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    Airthings Ethernet Hub Brings Remote Access to Air Quality Sensors

    Airthings Hub
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    With both the Airthings Wave Plus and the Airthings Mini in the new Automated Home, we love the ability to keep an eye on our air quality.

    As they are Bluetooth devices rather than WiFi they have a long battery life, however this also means that you have to be within a few metres of them to get a reading.

    Until now.

    Airthings Hub

    The new Airthings Ethernet Hub (Model 2810) is a 12 cm square that acts as a gateway between the battery powered Airthings sensors and your network.

    The Hub does not use Bluetooth, instead it bridges your LAN via its Ethernet port to Airthings own ‘SmartLink’ wireless system which operates on 868 / 915 Mhz. This gives it a much better range than Bluetooth and Airthings say it ‘covers most residential homes’ with a range of ‘up to 100m’.

    Setup

    The hub can sit on a flat surface or on a wall with the included bracket which in a nice touch has a little spirit level built into it

    Just plug it into your router or switch with the Ethernet cable and connect it up to the mains power adaptor (both included in the box). We’ve mounted ours in the data rack in the garage and the signal strength to the sensors in the barn and our bedroom are great.

    Device Support

    The Hub supports the Wave Plus, the Wave Mini and the Wave 2nd Gen sensors and you can connect up to 10 devices at once. If you have more than 10 devices then Airthings tell us you can use multiple hubs too.

    While the Hub does have Bluetooth on-board this is only used for the initial setup process with the app. Once you connect your sensors to a hub their Bluetooth is disabled and you are no longer able to access readings directly from them.

    Airthings Hub - Browser Dashboard

    Remote Access

    With the hub added to your Airthings setup, you have remote access to all your sensors and data.

    I used to have a daily reminder on my phone to fire up the app and sync our readings which wasn’t really ideal. Now everything just happens automatically and I can check our current and historic air quality from anywhere at any time from dashboard.airthings.com.

    The hub polls the sensors every 5 minutes for VOC / Temperature / Humidity / CO2 and Air Pressure readings and once an hour for radon.

    Airthings say that battery life on the Wave Plus using this smartlink setup is up to 18 months, versus around 16 months on BLE.

    New Mould Feature

    It’s great to see the Airthings system continue to develop with products like the Hub. There’s also a brand new Mould Risk Indication feature that has just been added to the Wave Mini too.

    Summing Up

    The Hub was the missing link that has pulled our Airthings system together and put everything online automatically. This gives the best of both worlds – the network connectivity of a WiFi device, with battery life that’s even better than a BLE sensor.

    Available from Amazon

    [amazon box=”B08768D9J5″]

    airthings.com

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    2 comments on “Airthings Ethernet Hub Brings Remote Access to Air Quality Sensors

    1. Automated Home
      Mark B October 26, 2020

      Hi Mark. Have you seen any trends in air quality in your new build with its air tightness, heat recover and ventilation, no open fire, open plan kitchen with recycled hob extraction etc. Would be interesting to contrast that to your previous environment. I won’t make any assumptions on improved kitchen skills with the new connected appliances!

    2. Automated Home
      Mark McCall October 26, 2020

      @Mark – you may have missed this, swipe for the graph – https://www.instagram.com/p/CFz3ix1Hsxn/

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