mkgeiger / matrix-weather-clock

Matrix Weather Clock on an ESP8266 microcontroller

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LED matrix clock with weather informations

Overview

After my old 7-segmented clock in the living room gave up, I decided to build my own really fancy eye catching clock. The decicion fell on a LED matrix clock (after a Nixie clock was ruled out because of its limited capabilities and relative short tube lifes) because of its 80s retro look. The feature for my needs are:

  • the device shall only communicate over WIFI to the outside world
  • configurable WIFI access parameters
  • the clock shall be using NTP to adjust its time automatically (I am always tired of setting the time after a power failure or when there is a change to the daylight saving time)
  • the color of the time shall be configurable and also the seconds to be displayed or not
  • a flashing colon (1/s) and a scrolling of the digits (from top to down) for the retro look
  • displaying permanently the ouside temperature with a color gradient from blue (cold) to red (hot)
  • displaying the actual weather icon and 2 weather forecast icons in the menu row, or alternativly the humidity or the air pressure
  • changing the menu by pressing the push button shall have a retro scrolling effect
  • the OpenWeatherMap API shall be used for requesting all weather information (I know its sometimes less accurate then commmercial ones, but its free!)
  • all individual settings like time zone (incl. daylight saving and nornal time), OpenWeatherMap API key, OpenWeatherMap API city, OpenWeatherMap API units, NTP server address and motion detection hold time shall be configurable with a WEB server providing a settings page.
  • a PIR (Pyroelectric Infrared Sensor) shall turn on the display when motion is detected and turn off the display again after a configurable time
  • displaying popup notification messages from Android mobile phones

Mechanics

The different layers Layers

Dividing grid

You need a dividing grid in order to prevent neighbour pixels from blending colors. Without a dividing grid, there will be no sharp edges between two pixels, but a gradient, making the resulting image look blurry. The grid I designed is for a LED matrix display 32x16 RGB P6, means for 6mm led raster. The STL-file (an abbreviation of "stereolithography") created with FreeCad can be downloaded here. The STL-file can be sent to any online 3D-Print service.

Diffuser

It is very important to take the thinnest foil but with the most diffused effect at the same time. Don't take diffused acrylic glas, this is too thick and too blury. Plastic sheets from crafting suppliers are also most times too blury. Good results you get with adhesive foils for windows for privacy. I ordered my foils at Velken (item no. 213010 or 213001). Glue instructions from Velken are included.

Glas pane

Online offers for individual sizes of panes you get at Ebay. A 2mm thick pane is enough. The diffuser foil is glued onto the glas pane.

Hardware

Display

Display

This is a LED matrix display which has in total 512 (32x16) RGB LEDs. If you want to learn more about the internal electronic details of such a display, please visit this page: https://bikerglen.com/projects/lighting/led-panel-1up/#The_LED_Panel. The setup and cabling for usage with the PxMatrix driver you should visit the page: https://github.com/2dom/PxMatrix/blob/master/README.md and https://learn.adafruit.com/32x16-32x32-rgb-led-matrix/new-wiring. For powering please visit this page: https://learn.adafruit.com/32x16-32x32-rgb-led-matrix/powering. The main power supply for the display should deliver at least a current of 2A. I had to power the display with about 4.3 Volt, maybe because the logic of display does not detect High-levels (3.3 Volt) from the ESP8266 correctly when powered with 5 Volt.

Display

NodeMcu ESP8266-12E

I decided to take this microcontroller board because of its power, easy programming, WIFI and small form factor. Following GPIOs are used:

Signal ESP8266 NodeMcu
MOSI (R0) GPIO13 D7
A GPIO5 D1
B GPIO4 D2
C GPIO15 D8
CLK GPIO14 D5
OE GPIO2 D4
STB GPIO16 D0
PIR GPIO12 D6
BUTTON GPIO0 D3
GND GND GND

This module can be obtained at Ebay for about 3€.

NodeMcu

PIR sensor

NodeMcu

The PIR sensor is used to switch off the display after some configurable time (default 10 min), when no motion is detected. This is mainly for extending the lifetime of the display LEDs. I have choosen the embedded PIR sensor HC-SR505, which is one of the smallest and cheapest. I had to add a suppression choke to filter high frequency signals like WIFI from he power lines, otherwise I got false positives and the display never turned off. The sensing distance for me is also very poor (only 2m) and not 3m as in the datasheet. All in all I have deaktivated the "display switching off" in mean time (DISPLAY_ON_PERMANENTLY), until the problem with the distance is solved. 2 ways to solve: 1. increasing the amplifying factor of the HC-SR505 OPAMP or 2. using the radar sensor RWCL-0516. I tend to solution 2 but no idea of the permanent microwave emission influencing the healt.

