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Custom component that integrates the Kamstrup 382 power meter into Home Assistant.

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jukkapirinen/ha-kamstrup_382

 
 

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Kamstrup 403

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Kamstrup 403 custom component for Home Assistant.

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Requirements

To use this custom component, you'll need an optical eye and connect your machine running Home Assistant directly with the optical eye to the Kamstrup meter. The optical eye looks like this:
cable

Placing the optical eye

There is not a lot of tolerance for placing the optical eye on the meter, it can be very tedious to get this right. The best way is to fix the optical eye to the meter. I suggest this 3D-printed holder from Thingiverse.
647d4ce9-4e72-4c54-95e6-d4caf720a79b

Supported devices

This component is created to only support the Kamstrup 403 meter. This is a conscious decision because I do own this device and I can only offer support for that. There are some similar devices that work with the same communication protocol. If it does work for a meter that isn't listed below, please create a feature request so I can update the table.

Meter Supported Description
Kamstrup 403 Yes
Kamstrup 402 Yes Confirmed in #14
Kamstrup 601 Yes Confirmed in #14
Kamstrup 602 Yes Confirmed in #10
Kamstrup 603 Yes Confirmed in #18
Kamstrup MC66C No Supported in my old component

Installation

HACS

This component can easily be installed in your Home Assistant using HACS.

Manual

  1. Using the tool of choice open the directory (folder) for your HA configuration (where you find configuration.yaml).
  2. If you do not have a custom_components directory (folder) there, you need to create it.
  3. In the custom_components directory (folder) create a new folder called kamstrup_403.
  4. Download all the files from the custom_components/kamstrup_403/ directory (folder) in this repository.
  5. Place the files you downloaded in the new directory (folder) you created.
  6. Restart Home Assistant
  7. In the HA UI go to "Configuration" -> "Integrations" click "+" and search for "Kamstrup 403"

Using your HA configuration directory (folder) as a starting point you should now also have these files:

custom_components/kamstrup_403/pykamstrup/__init__.py
custom_components/kamstrup_403/pykamstrup/const.py
custom_components/kamstrup_403/pykamstrup/kamstrup.py
custom_components/kamstrup_403/translations/en.json
custom_components/kamstrup_403/translations/nl.json
custom_components/kamstrup_403/__init__.py
custom_components/kamstrup_403/config_flow.py
custom_components/kamstrup_403/const.py
custom_components/kamstrup_403/coordinator.py
custom_components/kamstrup_403/diagnostics.py
custom_components/kamstrup_403/manifest.json
custom_components/kamstrup_403/sensor.py

Configuration

Configuration is done in the UI. It's recommended to use devices as /dev/serial/by-id and not /dev/ttyUSB1 as the port. This is because the first example is a stable identifier, while the second can change when USB devices are added or removed, or even when you perform a system reboot.
The port should look like this: /dev/serial/by-id/usb-FTDI_FT230X_Basic_UART_D307PBVY-if00-port0.

Some meters contain a battery, and communicating with the meter does impact battery life. By default, this component updates every 3600 seconds (1 hour). This is configurable. Also, since version 2.0.1 you can also configure the serial timeout. The default value is 1.0 seconds, if you get the error Finished update, No readings from the meter. Please check the IR connection you can try to increase this value. Fractional numbers are allowed (eg. 0.5). You can do this by pressing configure on the Integrations page:

integration configure

Sensors

This component comes with many sensors, and most of the sensors are disabled by default. This is to preserve the battery life of the meter, reading data uses an internal battery, so it's advisable to not read too much data too often. If you like, you can enable as many sensors as you want, it's good to keep a good balance between the number of sensors you enable and the configured Scan interval. Next to that, the component will read up to 8 sensors in one interaction with the meter.

Integration in the energy dashboard

This component does support integration into the Home Assitant's energy dashboard.

Heat Energy (E1)

This sensor, with unit GJ, can since Home Assistant release 2022.11 directly be added to the energy dashboard. It's important to understand that you need to add this in the individual devices section. So not in the electricity or gas section. The devices here will be added on the bottom of your energy dashboard in a horizontal bar graph showing all your devices in kWh. This is by design and can't be changed by this component.

Heat Energy to Gas

From version 2.0.0 of this component, there is Heat Energy to Gas sensor, this is disabled by default and needs to be manually enabled. It's also required to have the Heat Energy (E1) sensor enabled for this to work. This sensor acts as a gas sensor with the unit and has the same value as Heat Energy (E1). This sensor can be added to the energy dashboard in the gas section. The added value for this is, that you get a better visual representation in the energy dashboard, eg hourly graphs.

Collect logs

When you want to report an issue, please add logs from this component. You can enable logging for this component by configuring the logger in Home Assistant as follows:

logger:
  default: warn
  logs:
    custom_components.kamstrup_403: debug

More info can be found on the Home Assistant logger integration page

Contributions are welcome!

If you want to contribute to this please read the Contribution guidelines

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Custom component that integrates the Kamstrup 382 power meter into Home Assistant.

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  • Python 98.4%
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