I really don't understand why is there a minimum and a maximum temperature value?

  • Hi there,

    so I bought five Flood sensors and three Plus H&T. They work nicely, one Flood sensor already averted a leak recently, thanks for that. Except the humidity sensors of the Plus H&T seem to be way off and it would be nice to have a reliable method for calibration that's not just an offset value.

    What's weird to me is that the application tracks a "minimum" and a "maximum" temperature graph for both the Flood and the Plus H&T.

    Why are there two different values? After all, there's just one temperature in the room at any time (and the Plus H&T shows only one temperature value on its internal display). I would have expected the devices to return a single temperature value only and report it whenever there's a configurable change in temperature.

    What am I supposed to put into my home automation system with these two values when they differ? Shall I just use the average of them?

    Einmal editiert, zuletzt von hzulla (15. September 2022 um 10:34)

  • Thanks. The firmware update indeed fixed the humidity values, these are much more plausible now.

    However, I still don't get the rationale behind the minimum & maximum temperature value.

    Your devices are fairly powerful, some of them even contain a full webserver. Even if saving battery requires them to send messages over WiFi as rarely as possible, I assume the devices still have enough resources to store more than just two temperature values between message sending. So even if the device waits an hour between message, why not send an array of temperature measurements with each wifi message?