I wanted some temperature sensor that can place outside my house, it is simple and not very expensive, which directly integrates with HA would be ideal but not 100% necessary.

I have seen these in Aliexpress, I don’t know if someone has them or if you think they can serve me https://acortar.link/5vbeT2

Thanks for the aid, I am starting with all this and I see good resources in this community

EDIT: Thank you very much for all the answers, it is incredible how fast you have helped me. You have also given me many interesting options to investigate more before making a decision

  • Knossos@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Ecowitt has been really good. I’ve had my station for two years now. Great equipment.

  • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    I use Aqara zigbee sensors—they cost under $20 and measure temperature, humidity, and air pressure. I’ve been using one outside (in a covered location) for over a year with no issues.

  • spaghettiwestern@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    I use the round version of the same Tuya temperature sensor in my refrigerator and with Home Assistant. For $4 I wouldn’t hesitate trying one in a protected area outside. As long as it’s not directly exposed to rain or sun it’ll probably work fine.

  • hobbsc@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 day ago

    Late to the party but I use several from third reality for temp/humidity both indoor and out. They’re ZigBee based and I just have a little ZigBee dongle attached to my server. Basically no setup needed once the dongle is up. Just add batteries and then add them in HA.

  • dmtalon@infosec.pub
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    1 day ago

    I use an Ecowitt weather station and sensors inside and out.

    And I use weewx on a Raspberry Pi to publish that data. Weewx also has a mqtt plugin so I created a weather topic and transmit all the sensors onto it.

    Then I created all those sensors in HA :)

    Unless you’re a weather nerd and wanna go that route there’s probably better ways. I was already using Ecowitt devices independent of my smart home stuff.

    A number of esp32 based devices have temp sensors too. Or gpio pins to add a 1wire or 3wire sensor.

    Weather sensors

    • jaxxed
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      1 day ago

      The ecowitt sensors last a whole season in battery, and they tend to have really good range.

  • walden@sub.wetshaving.social
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    1 day ago

    Those are designed for indoors. I don’t have any experience with them, but they might not survive the harsh conditions of being outdoors… especially water intrusion if they get rained on. They might be fine if placed directly under an awning or soffit.

    My favorite temp sensors, by far, are one of a few that you can hook up to a LOLIN D1 Mini or other ESP type board. This is temp sensors on hard mode, though. You have to buy the various parts, solder them together (read further for a no-solder option), and then flash software onto it. The software I use is Tasmota, but ESPHome is another popular option. Both integrate directly with HA.

    The downsides to this is each D1 Mini needs a 5v power supply (phone charger, for example). The new ones are USB-C. I don’t know of a good battery option for these boards. These are wifi devices use more power than z-wave or zigbee.

    Sensors that I’ve had good luck with are DS18B20 (also available in a waterproof version), and if you want something really good that includes humidity and barometric pressure, then BME688 is top of the line. The board that the BME688 comes on still needs a D1 Mini to hook up to. They are easier because you can use one of these cables to connect it to the D1 Mini, so no soldering required.

    You can even go a step further and 3D print an enclosure for the electronics.

    I know it’s not what you asked for since you’re looking for outdoor sensors, but maybe someone will find it interesting.

  • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    If you want some honest advice: just use an internet source.

    Unless you are a buying a scientific weather station to host at your home, none of the Ali* sensors will withstand what you’re expecting.

    Either pay for the real thing and get results, or skip on the cheap junk that will almost certainly die in a few months with no warranty or recourse…just use a close weather station.

    • Ebby@lemmy.ssba.com
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      1 day ago

      I use openweathermap and it works great for my needs and it’s free (they switched to an account based service recently but still free for small stuff)

      For internal temp sensors, I use my ZigBee thermostat and a window AC unit that has a temp sensor available to Home Assistant.

      Nothing fancy for me, yet anyways, but works for my needs.

  • earphone843@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    For the most part I use SHT-35s with esp chips, although I got the Govee sensors with a base station for our reptile enclosures.

    • hendrik@palaver.p3x.de
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      1 day ago

      I also soldered some myself. I’m currently using Bosch’s BME280 and similar. Works well. Just don’t bother with the old DHT11 sensors, in my experience they don’t work well outdoors. But I’m not sure of OP prefers buying a proper product that doesn’t require soldering and coding/configuring.

      • earphone843@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        I never had dht-11s that worked at all. Maybe one in ten was anywhere close to calibrated correctly. I need to check out the bme280, though.

        • hendrik@palaver.p3x.de
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          1 day ago

          Yeah, there’s a whole line of these sensors with BMPx80 and BMEx80 which include additional features, humidity, pressure, VoC… And I had my two or three DHT-11 work for some time. But mine also weren’t very accurate. Plus the humidity measurement were always way off. And they’d get saturated and just show 100% a lot of the time. And i think two just stopped working over the years, I’ve replaced the last one, one or two years ago.