EVERSPRING ES163-1 Z-Wave Plus Floodlight Sensor User Manual

June 5, 2024
EVERSPRING

**EVERSPRING ES163-1 Z-Wave Plus Floodlight Sensor User Manual

**

Overview

This is a PIR module that’s designed to retrofit onto existing outdoor floodlights. It features a PIR sensor to detect motion through movement of heat sources and a LUX sensor for determining brightness of its surroundings. It is equipped with Z-Wave Plus wireless communication capability that will convert an ordinary motion-activated floodlight into a smart home device.

Conventional Floodlight Mode
It can be used as a conventional motion-activated floodlight sensor to power floodlights when motion is sensed during dark hours. Controls are provided for manual adjustment of LUX sensitivity and floodlight ON times.

Smart Floodlight Mode
When added to a smart home system, the sensor will send Z-Wave commands to the smart hub or home controller when motion is sensed and when the LUX level changes. Likewise, the smart hub or home controller can send Z-Wave commands back to the sensor to turn floodlights ON and OFF. This added functionality provides a very high level of flexibility not typically available in conventional motion-activated floodlights.

Smart Sensor Mode
It can also be installed and used simply as an outdoor motion, LUX and temperature sensor. Floodlight functionality is not required. This brings some interesting security and smart home possibilities!

S2 Security
This product supports the S2 security protocol that uses encrypted Z-Wave Plus messages to communicate to other security-enabled Z-Wave Plus products. A security-enabled Z-Wave Plus controller must be used in order to fully utilize the security features of this product.

Product Overview

  1. PIR Lens
  2. LED indicator (hidden behind lens)
  3. Link button
  4. Lux knob
  5. Timer Knob
  6. Threaded arm
    Product Overview

Below diagram show a typical assembly on a floodlight fixture (not provided).

  • (Wall mount)
    Wall mount

  • (Under Eave mounting)
    Under Eave mounting

Note: Please read this entire instruction manual before you start the installation.

IMPORTANT

Installation must be performed by skilled technicians who are informed about the standards and technical requirements of the appliance and its proper installation. Check your local codes as they apply to your situation. If the house wiring is of aluminum, consult with an electrician about proper wiring methods.

Before proceeding with the installation, TURN OFF THE POWER TO THE LIGHTING CIRCUIT AT THE CIRCUIT BREAKER OR FUSE BOX TO AVOID
ELECTRICAL SHOCK

SAFETY PRECAUTION
  • DO NOT install when it is raining.
  • Isolate the power supply before installation.
  • Ensure that local Wiring and Building regulations are complied with.
  • The unit is supplied with a pre-wired supply cable this must be used and must not be removed.
  • Total lighting load not exceed:
    • 300W incandescent @ AC120V
      100W LED @ AC120V with 0.8 pF Driver
Installation & Wiring instructions

Note : As with any outdoor installation work it is always recommended to start early during the day.

WARNING : TURN OFF POWER BY REMOVING POWER FUSE OR TURNING OFF CIRCUIT BREAKER BEFORE INSTALLATION.

Taking down the existing floodlight

  1. With mains supply turned off, if possible remove the lamps from the bulb holders of the existing floodlight to avoid any damage during the installation.

  2. Carefully detach the floodlight from the wall by removing its mounting screws. Keep all parts for reuse later, including any rubber rings. Take note the direction of the rubber gasket as it needs to be reassembled later in the same way.
    Taking down the existing floodlight

  3. Disconnect the mains wire from the floodlight by untwisting the wire nuts.

  4. When done, place the floodlight on a table to prepare for wiring.
    Removing old motion sensor
    (Skip this section if the existing floodlight has no motion sensor)

  5. Locate the wires coming from the old motion sensor, usually colored black, white and red
    Removing old motion sensor

  6. Disconnect the wires of the motion sensor by cutting it if necessary.

  7. Remove the old motion sensor from the mounting base by twisting its threaded arm counter clockwise.
    Wiring Up

  8. Screw the threaded arm into the mounting base. For typical wall installation, device should be located at the bottom of the mounting base.

  9. Connect up the wiring as in the diagram below, using wire nuts to join the wires. If replacing an old motion sensor, simply follow the same wiring color as the old motion sensor.
    Wiring Up

  10. Route the power leads Hot and Neutral through the rubber gasket to get ready for wall mount. Ensure the rubber gasket is facing the same direction as it was before.

  11. When completed, turn the knob of Time-Off on the unit to “T” mark, and turn the knob of Lux on the unit to the “ ” mark
    Time and Lux Button
    Assembling back the floodlight

  12. Connect back the mains wire as before. Tuck the wire nuts and excess cable neatly inside the junction box.

  13. Screw the lighting floodlight back into position using its mounting screws. Place the rubber rings back into their positions.

