automate cleaning my cat's litterbox?
Interested! Thanks for the explanation so far.
Cool, I'll keep going then!
I hope the tourney gets to happen.The Twin Cities has had 48 inches of snow this year and due to that there is a huge amount of slush under the snow, the lakes are just not building ice this year.I live 40 miles northeast of St Paul we have probably 12 lakes in a 10 mile radius and nobody is driving much less putting permanent ice houses out yet.If they can get the snow off they will need to flood the rinks heavily, if not they'll look like the city streets here(6 inches of rutty ice).Heed the waitress's advice at Matts to let the burger cool a bit .I still have a scar on my forearm from the molten cheese of my buddies burger when it squirted out.It is indeed! Snow also makes pond hockey extremely slow so as long as it is not actively coming down, I am fine with it! I would love some recs! We have an Air BNB for for 5 days and plan to explore the area a bit. Only rec I have so far is getting a Juicy Lucy burger haha. I am sure we will find the breweries one way or another but recs are always welcome!
Also very interested to see how this goes! I've got some smart devices but nothing tied together, even have some Caseta switches and the hub I had going at last house that haven't reinstalled(laziness, they worked great) but continue to think that some automation would be nice.
Daughter has figured out Alexa and how to get it to play her favorite song and make animal noises...so I probably have to watch the voice commands lol.
I did an automation thread 5 or so years ago when I installed blue iris and HomeSeer. It has been rock solid since I initially set it up. I have a lot of little things implemented that are true quality of life enhancements, and some that have real energy savings.
if
contact sensor changes to open
then
with
lights
do
turn on
if
contact sensor changes to open
and
Nick's iPhone changed to 'present' in the last 10 minutes
then
with
lights
do
turn on
Turn Plant Grow Light ON at 7:00 AM
Turn Plant Grow Light OFF at 7:00 PM



I hope the tourney gets to happen.The Twin Cities has had 48 inches of snow this year and due to that there is a huge amount of slush under the snow, the lakes are just not building ice this year.I live 40 miles northeast of St Paul we have probably 12 lakes in a 10 mile radius and nobody is driving much less putting permanent ice houses out yet.If they can get the snow off they will need to flood the rinks heavily, if not they'll look like the city streets here(6 inches of rutty ice).Heed the waitress's advice at Matts to let the burger cool a bit .I still have a scar on my forearm from the molten cheese of my buddies burger when it squirted out.
I'll throw another vote for Creality @Denwood. Mine has worked perfect out of the box. I will heed my only advice. Don't got to far down the rabbit hole of modding. If you truly want certain options on your machine I suggest buying one that has most of the options you want. I think Nick just got a lemon out of the box unfortunately. Maybe his was built on a Friday before a holiday weekend.
Nick the automation interest me on certain levels. On the other hand my conspiracy theory mind doesn't like the aspect that anyone that can hack into the system would have control of things. Not that we have ever seen that happen in a movie before. But now that you mention it. One thing I could probably build a system for is watering most of my plants with a timer so I wouldn't have to spend 30-45 min a day watering.
I also love LED's but I will be honest I hate them on cars. Damn headlights of new cars blind the hell out of me to were I can barely see at all until they pass. And I absolutely hate LEDS on older vehicles. It just doesn't have the right look in my opinion. Just my .02 I will get off my soapbox now.
I look forward to following along on your journey and seeing what I can learn from it.
Bret
This thread is about how I control electric shop heaters with Ecobee smart thermostats.Are you able to dig that thread up? I wouldn't mind checking it out.
I have Ubiquiti point to point link between my two properties, with the automation running there as well. I have iBeacons to detect where I am physically located, and it switches things up in Homeseer and my camera system (Blue Iris). It's completely automated and I rarely use any HMI type of thing.
By each door - two man doors and three roll up doors, is another ZWave switch. It doesn't switch power to any lights. It's just a trigger into Homeseer. Currently configured to turn all four rows on and off. This saved a TON of unneeded wire and complexity in the lighting circuits.
I continue to browse 3D printers, but the more pressing priority of my eldest heading off to school in the UK this month, and her sibling doing competitive dance conspire against me..ha. Save yer pennies Nick!
What I did find at home is that our electricity consumption dropped nearly 40% after automation, which suggests that across North America there is a lot of "low hanging fruit" when it comes to efficiency.
Keeping lights off when not needed, but also running them at lower dim settings (during the day for example) can reduce consumption easily another 50%.

