Philips Hue Maximum Distance From Bridge Test

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  • Опубліковано 9 гру 2017
  • Philips Hue Maximum Distance From Bridge Test
    What is the maximum distance that Philips Hue and/or the Philips Hue bridge will work? Is there a maximum Philips Hue bridge distance? These are tough questions to answer without a pretty serious test.
    I take my iPhone as a controller using the Apple Homekit application and move around my house, giving you the distance from my Philips Hue Bridge each time I test the functionality. In the end I give you the ultimate Philips Hue distance from bridge capability that you'll get in your house. Tip: it's a long ways.
    One quick note: I do set up a Philips Hue light quickly in this video.
    One major finding that occurred from this test is that it's your controller that has to be closer to the Philips Hue bridge. The lights themselves can have a little extra distance. I personally believe that's because the bridge is simply authorizing the action from your device and your iPhone, Android phone or tablet, or your Philips Hue controller is the device sending the signal out to turn on or off. Either way, there are some interesting findings in this maximum distance test for our Philips Hue lights.
    Thanks for watching, and please subscribe below!
    Brian
    / @automateyourlife
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 39

  • @MichelleGold
    @MichelleGold 5 років тому +3

    Super helpful! Thank you!!!

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  5 років тому +1

      Glad I could help! I didn't put this one thing in the video that's very important (learning process for video creation for me...). Your bulbs actually act as a repeater, so this video shows the approximate distance based on one bulb and a hub.

  • @MrTydog4
    @MrTydog4 6 років тому +9

    i'm up on the second floor of a house that is not that big and my router and bridge are downstairs and i haven't gotten it to work upstairs. do extra lights extend the range

    • @Aurel004
      @Aurel004 5 років тому +2

      Actually they say "put an extra Smart Home Intelligent Switch or hue bulb between the bridge and the device you are having difficulties controlling - This extra bulb or switch will function as a “repeater”."

  • @Nachbarshund
    @Nachbarshund 6 років тому +2

    Thanks for that 👌🏼

  • @elijahmarxer6
    @elijahmarxer6 4 роки тому

    thanks for this video

  • @berylwhite2983
    @berylwhite2983 3 роки тому

    Hey there glad to see you again!I became interest with the Philips hue Got some outside Lighting. It works wonderfully.It turns on at Dusk And about 10:30 pm It starts today to about 1%And then it will Return to 50% if the motion sensor is tripped And then return after set amount of time To 1%.Then it goes off at dawn . High priced but worth it. May thanks for the great information.Take good care of yourself!

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  3 роки тому

      High priced, but worth it. My feelings exactly with philips hue

  • @robertstokes
    @robertstokes 5 років тому +7

    Thanks for this video. One question ... did you have any other Philips Hue devices connected when doing this test? I’m interested to know if these distances are truly from single device to bridge, or if other devices in between have extended the mesh and therefore the range.
    I assume when you’re out in your garage there was nothing between so it looks like the range is pretty good regardless.

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  5 років тому +3

      It's a mesh, so the hub is the base but the other bulbs affect this. It allows you to set bulbs in the middle of your furthest bulb. I didn't explain it very well in this video...truly, might be time for a remake of this. There was nothing between my bulb and my bridge for the garage test, you're right.

    • @Ivarposthumus
      @Ivarposthumus 5 років тому +2

      @@AutomateYourLifeReally curious what the range of a bulb is. I have the feeling it's less than a bridge... Would be a nice test to do!

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  5 років тому +1

      I think I will remake this one and explain a little more about these bulbs!

    • @robertstokes
      @robertstokes 5 років тому

      Thanks. I knew about the mesh network and how the message may go from one Hue bulb to another before hitting the bridge, which is why I was curious about the conditions of the test in the video. I'm keen to know what the range is (although with so many factors involved - eg. building materials - there's no exact number anyone could give) between one Hue bulb and the bridge, with no other Hue devices in between to help extend the mesh. This is because I want to see if the bridge in my house will be able to work with Hue bulbs in a home office which is a separate building with nothing in between except for the garden. I'm sure it will be fine, but the other Hue devices in the house that extend the mesh won't be helping the home office here. If your test in the video was conducted with no other Hue bulbs powered (not just "turned off") at the time then the distances would be clear. Still, I think your garage is further away from your house than the distance I'm interested in so I think I'll be all good! Thanks again for making the video!

    • @shivd6211
      @shivd6211 2 роки тому

      I have an issue where I’m not using any lights but only motion sensors to connect with my HomeKit devices and it’s not giving any response even one floor down

  • @GregMcfarlaneAu
    @GregMcfarlaneAu 2 роки тому

    Hi Brian, You mentioned in these threads that the Philips Hue bridges act as repeaters. I would love it if they do. I have a large house and need to link the bridges up so that I can control my Hue lights with Motion detection. I am intending in interfacing it with Alexa for movement. As Google Home doesn't support motion detection at the moment.
    I need to link the Hue bridges together so I can get through brick walls and across the distance required. Do you know how I can link these Hue bridges devices together?

