Balcony Gardening
Welcome to c/BalconyGardening @ slrpnk.net!
A young community dedicated to balcony gardening.
About
Show off that vertical veggie garden 35 stories high. Or that bucket of potatoes you're proud of. Perhaps some fall mums that have been catching your eye through the sliding door into your living room. Any and all balcony gardens are welcome! Come and show your's off because we love to see it. :)
We also welcome ideas, tips, and items which have helped you in your balcony gardening journey. No balcony? Feel free to join in with your container garden with limited space too!
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This is a work in progress, please don't mind the mess.
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occasional self-promotion
by active members is fine.
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At home I use an "automated indoor plant care" device of my own making with about $3 of parts (including a capacitive sensor) plus a water pump on a jar full of water and some hose.
Because it uses an ATTiny45 (I had plans to move to a more modern microcontroller but couldn't be arsed) rather than an ESP32, it's not "internet enabled".
I specifically chose a microcontroller which only used about 2 micro Amperes in sleep mode and has a broad range of functional input voltage, so that it can run directly of 3x AAA batteries, which only have to be changed about every 10 months.
I would say that "doesn't need to be plugged to an external power source" and "batteries last ages" are probably more important requirements that "internet enable" for something whose only purpose is to automatically keep the humidity of a vase above a certain value and to me this Plant Bot just seems overengineered and trading important things for frills.
This kind of stuff is really just an Advanced Arduino project.
Do you have some designs posted someplace? I have Arduino experience but I don't know how to build anything for $3.
I don't have that design posted anywhere. Here's the circuit diagram in image format:
I don't use Arduino boards but rather the microcontroller chips directly, which turns out to be pretty simple to do (here's some videos on doing Arduino stuff that way).
Because I'm using discrete components (mostly DIP so that they can go into a perfboard but also some cheap SMD MOSFETs because low power SMD MOSFETs go for 2 cents each and work fine for just driving a small water pump whilst all the DIP MOSFETs are power MOSFETS, so much more expensive and way over spec for the kind of currents a small water pump pulls) so it all adds up to very little cost, plus I made a board design for it and had 20x of that done by some cheap chinese PCB maker so even the board ends up even cheaper than a perfboard.
Doing the whole thing around an Arduino board, even a cheap Arduino Micro is much more expensive, way over-spec for an automated watering device plus those boards tend to eat up lots of power when in sleep mode so the batteries wouldn't last long if the circuit was built around such a board - if you look at the diagram, all the paths from VCC to GND either go via the microcontroler (like how SIGNAL- and SIGNAL+ drive both sides of a two color bi-directional LED) or have a control MOSFET that blocks by default when the micro-controller doesn't send any signal (like SENS_CTRL).
The $3 bucks are a rough estimate but I wouldn't be surprised if it's an overestimate. It really depends on the price of the capacitive sensor you're using (I just get mine from Aliexpress) as that might actually be more expensive than the rest. However do note that the price of the water pump was not included and that adds maybe another 2 bucks.
EDIT: For some weird reason I kept mentioning "diode" when talking about MOSFET transistors, so I corrected that.