University here is a lot less expensive than US colleges. Tuition in the $8-10K per year average. My daughter has made it a lot easier for us with scholarships as she maintains a + 90% average and lives at home, so it's maybe 50% of that. The foreign exchange program with the UK maintains pretty similar pricing, but housing/food will add about $1000/month while she is there.@Denwood 's "save your pennies" advice is spot on.
My kids went to pretty expensive schools (his was almost stupid), I can't imagine foreign country expenses.
@Denwood 's "save your pennies" advice is spot on.
That said, we've been saving for both of them since birth with monthly contributions to RESPs (tax free investment account with government adding up to $500 per year if you contribute over $2500) so the financial impact today is much less![]()










Office area looks great! Congratulations on the Herman Miller chair. They are everything folks say they are.
Also.. I'm told you want to see lots of Bambu X1C posts and photos..
Hey Nick, I'd try printing a first layer calibration print and dial in your initial Z height. It appears too low and as a result the extrusions are being too far squished, causing that raised blobby effect. That squish also seems to be causing a bit of elephant foot or excess width around the perimeter of the first layers as well. Raising the initial Z will also help a bit when it comes to removing parts from the build sheet.
Awesome score on that Herman Miller chair by the way! I would have been all over that for the price as well.
Ditto on the chair…the good ones are like art pieces in my book. The part looks pretty amazing too in the appropriate Koolaid colors![]()
As far as I understand and in my own experience, eyeballing the initial Z height is the best way to dial it in. Make or find an object with a broad first layer (the puzzle piece trays I just printed are excellent for this) and do a live Z adjust as the first layer is printing. As the first layer progresses, closely watch the way the extrusions are laying down. You obviously don't want to have any space between them, but there shouldn't be so much squish that the raised blobby effect is present. I'll run one right now and try to get some pictures of my first layer on my smooth build sheet.Thanks Austin, that is very helpful. I've struggled to wrap my head around leveling with this new printer. With the 3v2 I didn't have a bed probe, and all I ever did was level the 4 corners with a piece of paper. Never even touched the Z offset once. I never had issues with that method and it seemed so simple to me for how much bed leveling seems to be a challenge for people.
I followed some YouTube videos on how to dial in the Z offset on the Ender S1, and it still involved a piece of paper manually leveling the bed with the Z offset set to zero. And then running the bed probe to create a mesh. But upon printing after this, it was clear the nozzle was WAY too far away from the bed. I don't understand why, but I read other similar comments online. So... I tried to dial in the Z offset manually and I guess I went too far.
What you're saying totally makes sense and I'll try backing it off a little bit. I just wish there was a foolproof way to set the correct height like the paper method vs. eyeballing it.
Any tips for removing a prime line that was over-squished and really got embedded in the textured plate? There's a few sections I can't get fully clean but I'm not sure if isopropyl alcohol, dish soap, etc is recommended on these.
And on the chair... the guy said they started with 40 and when I got there they had 7 left. I was tempted to buy more than one at that price!
That seems like an awful waste of good beer there Bret.Nick are you spraying the bed with IPA between each print and wiping it off in one direction.
Bret

