VINDRIKTNING

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Revision as of 19:35, 3 August 2021 by Bertrik Sikken (talk | contribs) (Hardware)
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Project VINDRIKTNING
VINDRIKTNING.png
Hacking IKEA VINDRIKTNING PM2.5 indicator
Status In progress
Contact bertrik
Last Update 2021-08-03

What

This page is about hacking the IKEA VINDRIKTNING PM2.5 indicator light.

Hardware

  • power is by USB-C probably 5V
  • the particulate matter sensor is the PM1006, probably very similar to the Cubic PM1006K but with a slightly different command set
  • has LEDs for three colours (red, orange and green)
  • has a light level sesnro
  • the sensor output can be PWM or UART, the UART output provides a PM2.5 value

Pictures of its internals: https://twitter.com/guido_burger/status/1413900622919872521

  • there is a footprint for a kind of debug header, with signals ISPDA, RESET, ISPCLK, GND, +5V
  • there is an internal header with signals LED_G_1, PWM_Fan, LED_R_1, FAN-, FAN+
  • there is a separate header for the fan with signals FAN+,FAN-
  • there is an 8-pin IC, could this be the "main" microcontroller?
  • there is a light-sensing element, that controls the brightness of the LED

More pictures of its internals, with reverse-engineered schematics: https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1415291684569632768.html

VINDRIKTNING Schematic by Adam Hořčica

Interfacing with ESP8266

The datasheet of the PM1006K mentions that it takes 5V as power and communicates using 4.5V levels. The reverse-engineered schematic shows resistors in line with the RX and TX lines. An ESP8266 should be 5V tolerant. This means that it is probably possible to directly connect an ESP8266 in place of the original microcontroller.

Hacking

The microcontroller is an ES7P001.

Find out if it can be read out, perhaps reprogram it.

Idea: by default, the light only shows one quality indicator, but the particulate matter sensor datasheet shows that it can output PM1.0, PM2.5 and PM10 values too. You could fit an ESP8266 that reads out the raw PM categories and publish them over WiFi, e.g. using a home assistant compatible protocol.

With no PM1006K attached at all, the sensor indicates "green", or good air quality!

Protocol

Mentioned here, the MCU sends

 11 02 0B 01 E1

This is different from the command mentioned in the data sheet!

Software

Some intial, untested code for an ESP8266 (Wemos D1 mini) to communicate with the PM1006K sensor inside this device can be found at https://github.com/bertrik/pm1006k

The hardware probably needs a level shifter in line with the RX and TX signals.