  14. Insert the lamps removed earlier back into the bulb holders, adjust the lamp direction if necessary.

  15. Reinstate the power supply to the floodlight and switch on the wall switch, if installed. The floodlight will turn on for around 60 seconds for warm up and then turn off. It is now in ‘Test Mode’.

Walk Test
The user can perform a walk test to ensure the PIR detector’s range falls within the desired area of coverage.

  1. . Walk through its PIR Detector coverage area. The floodlight turn son when you move and turns off after approximately 5 seconds. Wait for the flood light to turn off before the next test.
  2. When you are satisfied with the coverage area you can now set the desired Time period and Lux level.

Note: The sensitivity of the PIR can be adjusted after the Inclusion to aZ- wave controller, using Parameter 8 configuration (refer to Z-wave configuration settings in the Programming section)

Time and Lux adjustment

You can set desired Time period and Lux level through;

  • the Z-Wave controller after connecting to a Z-wave network (see next section)or,
  • manually adjusting the knobs on the unit if not connected to a Z- wave network. The following section describes the steps for manual setting

Time adjustment
Time-off knob controls how long the floodlight will stay on after the motion is detected. Turning the knob towards the + mark increases the time(uptoabout12 minutes) or towards the T mark decreases it (down to about 8seconds).There commended setting is around midpoint of the scale givingapproximately5minutes.
Time buttons

Lux level adjustment
The LUX knob sets the threshold of ambient brightness level that will activate the motion sensor. The knob can be adjusted between “ ” mark(always trigger regardless of light level) and the moon symbol (trigger only when dark). The adjustable Lux range is about 10 – 900 Lux.
LUX Button

  1. To set the lux level, turn the Time-off knob to “T” for maximum response.
  2. Turn the LUX control knob to the “moon” (dusk) position.
  3. Wait until the ambient light reaches the level of darkness at which you wish the floodlight to activate.
  4. Slowly rotate the Lux knob anti-clockwise while keep creating motion during the process until the floodlight turns on. At this position the light will operate at approximately the same level of darkness each evening.
  5. Set the Time-off knob back to the desired preset time.

Note: When connected to a Z-wave controller, this manual setting will be overwritten by the settings through the Z-wave controller.

Z-wave Auto Inclusion
The unit supports Auto Inclusion feature where it will automatically enter Inclusion mode when first powered up after a factory reset.

  1. Turn off power to the floodlight by turning off the wall switch.

  2. Try to relocate the Z-wave controller nearer to the floodlight, with at most one wall separation between them.

  3. Put the Z-Wave Controller into Inclusion mode.

  4. Turn on the wall switch of the floodlight. The floodlight will thenturnonfor5seconds and the Link LED will start to blink slowly.

  5. When the Link LED stops blinking the Inclusion process is complete.
    Note: If you are connecting this unit to a Z-wave controller that utilizestheS2security protocol, you may be asked by your controller to enter a5-digitDevice Specific Key (DSK) that is unique to each unit. This can be found in one of two places:

    • on the QR code label on the back of the unit
    • on the insert card inside the packaging.
  6. Turn on the floodlight using the Z-wave controller to check if the auto inclusion is working properly.

If Auto Inclusion fails, refer to the Troubleshooting section regarding Manual Inclusion.

Note: the sensor also supports Z-wave Smart Start technology which allows inclusion of device with controller through automatic means, or through a quick scan of a QR code. The controller must support Z-wave Smart Start feature for it to work.

Operation

The table below describes 4 main operation modes available. Refer to Z-wave Configuration section for setting Parameters 1, 4~6.

Control mode When sensor triggers Corresponding action
Lux sensor PIR sensor Floodlight behavior

PIR control (default)
Par.5=1 Par.6=0| Night| Triggered| ON at night, when PIR triggers, (Par. 1 sets the ON period)OFF during Day| Sends alert whenever PIR triggers.
Lux control only
Par.5=1 Par.6=1| Night| Not relevant| ON at Night OFF during Day| Sends alert whenever PIR triggers.
Controller control
Par.5=0| Not relevant| Not relevant| ON/OFF controlled by controller directly| Sends alert whenever PIR triggers.
Walk Test
**** Lux knob and Timer knob both set to “T| Not relevant| Triggered| On for 5 seconds| Sends alert whenever PIR triggers.

