Have several smart sockets and Google nest mini’s , any drop outs seem to always be related to WiFi problems,
I've had mine dropout, when just 8 feet from and in the same room as the router.
Have several smart sockets and Google nest mini’s , any drop outs seem to always be related to WiFi problems,
Does not mean it’s not a WiFi problem.I've had mine dropout, when just 8 feet from and in the same room as the router.
I had a very surprising reverse issue- device retained its programming even when deliberately disconnected from WiFi (by distance of 100 miles or so).
Details- it's not a smart socket but a Sonoff smart relay controlled by their pet app EweLink. There's a manual override button as well, this can change relay state to off or on and state change shows in the app. I programmed the relay (via EweLink) to switch on once a day then switch off an hour later - this to keep the leisure battery topped up in the caravan while it's in the back garden. This works fine.
Trip to Scotland-130 miles away. There is site power but most of the caravan lights run on the leisure battery so by day 2 it's looking a bit low. Press the manual override (expecting the thing to stay on til I turn it off again)- nope, it switches itself off after an hour as programmed. Didn't check to see if it switched itself on at the scheduled time.... I was surprised and quite impressed, I'd assumed since it was a cheapie it would go dumb without a network connection.
Fair point- I need to investigate further. Pretty certain back then the phone hotspot was different name etc to home WiFi (I've changed that now so using lappie, iPad etc as well as IoT gadgets on the road is v easy).That is something I had a mind to do. I do it manually at the moment. I leave it on mains 24/7 around the year, so 12v is always available - but only make the connection to the lug on the battery for two days per month.
I would question that - a Smart Plug isn't that clever. It must have had some sort of connection to the Internet, maybe via your phones hotspot?