Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
UPDATE: Replaced my PIR-Sensor with a Doppler Microwave Sensor.
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@Lipax this sensor is very sensitive and catches any movement 360 around from several meters away. I had same problem… If you don’t dial down the sensitivity-range you will keep getting false positives.
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@Lipax try dialing down the sensitivity, it’s probably picking up dust or something small you can’t see.
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thanks for the help, but i doubt its some kind of movement since its exactly every minute. i tried a different room and its the same.
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@Lipax please don’t submit duplicate posts…
all users with reputation below 2 have their posts reviewed… this eliminates all the porn, advertising and trash posts from the forum.
it just takes time for (me) to get to review the posts…
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Can you share your python code? Perhaps there’s something there
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@sdetweil sry about that
@uros76 i hope thats not the problem
import RPi.GPIO as GPIO import time import datetime switch=11 GPIO.setmode(GPIO.BOARD) GPIO.setup(switch, GPIO.IN) try: while True: if GPIO.input(switch) == 1: now = datetime.datetime.now() print(now.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"), "something") time.sleep(5) except KeyboardInterrupt: print("Bye Bye") finally: GPIO.cleanup()
thanks for the help
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@Lipax try different gpio pin, like a pin 18 which is a GPIO 5. It’s default set to input function. Don’t forget to adjust the python code, change switch to 18.
You might check the GPIO 0 (your pin 11) if it is set to input. Use command: raspi-gpio get 0 or raspi-gpio get to check all GPIO’s.
Also, use a multimeter to measure the voltage coming out from sensor. It should be around 3.3V for few seconds when sensing detected. This way you can monitor if actual detection / voltage is coming from sensor.
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@uros76
i forget to mention i already changed the pin, i first tried pin 7 beforeaccording to pinout.xyz my pin 11 is gpio 17
GPIO 17: level=0 fsel=0 func=INPUT
thank you very much for helping me, i dont have a multi meter but ill ask my father to do that. u think its not the sensor sending the signal? maybe it picks up something with the wire along the way? i dont have a engineering background.
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@Lipax you need to be sure that sensor is not the cause.
Measuring it’s sensing, output voltage and duration is a good way of confirming if sensor works ok. -
it took a long time but i tested the voltage, i can upload a video somewhere if u want. the wrong positive and the regular ones look the same for me. it kinda spikes to ~5v and then instantly goes to 3.3 and stabilizes