This is a Levoit Vital 100 and it has a timer to switch itself off after x hours but i’d like to turn it on automatically.
I’m somewhat fit with soldering and taking stuff apart but i don’t wanna go that route before i have atleast a rough understanding of what’s up with those buttons.
Thx! 🙂
- Attatch a sausage to a soneloid and make a capacitive button pusher! - #gifsYouCanHear 
 
- Yes. SwitchBot is the biggie but there are a ton of knockoffs (google “smart button pusher”). The catch is that the security is crap - fine for what you’re doing, but I wouldn’t use it for a garage door, for instance. - I think you’d need a shortcut or script on a computer to run a scheduled task or cron job to start it, but pretty sure that’s available too. (Note - looked at them briefly, just wanted to respond while it was fresh in my mind) - it works for capacitive buttons? - It doesn’t look that way. https://us.switch-bot.com/pages/switchbot-bot - I don’t see why you couldn’t stick something capacitive to the dingus. - iirc there’s a common mod with aluminum foil tape which makes them work great with capacitive touch buttons. For some reason I remember it having to touch the negative terminal for the battery too. 
- How would you switch it? What’s an example of something capacitive? This hadn’t occurred to me. I do know there are supposedly capacitive styli for phones, but they don’t work very well. - Human fingers.  - That would work fine but you’d probably have to replace it every couple days. - Can you do toe subscriptions? 
 
 
- LMBO I posted the answer to your question in this same thread at the exact same time you asked it. 
 
 
 
 
- Oh man switchbot is scary, a lot of awful looking IOT stuff though with one wall switch flipping peripheral. I think I’d just rip into the air filter with a soldering iron. Also better check whether the buttons are capacitive. - There are some where there’s no hub, just a standalone (I can’t be arsed to check if you still need the job for switchbot itself). Worth looking at the knockoffs since I know some exist that don’t need anything else. And I wish the security were better, but for a simple case like this I think they’re fine. 
 
 
- If it’s on when you unplug it, does it go back on when plugged in? If so then turn off its own timer and just use a regular appliance timer. - oh man, you got my hopes up there for a sec. - sadly it didn’t work. - Aww. Modern tech is too ‘smart’ for its own good. - For anyone looking for a cheap but decent air filter which DOES do this, IKEA’s UPPÅTVIND remembers its last setting when turned off and back on at the plug. 
 
 
 
- You just need a humanoid robot with the latest AI. Then you explain what you want it to do, and if it doesn’t murder you or make you its slave, you might be alright. - what kind of slave? 
  
 
- You can build your own in Home assistant using esphome with an esp32 dev board, a linear servo, and a piece of fabric that works on touch screens. - It’s really not as complicated as it sounds, and if you’re wanting to get into smart home stuff, HA is the way to go. - If OP is willing to open it up, you can just bypass the capacitive button and directly close the circuit it controls with the ESP’s pins. - But yeah, Home Assistant and ESPHome are awesome! - I think for all the talk of integrating a servo, wiring in a relay or some other internal bypass makes more sense. 
 
- If it has a remote, then using Home Assistant plus an IR emitter might be easier. - Our evaporative air cooler uses IR, we bought a Tuya ir receiver and taught it the remote codes. Whole thing carried through to home assistant with the plugin. - Tuya devices are extremely sketchy. The only reason you should buy one is if you’re going to flash it with Tasmota. - Otherwise it should go in the trash ASAP. - Many of them support ZigBee and work fine in that context. It’s just the wifi devices that are problematic. 
 
 
- Or, if it uses RF, a Bond Bridge. 
- Great point! 
 
 
- I don’t remember the brand but there are smart home button pushers for this thing. I have no idea how well they work or anything, but it’s a product at least one company made at least one point in time. - SwitchBot 
 
- deleted by creator 
- As everyone says, what happens if you just turn on the power at whatever time? 
- Is using a Christmas light timer not an adequate solution to this problem? - No, it appears that just plugging it in won’t make it go, you have to plug it in and press the button. 
 
- I’ve always wondered if something like this would work: - Take a relatively short bit of wire, make a flat spiral at one end about the size of the button, tape that spiral to the button. Then take the other end of the wire hook it up to a relay with the other end attached to ground (or any big metal object probably). I would imagine then closing the relay is “touching” and opening the relay is “not touching”. - I have no idea if that would actually work, but it seems to me like it should. You just need something to interrupt the electric field above the “button”. 
- quite a few simply turn back on if you pull the power and reconnect afterwards 
- You just need a humanoid robot with the latest AI. Then you explain what you want it to do, and if it doesn’t murder you or make you its slave, you might be alright. 