Programming

Z-Wave Group
The unit supports either one of two Z-wave Association Groups:
Group 1: Association with 1 Controller node. Group 2: Association with 4 nodes (i.e. end devices such as smart plugs and other lighting controllers). This allows the PIR detector on the unit to transfer commands directly to other Z-wave end devices without the participation of the controller. This has the effect that when its detector triggers, all devices associated with unit will be operated.

Z-Wave Plus Information

Role Type Node Type Installer Icon User Icon
Slave Always ON Z-Wave Plus node Sensor Notification Device Type (Home
Security) Sensor Notification Device Type (Home Security)

Association Command Class

Group Max Node
1 1
2 4

Version

Protocol Library 3 (Slave_Enhance_232_Library)
Protocol Version ZDK6.82.xx), Z-wave SmartStart supported
Firmware Version xVy (x=1,y=0 means 1V0)
Hardware Version 1

Manufacturer

Manufacturer ID Product Type Product ID
0x000C 0x0201 0x000C

AGI (Association Group Information) Table

Group| Profile| Command Class & Command (List) N bytes| Group Name(UTF-8)
---|---|---|---
1| General| Device Reset Locally Notification Notification Report Binary Report Sensor Multilevel Report Basic Report| Lifeline
2| Control| Basic Set| PIR Control

Notification

Notification Report

Event| Type| Event| Event Parameters Length| Event Parameters
---|---|---|---|---
First power up| 0x08| 0x01| 0x00|
PIR Trigger ON| 0x07| 0x08| 0x00|
PIR Trigger OFF| 0x07| 0x00| 0x01| 0x08

Switch Binary: Floodlight Status

Switch Binary Report (value) Description
0x00 Floodlight is off
0xFF Floodlight is on

Notification from other Events

Events Z-wave commands/notification
Device Factory reset Device Reset Locally Notification : Group 1

Z-wave Configuration settings

PIR Trigger Off period : Period to send Trigger Off command after PIR being triggered. Before this period expires, the PIR will not be able to detect any subsequent motion.

Parameter Size Range Default
1 2 8~720 secs 180

Lux sensor threshold : Ambient Lux level to turn on light. This setting overwrites the Lux level set by the Lux knob. When the lux level falls below this threshold and the PIR gets triggered, the unit emits a basic set command (value=0xFF) to turn on its floodlight.

Parameter Size Range Default
2 2 10 ~ 900 50

Regardless of this setting, the PIR will always send a notification report to the controller when triggered.

Multilevel sensors auto report interval : set the interval of periodic lux level report and temperature report to the controller.

Parameter Size Range Default
3 2 1~1440 (min.) 10

PIR Trigger alert : Enable/Disables PIR alerts sent from the unit through Notification report or Basic Report commands.

Parameter Size Range Default
4 1 0   : Disable alert
1   : Enable alert 1 (Enable)

Floodlight Control Mode

Parameter Size Range Default
5 1 1 : floodlight is controlled by PIR trigger and LUX level, or by Z-wave

controller
0 : floodlight is controlled by Z-wave controller directly, regardless of PIR trigger or LUX level| 1

Lux Sensor

Parameter Size Range Default

6

|

1

| 0 : floodlight is controlled by LUX Level and PIR trigger

1: lighting control via LUX level only,

regardless of PIR trigger

|

0

Measured Temperature Offset

Parameter Size Range Default
7 1 0x9C – 0x64 (offset range : -10.0°C ~ +10.0°C) 0x00:0.0°C

PIR Sensitivity Level

Parameter Size Range Default

8

|

1

| 0/1/2
0: low level, approx. 6m distance 1: mid level, approx. 10m distance 2: high level, approx. 20m distance
Distance measured at ambient temperature 68°F|

2:High

Multilevel Sensors
Read back ambient temperature measured

Sensor Type Precision Scale Size Sensor value
0x01 1 1 2 -4 ~ +122°F

Read back the LUX level measured

Sensor Type Precision Scale Size Sensor value
0x03 0 1 2 < 900

Command Classes

The module supports Command Classes including

  1. COMMAND_CLASS_ZWAVEPLUS_INFO_V2
  2. COMMAND_CLASS_ASSOCIATION_V2
  3. COMMAND_CLASS_ASSOCIATION_GRP_INFO_V1
  4. COMMAND_CLASS_TRANSPORT_SERVICE_V2
  5. COMMAND_CLASS_VERSION_V3
  6. COMMAND_CLASS_MANUFACTURER_SPECIFIC_V2
  7. COMMAND_CLASS_DEVICE_RESET_LOCALLY_V1
  8. COMMAND_CLASS_POWERLEVEL_V1
  9. COMMAND_CLASS_SECURITY_2
  10. COMMAND_CLASS_SUPERVISION_V1
  11. COMMAND_CLASS_FIRMWARE_UPDATE_MD_V4
  12. COMMAND_CLASS_NOTIFICATION_V8
  13. COMMAND_CLASS_SWITCH_BINARY_V1
  14. COMMAND_CLASS_SENSOR_MULTILEVEL_V5
  15. COMMAND_CLASS_CONFIGURATION_V1
  16. COMMAND_CLASS_SENSOR_BINARY_V1
  17. COMMAND_CLASS_MULTI_CHANNEL_ASSOCIATION_V3

