Ideas for self hosted door bell
from lucullus@discuss.tchncs.de to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 08:29
https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/61481877

We want a new door bell and we will even be able to run new wires (currently we only have 2 Wires). I would like to have video and 2 way audio locally hosted, though the most important thing is, that the base functionality (door bell button with connected wireless door chimes through the house) needs to be absolutely reliable (no random connectivity issues).

I have found the Acuvox R20A, which is seems to have all the bells and whistles about SIP (audio and video) calls. Though from its documentation it seems, that bell chimes also must use SIP, making it more depending on my network infrastructure and the self hosted SIP server (like Asterisk). I don’t see a possibility to trigger a relay on button press for triggering traditional door chimes. Which is a shame, since that would be the most reliable for this basic functionality

Do you have good ideas on how to go with this? Or does it make sense, to break this up and use a more basic door bell, while also adding camera and audio additionally as separate devices?

#selfhosted

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Shimitar@downonthestreet.eu on 03 Jun 08:48 next collapse

I built a DIY with a 12v chime, a 12v dry contact ZigBee relay, a 12v generator, one ZigBee button and a Tenda two way audio pts external camera .

The 12v (AC) is required by my gate lock. The two way audio depends on a proprietary app (didn’t bother too hard to make it works with Home assistant yet).

Using home assistant I can open the gate and check the camera. To actually talk back I need to open the proprietary app

lucullus@discuss.tchncs.de on 03 Jun 14:45 collapse

The proprietary app is something I don’t like. Would be great to find something, that is open enough to work with other systems

Shimitar@downonthestreet.eu on 03 Jun 14:57 collapse

I would need to mess with stuff and protocols, it should be possibile to get Rid of the proprietary app and maybe once I will have time to do it …

lucullus@discuss.tchncs.de on 03 Jun 16:52 collapse

Yeah, time, the all limiting factor. I have a big pile of project I want to do, if I only had more time…

IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz on 03 Jun 08:51 next collapse

I would go with separate devices. You can add a button with two set of terminals to trigger both the traditional chime and IOT thingy on the same time. Personally I don’t see the appeal on video/audio with a doorbell, but I’d guess there’s some raspberry pi project around to achieve what you want. SIP just for a single house doorbell at a first glance sounds like a massive overkill, camera with a two-way audio, possibly integrated to home assistant, works equally well without the overhead of running a whole IP telephone system with it.

lucullus@discuss.tchncs.de on 03 Jun 14:43 collapse

I agree, that full SIP is overkill. Though I don’t want to go the DIY hardware route. I already tried that and had constant disconnects. So I want to buy a system, that just runs, but also provide possibilities to do more in a self hosted solution.

I’m not sure how much time I want to invest in this. Maybe I will just go with an easy, less capable solution instead.

ShortN0te@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 08:56 next collapse

I would go full IP. Solutions like Reolink or unifi exist that do not need the cloud.

Only challenge would be getting ethernet to the door.

But there are 2 wire to ethernet even with poe from unifi. eu.store.ui.com/eu/en/…/uacc-retrofit-poe-2wire

Not sure if they work well, never uses them but i would try that.

EDIT: Typo

CameronDev@programming.dev on 03 Jun 09:41 next collapse

Edit: on re-reading, I think you typo’d not -> now

Unifi doesn’t need cloud, the storage is local. But unless youre already in the unifi ecosystem, their doorbells are expensive, as you also need poe switch and a cloud key (which is a poorly named local NVR).

ShortN0te@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 11:26 collapse

Yes its expensive but also good gear mostly (never used the door bell myself).

PoE switch is not necessary, PoE injectors can be had for couple of bucks used.

non_burglar@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 14:02 collapse

but also good gear mostly

I used to believe this. Then I flashed openwrt on my two ubiquiti access points and they are actually more stable and faster.

Ubiquiti is great at marketing.

ShortN0te@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 14:58 collapse

Switches, Security gear, nvr, central local management etc. not really something others can or do offer.

Ia it the best probably not but its still good well functioning equipment, for what it offers.

Just because something else works better, does not mean that it works not good.

non_burglar@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 16:28 collapse

Ia it the best probably not but its still good well functioning equipment, for what it offers.

Sure, for “power users”, maybe a small business, it’s fine. It’s just not very sophisticated under the hood. The point of Ubiquiti is the “easy” part.

lucullus@discuss.tchncs.de on 03 Jun 14:33 collapse

Do the reolink door bells also provide their feature openly to othet systems like Home Assistent? I don’t wanna use their proprietary app. And do you have experience with the connection stability on Wifi? I don’t want the connection to randomly cut out. I can go with ethernet (as we get new cables on our door either way), but Reolink doesn’t seem to have an ethernet option.

ShortN0te@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 15:17 collapse

First, I personally have not used it (but a security cam). But i have done some research.

Reolink Integration has Platinum Status on Home Assistant.

If you can set up Frigate then there seems to be 2 Way Voice Communication possible via the Home Assistant App.

There are a couple of Videos that show the process.

Reolink has at least one PoE Doorbell.

m.reolink.com/…/reolink-video-doorbell-poe/

lucullus@discuss.tchncs.de on 03 Jun 16:50 collapse

Ah, that looks good. And they are affordable. Definitely comes on the top of my list. Thanks you very much for your help

gazter@aussie.zone on 03 Jun 10:59 next collapse

I haven’t finished setting it up yet, so I can’t offer an opinion yet, but the way I’ve gone is a doorbell with electric lock control- mine does 2 locks, and you can set the 2nd lock to be a doorbell instead. The ‘doorbell’ output is a contact closure, which I just wired to a standard doorbell chime. Network down means I still have a doorbell.

lucullus@discuss.tchncs.de on 03 Jun 14:36 collapse

What door bell do you have? Many have the relays, though they also need to be configurable between door opening (on entry permission) and button press

Decronym@lemmy.decronym.xyz on 03 Jun 11:00 next collapse

Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:

Fewer Letters More Letters
HA Home Assistant automation software
~ High Availability
IP Internet Protocol
NVR Network Video Recorder (generally for CCTV)
PoE Power over Ethernet
Unifi Ubiquiti WiFi hardware brand

5 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 13 acronyms.

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Aspen10310@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 14:24 collapse

Reolink works well with Home Assistant. I have it working here, and have been quite pleased with it. No subscriptions required.

lucullus@discuss.tchncs.de on 03 Jun 14:48 collapse

Does it give you the option for 2 way audio through home assistantm And how are your experiences with wifi connection stability?

Justifier@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 15:08 collapse

I have had a bad experience with HA + reolink

First one, audio stopped after a winter storm, only static playing constantly

You can set them up with 2 way audio with HA, but it’s an endeavor, not a one click it works thing

I highly recommend you look up ubiquity, get a ubiquity protect router and bite the bullet cost wise because they work flawlessly

Or better, just get home cameras and keep a dumb doorbell