Archive for the ‘Wireless’ Category

Gardena Sileno City 250 goes “smart” – App control via Bluetooth

Monday, April 22nd, 2019

I recently upgraded my lawnmower robot from a Robomow City 110 to a Gardena Sileno City 250. Main reason for the changeover (besides dying batteries) was the mowing noise; the Robomow was quite noisy, both in terms of driving and mowing noise. Also as my lawn is not completely flat and the Robomow’s hard plastic chassis is not fixed but able to move around for “hard” obstacle detection purposes that always generated some sort of rattling noise.

The Gardena is much quieter although the more expensive Gardena lawnmower robot models seem to be even more quiet. With my model there is almost no driving or blade rotation noise, however there is a bit of noise that can be best described as “blades hit grass”. Depending on the height of the grass this can be unexpectedly loud however it’s supposed to become better the more the robot runs – mainly because it has less to cut.

There are different models of the Sileno City; I chose the most basic one because I don’t really need any of the “Smart” cloud features the higher-priced models have and because it only has to take care of about 160m². Getting a “Smart” model would have meant to choose the next bigger model, the “Sileno City 500” (+200 EUR) which is available “Smart” enabled as “Smart Sileno City 500” (plus another 100 EUR); basically they just don’t seem to sell the City 250 smart-enabled. And you’d have to trust “the cloud”.

According to some threads in the German Robotics forum it might be possible to get the “Smart” capabilities as an upgrade for the 250 by sending it to Gardena and having it upgraded which seems to consist of adding an additional internal board for wireless communications (863 – 870 MHz).

Reading these forums I came across a note that the Sileno City models are Bluetooth enabled for future software upgrades, which is also listed in the model specifications in the owner’s manual. Doing some research about these Bluetooth capabilities I noticed that Husqvarna offers a free App called “Automower Connect” for some of their “Automower” series lawnmower robots. Since Gardena is a part of Husqvarna group and advertises “20 years of experience” with lawnmower robots it’s pretty clear that these are all basically building up on known Husqvarna technology. If you know Husqvarna Automower robots – you will immediately see the similarities when looking at these Gardena devices.

Looks like an Automower – but is a Gardena Sileno City 250

The current version of “Automower Connect” (“AMC”) in the Android Playstore as of writing of this post is version 3.1.7 dated January 23rd, 2019. Turns out this App can’t just connect to Cloud-enabled Automowers but also offers an “Automower Direct” mode. This mode seems to have been introduced as an Automower product feature called “Automower Connect@Home” in 2018 and allows you to control your lawnmower robot via Bluetooth LE (BTLE).

Well… long story short – the non-smart Gardena Sileno City 250 is still smart enough to be found by this App. However similar to Automowers the initial pairing needs to happen within about 3 minutes after the robot has been powered on, so if you experience issues pairing make sure to fully turn it off (power LED not on or flashing), then turn it back on and try to pair.

Almost all App features for controlling the robot seem to work: Start, Pause, Resume, Park, Override Schedule (for x hours); including remotely editing the mowing schedule which is quite nice given the limited interface available on the robot itself.

What doesn’t work in the App are the mower settings; seems the Gardena robots either have a more limited or slightly different command set. However, it’s still very nice that the non-smart robot is smart enough to be controlled via Bluetooth LE. 30 meters line-of-sight were not an issue at all and I was quite surprised that the connection still worked through some concrete walls. Of course this can’t be compared to the featureset of the Gardena Smart module but seems to be sufficient for controlling the robot from a few meters away without having to walk to it, stopping it and pressing some buttons.

Based on the discussions in the German Robotics forum this also works with the same App on IOS and with other mower models such as Gardena Sileno City 500 and Gardena Sileno Life 750. There also seems to be an App for the Apple smart watch allowing you to control your lawnmower robot from your clock – of course only as long as the associated mobile phone is within Bluetooth distance of the lawnmower robot.

However there seem to be some limitations in terms of firmware versions; it does not seem to work with firmware 11.04 or earlier but was tested ok with firmware 11.07 and 14.04.

I will probably post a follow-up soon with some more details about the BT LE communication used between App and robot.

Hope that someone will find this useful; if you have anything to add or want to provide feedback please use the comments area below. Enjoy!

Long-distance wireless networking

Saturday, October 27th, 2012

Together with some friends I’ve recently tested a temporary wireless network link between Graz and Leutschach, spanning a distance of over 57 kilometers. Using Ubiquiti 5GHz equipment we quickly achieved a stable link with a throughput of about 20 Mbit/s …

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Cheap “open” WLAN router: D-Link DIR-300

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

It’s been a while since the last post here, but I just quickly want to mention the D-Link DIR-300. It’s currently the 2nd cheapest WLAN router at the Austrian price comparison site Geizhals – 24 EUR. Of course you can flash it and run alternative firmware such as OpenWRT or DD-WRT.

Just for kicks I got a hardly used one for 10 EUR at eBay. After checking out the D-Link firmware I quickly flashed DD-WRT v24-sp1 on the device. First I tried following the DD-WRT guide for the DIR-300, but it’s a bit misleading, as it tries to catch a sub-second boot prompt to send a break signal. Instead I used a method that’s way easier: Just keep the device’s RESET button pressed while powering it on. It will then halt at the boot prompt – now you can continue following the usual device-flashing guides.

The device seems to work fine, with signal strengths similar to those of my Asus WL500Gp (mind you, that was just a quick in-house distance measurement, not a scientific signal strength study).
Quite a nice device with a very attractive price tag.

WL500Gp tips: LED, Buttons, VLANs, USB-WLan, better web interface..

Saturday, December 9th, 2006

I’ve already mentioned the Asus WL500G premium wireless lan router in previous posts. Now I finally found some time to write about a few nice tips&tricks for the device: Reacting to button actions, turning the LED on/off by software, configuring VLANs on the different LAN interfaces, using an USB WLan stick with it and switching to a better web interface.

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wlan router wardriving

Sunday, November 19th, 2006

So, I have this shiny new Asus toy, now what can we do with it?
I thought that maybe using its ressources for some wardriving fun would make sense. What’s necessary for that? Well, we have the wlan router that has everything “on board” except for a power supply, a huge storage for the results and a device to record its position. Read the complete article for details 😉

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