Software

Preparations

First install the Arduino IDE. Under board administration install support for "NodeMCU 1.0 (ESP-12E Module)". The CPU frequency has to be configured for "160 MHz". Following libraries have to be installed:

  • PxMatrix
  • Time
  • Timezone
  • WiFi
  • WiFiManager
  • DNSServer
  • ESP8266WebServer
  • ESP8266HTTPClient
  • ESP8266mDNS

NTP client

The NTP client adjusts the internal clock every 10 minutes. The timestamp (UTC Unix time) is converted to the local timezone considering the standard or daylight saving time. An individual NTP server (default: de.pool.ntp.org) can be configured over the WEB interface.

Time Zone

Timezone

The time zone can be configured over the WEB interface. If the daylight saving time is not applicable to your time zone set both standard and dylight saving times the same values.

OpenWeatherMap API

  • first request an account at OpenWeatherMap to obtain an individual API key.
  • test following URLs in your browser and fill in your city and API key: query1 and query2
  • when you get back the weather information in JSON format, everything is ok. You can now enter the API key, city and unit in the WEB interface.

The weather condition codes (more detailed than the weather icons) are determined from the JSON response and the corresponding icons (which are designed by myself especially for a matrix display) are displayed. Most icons exist for day and night. A binary search is applied to the icon array when selecting one icon. The cJSON project source code is used for parsing the JSON response.

Motion detection

The status of the PIR sensor is read cyclic. Immediately when a motion is detected the display shows all graphics. The hold time (when no motion is detected anymore) until the display is drawn completely black can be configured in the WEB interface (default: 10 min). Because the range is very poor an alternative would be to use a short range radar for motion detection. Until this is not completely clarified the timeout of the hold time is disabled in the source code to leave the display permanently on.

HTTP server

The WEB interface is used to store the settings of OpenWeatherMap API, NTP server, time zone and motion detection hold time in the EEPROM. The assigned IP can be found in the router settings. The WIFI settings can be resetted with http://IPaddress/resetWifi. Due to implemented multicast DNS (mDNS) the WEB interface can also be accessed via http://MatrixWeatherClock.local instead of giving the IP. When the "Reset WIFI" button was pressed an access point is started with the following reset (SSID: matrix_weather_clock IP: 192.168.1.1) and new WIFI settings can be configured.

Android popup notification messages

If desired the user allows Android mobile phones to display popup notification messages like from E-Mail, Whatsapp, Messenger, etc. For this purpose a small App called LinConnect Client has to be installed on the Android mobile phone. The LinConnect Client implements the Bonjour-protocol to discover automatically devices in the network offering the (LinConnect-) service. The MatrixWeatherClock acts as a mDNS-responder offering a service for LinLonnect, over which text messages can be transmitted from the client (Android phone) to the server (MatrixWeatherClock). This is done by sending a HTTP PUSH-request, which contains in its HTTP-header the base64-encoded notification-header and -information. The LinConnect Client can be configured which Apps are allowed to send notification messages. The message pops up in the menue line and scrolls from the right to the left.

Drawing

The display refresh cycle for the PxMatrix library is configured to 2 ms. The drawing cycle is configured to 100 ms. Within these 100 ms all graphical elements are drawn. A temporary buffer of 1kbyte (32 columns x 16 rows x 2 bytes color) is used as a double buffer, to which every graphical element can draw in its draw cycle. At the end of the draw cycle the complete buffer is copied to the PxMatrix interface to control the LEDs. At the beginning of each draw cycle the buffer is completely cleared. All graphical text elements can be drawn with an individual color. The 100 ms cycle time has been choosen because of the animation effects like colon blinking, digit-, menue- and popup-notification-message scrolling. Menue scrolling is triggered by a push button event.

Photos

Actual weather icon and weather forecast icons (default view) (the PIR sensor is visible in the upper left corner, the push button at the upper side of the wooden frame is not visible)

Weather

Humidity view (visible after the 1st press of the push button)

Humidity

Air pressure view (visible after the 2nd press of the push button)

Pressure

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Matrix Weather Clock on an ESP8266 microcontroller


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