Erm, what? This is a new Sonoff product in the MINI series – this time simply with DRY contacts instead of having one connection commoned to the incoming power. Back in the early days there was a 4-channel Sonoff controller (rather big) with isolated outputs but that has largely been forgotten (It’s still on the Sonoff website for sale) yet dry contacts still have their uses:
For example – controlling an older oil boiler – the original thermostat may just have a dry (isolated contact pair – ifrten a requirement of such boilers) – which knocks out most of today’s controllers – or you might want to control for example a lower or higher voltage output than the incoming supply.
Sonoff Mini DRY does all that and more – but take note of the very low current capability of this device: switching an output of 100-240v (why do Chinese manufacturers ignore that fact that there are countries – Britain in particular – which have up to 250v – that may change if the US president goes ahead with making it more difficult for US consumers to use Chinese products – who knows!) – anyway with that output voltage, current is limited to 0.1A MAX – very low for a product that isn’t actually THAT mini. It is bigger for example than the Sonoff ZBMini.
At lower voltages – 12/24v current goes up to 2A max – compared to other Sonoff products – why the contact ratings are so low. I asked and the response was “low-current motor applications” – but of course powering a contactor is another use.
Anyway, here it is, isolated NO/NC and common connectors as well as AC and DC inputs and a switch pair – see photos. The DRY is also MATTER-compatible.
Can it be tasmotised?
Should be an easy way to add automation to a garage door / gate opener by the looks of it.
no templates available on blakadder site, so probably not… but why? it’s matter, and you can enable lan mode, so fully local in both cases…
Current is current surely that should still say 1amp @230vac. Doesn’t make sense unless there isn’t a truly isolated set of clean contacts. And potential for crossover at the higher voltage.
The whole point of using one of these would be to avoid using a SPCO or DCPO which what we are all doing in practice with Sonoff. But at such low amperage we would only end up driving a coil so back to square one!
You would THINK it would say 10a or even 1a.. But look at the box, it absolutely says 0.1a. followed that up with Sonoff – see updated blog.
Maybe, a mismatch
Rating : it is the power consomption of the product itself (240V or 12-48V)
Load : it is the switch capability
It looks like it is designed as a low power switch, more info : https://sonoff.tech/product/diy-smart-switches/mini-d/
Definitely isolated.