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  2 роки тому

      So the hue bridges don't act as repeaters, sorry if I said that. The bulbs actually act as repeaters in this system, not the bridge.
      The bridges hold 50...maybe it's 60 today...bulbs/devices each, so that's why you'd get more than one ever.

  • @MayaglezPCs
    @MayaglezPCs 5 років тому +3

    Sidenote for this video:
    I live in México where houses are made of solid brick and concrete, in my home just 12 meters and two solid brick walls (aprox 38 ft), the lights didn't respond.

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  5 років тому

      Makes sense. I'm thinking you have similar issues with wifi? Same carrier frequency of 2.4 GHz.

    • @MayaglezPCs
      @MayaglezPCs 5 років тому +1

      @@AutomateYourLife Yes, same problem with WiFi 2.4 Ghz and even worse sith 5Ghz it covers all living room well, but nothing behind a wall.

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  5 років тому

      Yeah I bet. That makes it tough to work with smart home gear. A suggestion for your situation is:
      Mesh wifi network, put bulbs from Philips at corners

  • @robertiadanza2160
    @robertiadanza2160 3 роки тому +1

    9ne quick note, the Hue lights use Zigbee technology to communicate with the hub, but they can also communicate with each other creating mesh network. So for instance if you had another light 20 feet away it would, in theory, be able to connect further away.

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  3 роки тому

      In theory, yep! One thing to note on that, the bulbs are notoriously bad at relaying messages to others with Hue so in general you want to use other wired devices.

  • @ryuky0
    @ryuky0 3 роки тому

    On the last test, was the phone connected to wifi? Have you tested the system thru cloud access?

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  3 роки тому

      Well the test was just simply to see the distance that I could put a bulb from the hub, so using it through cloud access wouldn't matter. All that matters is if the hub can connect to the bulb for a distance test.
      Otherwise, cloud access is anywhere!

  • @gabrielpascual9986
    @gabrielpascual9986 4 роки тому

    I have a question I want to use this hue lights for my room but the router is not in my room, the router its located in the room next to mine (Router room| |My room)
    will the hue lights work in my room even if the bridge is not in my room? Also from what i've seen the hue lights don't require "line of sight" from the bridge to turn on right?
    Another question:I want to use my Alexa to control the lights, if I ask her to turn off the lights will she do it even if the bridge is a wall far from the echo dot? And for the pairing between the 2 can I do it from my room (like will sje detect the bridge trough the wall) or do i need to unplug the echo dot, plug it near the bridge, pair them and then after that's done plug it back in my room?

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  4 роки тому +1

      Distance doesn't really matter here Gabriel, within reason. All of the components you've spoken about are very similar to WiFi in terms of distance they can go. So if your router can reach your room, then so can Hue bridge. :)

    • @gabrielpascual9986
      @gabrielpascual9986 4 роки тому

      @@AutomateYourLife thanks

  • @mick8982
    @mick8982 6 років тому +1

    Thankssss

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  6 років тому

      Whoa, it’s Morgan Freeman! Can you do a voiceover for one of my videos??? ;)

  • @yilmazdoga
    @yilmazdoga 3 роки тому

    Nice work but your results are misleading. Other hue devices extend the range of the mesh network which hue devices communicate. Thus the experiment you have done only shows the range of a lighit bulb in your particular setup. If you have removed other hue devices before the experiment that would give the desired result which is the range of a single bulb.

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  3 роки тому

      Yeah this was meant to show just how far they go on their own. I probably should have spent some time detailing all that in the video. :)

  • @theveryfirst
    @theveryfirst 3 роки тому

    Hue Bridge totally fails in my house. It won't even go through one floor or one wall. Straight to ebay or recycling centre. Trash.

  • @sebastiennudo7792
    @sebastiennudo7792 5 років тому

    Dont think it matter how far from the bridge... if you have wifi your good.

    • @AutomateYourLife
      @AutomateYourLife  5 років тому +3

      No, sorry. From Philips directly:
      Lights create a mesh network with each other which enables each light to pass on messages to the next extending the range and making everything more robust. They are connected to the bridge via an open standards protocol called ZigBee Light Link.
      In this video, I only had one bulb online, which was near my hue hub.

    • @sebastiennudo7792
      @sebastiennudo7792 5 років тому +1

      @@AutomateYourLife oh ok. Thanks for the pointer.

    • @TechTrainSolutions
      @TechTrainSolutions 5 років тому +4

      @@AutomateYourLife Well this actually means that as long as you have one light that is connected to the bridge successfully, the next one only needs to be able to communicate with the last one, not the bridge. So, technically, you could have lights hundreds of feet away from the bridge, as long as the last light can "see" the one before it, you're good.