Thinking about replacing my two openers and want to tie those into my HomeKit world. With the recent news from Chamberlain, I’m looking for suggestions about other brands. Looks to me like the Meross WiFi opener and a not-smart opener might be the way to go (or just ignore the smart part since they all seem to be proprietary). I looked at Genie openers

Any suggestions?

    • xxxbewrightxxx@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      Question, does the Meross require cloud access for any of its functions? Was reading their site, and that wasn’t clear to me.

  • LHuisingh@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Lol at the TailWind product. That unit can handle up to three openers and is very interoperable.

  • M_Six2001@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Any chance of being able to hard wire a controller into your network? If so, I highly recommend the iSmartgate Lite. It has a USB port, so you can add one of their USB to Ethernet adapters to hard wire it. I could never get a Meross opener I had to work consistently on wifi, so I went with the iSmartgate Lite and hard wired it. It’s been more than a year now and it has never failed me.

    OTOH, if you only have wifi available, you can get the iSmartgate Pro that uses wifi and has a few other cool bells and whistles. It will work for multiple doors. If you go with the Lite version, you’ll need one controller for each door.

    As for the opener itself, if you can get the door to open by shorting across the two connections from a wired switch, then pretty much any smart controller will work with it.

  • grundelcheese@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Do not buy a genie opener. Not only are they a garbage opener but the smart connect, Aladdin, is impossible to connect to 5-6hz routers. It is also very finicky when shutting of those bands to connect to the 2.4. 0/10 would not recommend

  • Budget-Scar-2623@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    You can get Zigbee enabled relays for fairly cheap, if you have a network to connect it to. Otherwise if you know what you’re doing (and want to put the time into it) a raspberry pi pico/esp32 and a single channel relay will do what you want for under $30 (not including cost of hardware for a Home Assistant machine if you don’t have one). And you won’t have a proprietary thing to worry about.