Reddit Reddit reviews Handicap Door Opener for Disabled People, Low Energy ADA Swing Door Operator with Wired Stainless Steel Handicap Push Buttons

We found 2 Reddit comments about Handicap Door Opener for Disabled People, Low Energy ADA Swing Door Operator with Wired Stainless Steel Handicap Push Buttons. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Tools & Home Improvement
Hardware
Door Hardware & Locks
Door Closers
Handicap Door Opener for Disabled People, Low Energy ADA Swing Door Operator with Wired Stainless Steel Handicap Push Buttons
Manually push force can be adjusted on closing force by handheld programmerAutomatically re-open door if it notices an object in the closing pathEasily set all of parameters by hand programmerUSA Technical phone supportComes with stainless steel hardwired handicap push switch,stable and high sensitivity
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2 Reddit comments about Handicap Door Opener for Disabled People, Low Energy ADA Swing Door Operator with Wired Stainless Steel Handicap Push Buttons:

u/SirEDCaLot · 4 pointsr/homeautomation

Short version- it's probably cheaper to buy a 2nd robot vacuum, unless you go total DIY route.

Medium version- Unless the hallway is an outside hallway (IE one of the hallway walls is on the outside of the house) you probably aren't wasting any money heating it. If the hallway is surrounded by heated rooms, then the hallway itself won't bleed much heat except maybe through the ceiling and that's probably to another apartment.

Long version: Locking and unlocking doors is fairly easy. Unlatching doors is a bit harder- motorized doorknobs aren't really a common thing so you'd need an electric security strike plate. That would probably require cutting out a lot of the door frame to mount it. Then you have the issue of actually opening and closing the door. It has to open and close with enough force that it pushes the latch through the strike plate, but also should have some safety mechanism so it can't cause any harm to a human or pet. That's one reason why automatic door openers (like you see at the supermarket) are quite expensive- you need a powerful motor but you also need a bunch of sensors to stop the motor before it does any damage. Those things are quite expensive and require custom mounting. They're also fugly- this is the smallest most attractive one I could find and it's $530. You could use something more like an automatic gate opener but that's still $289.

If you were to do this, the DIY route is probably the way to go. The strike plate is easy enough, you can get that on Amazon for $23. That just needs 12vdc to unlock it. The opener is the harder part. You'd probably want something like a long stroke linear actuator. Alternatively you could make something using some gears and stuff- there are a few ways to do that.

But when you put all this together, you are still spending a good amount of money. Even if it's just $100 (which I'd put as the absolute bare minimum for this) how long will it take you to realize $100 worth of energy savings vs just leaving the hallway doors open?

u/likeikelike · 0 pointsr/gifs

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Maybe you should google how cable is laid in existing walls, I doesn't seem to me that you think it's possible. I understand that nobody will do it for free, or even cheap, and that someone has to come inspect and certify it afterwards depending on location.

I'm not sure what you mean with your sentence 'And a motor starter.' Do you mean it would have to be a combustion engine that needs a starter? Do you mean a motor controller? If you like I can show the complete hardware and wiring for a setup like this, so that you can build this yourself.

Here is a kit for $655 that does this with buttons instead of the sensor in the hand sanitizer. Even if it was $1000 and it took two people at $20/hr a full working day to install this one in one bathroom kit, it would not be $5000.

Maybe you just didn't properly read what I said.