As far as I understand and in my own experience, eyeballing the initial Z height is the best way to dial it in. Make or find an object with a broad first layer (the puzzle piece trays I just printed are excellent for this) and do a live Z adjust as the first layer is printing. As the first layer progresses, closely watch the way the extrusions are laying down. You obviously don't want to have any space between them, but there shouldn't be so much squish that the raised blobby effect is present. I'll run one right now and try to get some pictures of my first layer on my smooth build sheet.
To remove the embedded filament, I have a couple of ideas. I haven't personally done this, but I've heard of people having luck by putting the build plate in the freezer for a while and then kind of carefully chipping the embedded filament off. Conversely, you can try carefully heating up the embedded filament with a heat gun or hair dryer and peel it up that way.
**EDIT: I made a post over on my Garage Gallery thread that hopefully will do a decent job at explaining initial Z height.
Nick are you spraying the bed with IPA between each print and wiping it off in one direction. I always do this and it helps adhesion and removal. Once my bed cools down I can literally hear the parts pop loose from the bed.
Those rough surfaces are due to over extrusion, which as was noted can be due to z-offset being incorrect, but can also be altered with the first layer extrusion multiplier. For good bed adhesion it is best practice to over extrude the first layer and squish it for the best contact. This will affect the second layer since the rough parts are filament that are squeezing up and around the edge of the nozzle, taking volume from where the second layer is being put down. It eventually evens out, but if it is bad it will cause failures of small features when the first layer is being put down as those rough edges will hit the nozzle as it goes by and lift the print off the bed. So if you are still having issues once your z-offset has been calibrated, you may want to see what your first layer extrusion settings are (typically 120% of the normal setting) and turn it down a little bit at a time until you get a better finish.



Wow, the snow melting business is hot! $400/hr for hot water is not an easy pill to swallow.
Nick, is that light fixture in an airtight box or open to the attic? Ice dams used to be an issue at times for us, but air sealing the attics with 2" of closed cell spray foam and then about R 80 of cellulose after fixed the issues. We're in a colder climate (but not that much colder) than you, and the trick here is keeping the attic cold with a combination of adequate ventilation, and careful air sealing/insulation. I ask about the light as the fixture itself may be heating the roof deck, along with air leakage there.
A lot of states/cities have pretty generous programs to fund some or all of that type of work as well. Probably would only take one or two emergency ice dam removal payments to fund someone else to crawl around up in the attic air sealing and blowing in extra cellulose.






Have you considered something like this: amazon.com/Garbage-Disposal-Aluminum-STAINLESS-CLEESINK/dp/B072L3VX57? Easy to install (especially if you already have an available hole in your sink or counter) and work well.
- Virtual 3-way dish disposal switch (switch is under kitchen sink cupboard and hard to reach, want to place battery powered switch in better location that controls it)
It's quite surprising really how similar our setups are down to the Amcrest cameras, Logitech integration and HUE lightingMore Home Automation Stuff
I pretty much have Hubitat up and running the way I want, now. I figured I'd give an overview of what I have it programmed to do, give another coding example or two, and some future goals to wrap this topic up.
This is a list of automations I have currently set up and working (a lot were carried over from SmartThings)....
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Lots of good stuff there!
Have you considered something like this: amazon.com/Garbage-Disposal-Aluminum-STAINLESS-CLEESINK/dp/B072L3VX57? Easy to install (especially if you already have an available hole in your sink or counter) and work well.
It's quite surprising really how similar our setups are down to the Amcrest cameras, Logitech integration and HUE lighting![]()
Logitech is no longer manufacturing remotes, which stresses me out a bit as the theatre relies on this for automation of the media rack, projector screen, lighting etc. The Harmony Elite touch screen remote/hub will be a huge PITA to replace with the integrations it needs to work nicely with Hubitat and HUE.
I've been quite impressed honestly with Webcore in the past (even on SmartThings) running our pool automation/solar heating system flawlessly for four years now. I've got the HRV ventilation system humming along nicely now in Rule Machine, but there is a pretty good list of tweaks that have been added. I would 100% agree that WebCore is far better for programming logic, particularly if you're using equations as I'm doing to set variables for heater power settings (calculated on temperature and air flow) as well as calculating HRV defrost times based on the outside temperature. I'm doing these calcs in Rule Machine where variable math is very, very basic.

I'm curious on the NFC tags. How are you using them?


