🔌 Plug into the Future of Smart Living!
The THIRDREALITY ZigBee Smart Plug 4 Pack offers a seamless integration with Zigbee hubs and Echo devices, allowing for easy setup and real-time energy monitoring. With a 15A outlet and safety features, it ensures efficient and secure control of your home appliances, making it a must-have for the modern, tech-savvy household.
C**1
Works as advertised. Convenient, useful and informative.
Manual states that they are good for up to 15 amps, 1500 watts. Looks like it is good for it. I am running 1200+ watts through one right now.I thought I had killed one. I was wrong. We seemed to be having another power problem that cause one unit to flake out. A power outage the other day that turned out to be a bad connection at my house electric company meter proved that the socket itself had not gone bad. It was just 'scrambled' / 'confused'.The manual for these tells how to perform a factor reset. I did. It still would not show up in my zigbee devices. It took a lot of fussing to work out it was stuck in bluetooth pairing mode. Eventually I worked out how to get it out of that mode and become visible again as a zigbee device. Major pain in the butt. But it is back online and works correctly.So, verdict? It does work. It is responsive to zigbee commands. It works fine with household portable heaters. I took my newly recovered socket and put it onto a heater that has a nasty bug: If the power goes off at the heater, when it comes back on it is running at full power, with no high temperature limit. So I put it on the socket, and set the socket to not turn on after a power loss. That takes care of the risk if we are out of the house when a power outage occurs (however brief). I also put it there so I can monitor power use. That is a great feature on these. I can remotely see how much power the heater is drawing, and turn it off if I need to. Even when I am off in the wild world of fast food restaurants, or some such.Worth buying? Yes, if you are me. For the two reasons I noted above. If I go pickup another thermometer unit, I can setup a script that watches room temperature and can turn it on or off as needed automatically. Exactly what these are built for.I still stand behind the comment below about not using them for things like motors (that do not specifically have a 'soft start' feature). Those can kill any electronic switch not built for the power draw spike.------ Old review.. take two grains of salt - I retract it.------It looks like I managed to kill one by plugging in a room heater into it.This plug works great with Home Assistance , using Zigbee2MQTT. I could see from the power usage sensor that the heater was drawing up to 1300 watts. It seems to work fine. They have been connected together for a day or two. I even wrote an automation to turn it on in my home office before I start work.Just a few hours ago, I turned it off. But it did not turn off. The manual power button works on it. So I followed the instructions on how to wipe it back to factor default and re-pair to my Zigbee network. Removed the device from Home Assistant (HA) and stepped through pairing again. There she is! Add it back into HA and it shows up as a Zigbee Smart Plug from ThirdReality.But.. during the paring process there is an 'interview' stage where HA works out if the device is reporting sensor data and its attributes. This never completes.I bought the four pack and have only used two. So I delete this plug from HA and paired up another one. It paired up quickly and completed the 'interview' instantly.So... yeah.. Maybe just a bad one. Maybe I fried it. I have put the newly paired plug back on the heater. We shall see if it holds up over the next week.Outside of that consideration, I haven't had these very long. Not long enough to give a real review. Just share something you should know.Last little nugget of knowledge: Electronic switches (smart or just a timer) do not do well with major load spikes like running electric motors. That is why they are frequently suggested as not the right solution for things like pond or well pumps. You just burn them out. They do make electronic switches built to survive that workload. I will guess this is not that kind of switch.Be that as it may, so far these are working fine on low power draw workloads (like my desktop PC)
T**K
Both the power monitoring and non power monitoring versions work perfectly within Home Assistant
I have a total of six of these plugs now (4 basic, two with power monitoring) in my home. To be brief, I'm very satisfied with these so far.The four basic plugs act mostly as repeaters to help extend my mesh from my Home Assistant Pi in the front of the house to the boiler room in the back of the house (one floor down in the basement). With one plug in each room, with various amounts of obstructions between them, each maintains healthy LQIs to each other and to the sensors connected to them (above 60 in all cases, reaching 150 when they have an unobstructed LOS in one case). Honestly I could probably remove a plug or two without impacting the network's stability, but I'd rather have the peace of mind. One slight downside that I noticed was from one plug that had nothing plugged into it; if the plug was on but there was no load, it would make a buzzing noise. Turning it off stopped the noise, so I did that. I'm not sure if this happens with a load plugged in.The two energy monitoring plugs are connected to our washing machine and gas dryer (which both use standard 120v power cables). Each plug measures the following values, as described in Home Assistant while using ZHA:- AC frequency (Hz)- Power/active power (W)- Power factor (%, may show as Unknown or not show up at all)- Current/RMS current (A)- Voltage/RMS voltage (V)- Summation delivered (kWh, which appears to be cumulative over time)The readings appear to be generally sensitive at the lower end of the scale. Both machines are registered as pulling 1-2W when off and about 4W at idle, which allowed me to set up a threshold helper in HA that lets me know when the machine is on or off. I think the update frequency is somewhere on the order of 15-30 seconds, but I'm not entirely sure. For my purposes, it's more than fast enough.All plugs work perfectly when using ZHA. The pairing process was painless, all plugs support power on configuration, you can set up OTA firmware updates in ZHA with a config change, and it supports channel migration, so if you change your Zigbee network to use another channel they'll automatically update without needing to re-pair.All in all I'm quite satisfied with all of these plugs, especially at their current prices of 4 basic for $30 and one power monitoring for $12.UPDATE 2024/1/10: I recently had to re-set up my Home Assistant install, and both of the power monitoring plugs I owned before no longer show the nonfunctional Power Factor stat. This might have been disabled at some point in the past on ZHA's side, as the labels for each stat had been changed. I've updated the list above to reflect the new labels.Additionally, I picked up another power monitoring plug recently when they were on sale recently, and this new one has Power Factor both in the list and functioning. EDIT 2024/1/30: After some diagnostics, I've determined all three PM plugs are running the same firmware revision (0x10013048, or v72 if you convert the last three numbers from hex to decimal), but the older two don't show the power factor. This suggests to me there might have been a minor hardware revision to reenable that properly, so if you're looking to write automations or analytics that use it, be sure to check the plugs beforehand. Beyond that, all power monitoring plugs work identically.
D**A
Great ZigBee smart plug
Pairs easily, works reliably, has energy monitoring, includes a physical button for manual control - just what a smart plug should be.I'm using this with Home Assistant paired with a Sonoff dongle and the ZigBee connection is solid. Works as a repeater as well.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
2 days ago