Troubleshooting

Symptom Possible Cause Recommendation
Floodlight does not turn on for 5 seconds after power is connected. Power is
not connected properly. Check if wall switch is on. Confirm wiring is

correct. Check supply breaker / fuse.
Cannot carry out inclusion and association| Floodlight already paired to another Z-Wave Controller.| Perform a factory reset.
Floodlight flashes on and off| The unit’s lux sensor is being triggered off| Change the angle and direction of the lamps.
| by reflected light|
Z-wave controller cannot communicate with the unit| Out of range.|

  1. Relocate the controller closer to the unit.
  2.  Install a Z-wave repeater such as smart plugs or other AC devices that can operate as a

Repeater.

Floodlight remains on| PIR detector triggered by unknown heat source.|

  1.  Check time setting
  2.  Cover the PIR Detector with black insulating tape. If after the timer expires and the floodlight turns off this indicates that the PIR Detector can see a moving heat source e.g: radiator, heater, boiler outlet, open window, open exterior door or moving branches or bushes retaining heat from the daytime period.

Manual Inclusion/Exclusion
The table below lists the several steps involved when adding or removing the unit from the Z-wave network.

| Action/Status| Description| LED indication
---|---|---|---
| No node ID| The Z-Wave Controller does not allocate a node ID to the unit.| 2-second on,
2-second off for 2 minutes.
| Auto Inclusion| The power is applied for the first time and no node ID has been stored in the module, or after executing reset. This process times out in 30 seconds.| LED blinks rapidly during Inclusion, LED stops blinking when Inclusion is complete.
| Manual Inclusion| 1. Put the Z-Wave controller into inclusion mode.| LED blinks rapidly during Inclusion, LED stops blinking when Inclusion is complete
| 2. Press the Link button 3 times within

1.5 seconds to put the unit into inclusion mode.

| Exclusion| 1. Put the Z-Wave Controller into exclusion mode.|
| 2. Press the Link button 3 times within
| 1.5 seconds to put the unit into exclusion mode.
| Factory Reset (This procedure should only be used when the controller is inoperable.)|

  1. Press the Link button 3 times within1.5 seconds to put the unit into exclusion mode.

| 2. Within 1 second of step 1, press the Link button again and hold until LED is off (about 5 seconds).
| 3.  Node ID is excluded. The device reverts to factory default state and will be in auto-inclusion mode for 4 minutes.
 Failure or success in Inclusion/Exclusion can be viewed on the Z-Wave Controller user interface.

Specifications

PIR Tilting Angle 140°
Mounting Height Recommended 2.0 ~ 3.0m height on normal brick wall
PIR Detection area Max. distance 20m, max. angle of 120° (@2.0m height, 68°F

ambient temperature)
PIR Swivel Angle| Up to 90° Leftward, Up to 90° Rightward
PIR warm-up time| Approx. 60 seconds
Lux Adjustment| Approximately 10 ~ 900 Lux
Timer Adjustment| Approximately 8 seconds ~ 12 minutes
Working Temperature| -4°F – +104°F
Dimension (H x W x D)| 60mm x 55mm x 60mm
Protection Degree| IP44 – Weather proof

Specifications are subject to change without notice

Federal Communication Commission Interference Statement

This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiator audio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one of the following measures:

  • Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
  • Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
  • Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected.
  • Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help

UN-license band: This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions:

  1. This device may not cause harmful interference, and
  2. This device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.

FCC Caution: Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user’s authority too perate this equipment.

This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter.

  1. To comply with FCC RF exposure compliance requirements, a separation distance of at least 20 cm must be maintained between the antenna of this device and all persons.
  2. This Transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter.

WARNING:

Do not dispose of electrical appliances as unsorted municipal waste, use separate collection facilities. Contact your local government for information regarding the collection systems available.
If electrical appliances are disposed of in landfills or dumps, hazard onus substances can leak into the groundwater and get into the food chain, damaging your health and well-being. When replacing old appliances with new ones, the retailer is legally obligated to take back your old appliance for disposal at least for free of charge.
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