This is a text-only version of the following page on https://raymii.org:
---
Title       :   YouLessQt, helps you align the YouLess to an analog electricity meter
Author      :   Remy van Elst
Date        :   16-9-2023 09:00
URL         :   https://raymii.org/s/software/YouLessQt.html
Format      :   Markdown/HTML
---





The [YouLess](https://youless.nl/home.html) is a device that can help you monitor energy usage. It works on so called smart meters using a P1 port, it can monitor solar panels but it also works with regular old analog meters. I have an old style analog meter but I like gadgets and monitoring / reducing my energy usage just as much as the next guy so I bought one. It has an optical sensor that you paste (with tape) on your meter and that detects a little black bar on the rotor disc and using a rpm factor on your meter it calculates the electricity used.
I has some trouble with the device when I set it up, it turned out to be aligned wrongly. It sometimes missed the black bar, so the numbers were incorrect.
I wrote a little application using Qt and QML to show the raw light sensor values in a line graph to help me align the YouLess correctly. This post tells you more about the application, which of course is open source.

This is a screenshot of the Windows build of YouLessQt. The marked dips
in the graph are the light sensor values when a pulse is detected:

![youlessqt][2]





This is a picture of the YouLess attached to an analog meter:

![youless][1]

<p class="ad"> <b>Recently I removed all Google Ads from this site due to their invasive tracking, as well as Google Analytics. Please, if you found this content useful, consider a small donation using any of the options below:</b><br><br> <a href="https://leafnode.nl">I'm developing an open source monitoring app called  Leaf Node Monitoring, for windows, linux & android. Go check it out!</a><br><br> <a href="https://github.com/sponsors/RaymiiOrg/">Consider sponsoring me on Github. It means the world to me if you show your appreciation and you'll help pay the server costs.</a><br><br> <a href="https://www.digitalocean.com/?refcode=7435ae6b8212">You can also sponsor me by getting a Digital Ocean VPS. With this referral link you'll get $100 credit for 60 days. </a><br><br> </p>



The YouLess in my case detects the little black stripe on the analog
electricity meter, as shown in the below picture:

![analog meter][5]


When I first got the YouLess, I placed it on the analog meter but after a
few hours it missed pulses, the count didn't match the actual meter. After
fiddling around to get a Windows 7 gadget installed on Windows 11 and re-aligning
the YouLess a few times, it picked up all the pulses. The most time-consuming
part was to get that Windows 7 gadget up and running, it crashes a lot. So I
decided to write a bit of Qt/QML to make this experience better.

The use-case is limited since there are not a lot of analog meters here in The
Netherlands, most households have had their electricity meter replaced for free
with a so called Smart Meter (with a P1 port), a digital meter. But even with
a very limited use case, who needs an excuse to write some line-graph code in
JavaScript for QML using the Canvas API? After my recent experience of
[drawing a Circle in QML][12], I'm starting to like how easy it is to quickly
draw custom shapes with it.

This post is [not sponsored nor endorsed by YouLess][13]. I wrote this app myself
to help me align the device to the meter correctly using the open API they
provide. I paid for the device myself.

You can download the Android app on the [Google Play Store here][10] and the
source code is [available under the GPLv3 here][11]. On GitHub you'll also
find a release APK if you do not want to use the Play Store.


### YouLessQt

YouLessQt is written in C++ using Qt and QML, because that is what I currently
use most of the time for my cross-platform app development. It uses mostly QML,
It is nothing more than a `Timer` which does a JSON API call and plots a line
chart with some values.

The [HTTP calls are done in QML using xmlhttpreqeust as I wrote on last year][8].

The API is described in the [the YouLess manual][14]. There is 1 api endpoint
that has the raw lightsensor value. The documentation states not to use it
for electricity data, but since my usecase is the raw value, I can safely
ignore that message. I also request a few other data points such as the
firmware version, model, mac address and the last 1 minute energy usage,
but that request is done only once when connecting, not every 250ms.

The application also has a graph showing the most recent current power usage
value and the value 1 minute before that. It however is not intended as a
general YouLess application, since YouLess themselves [provide a great app][9].
If they added the raw light sensor value to that app instead of a Windows 7 gadget,
I wouldn't have written this small app.

YouLessQt is available for [Android in the Google Play Store][11] since I suspect
you'll be near your electricity meter when you are using this (fuse box). My
computer is in my office, nowhere near my electricity meter, so a mobile app is
way more useful. If you'd like a Windows build of YouLessQt, please send me an
email, I'd happily build an installer if there is an interest for it.


YouLessQt is not intended as a replacement for the official [YouLess app][15].
It does not support selecting different inputs (like S0, Gas meter, etc) and
it has no history. The only intended use case is when aligning the YouLess
to you analog meter.

### The Windows Gadget

YouLess provides a Windows 7 gadget named RawMon to monitor the specific
value regarding the pulses. There is a workaround for modern Windows (10/11)
but in my case that was very unstable and my computer is nowhere near my
electricity meter.


Quoting [YouLess support][4] (translated to English):

> In Belgium, analogue electricity meters are often housed in an additional
(semi)transparent plastic casing. Is this the case for you as well?

> As a result, the distance between Youless and the rotating disk is often
 greater than without the plastic casing. Due to the weaker signal, it is
 often necessary to adjust the sensitivity of the Youless device to
 accommodate this situation.

> We have a Windows tool in the form of a Windows gadget that can visualize the
 reflection of the rotating disk in a graph. This tool is helpful for
 adjusting the sensitivity. You can download this tool here:

[http://www.youless.nl/tl_files/downloads/rawmon-0.2.zip][6]

> If you are using Windows 8, the raw monitor gadget can be used with the
 8gadget pack:

[http://www.youless.nl/blogpost/items/gadget-windows-8.html][7]

> The Youless device is designed to count a dip in the reflected light intensity
 of approximately 45% as a pulse by default. With the Windows tool, the graph
 typically looks like this:

![siemens red][3]

> There is a clear, sharp dip in the signal when the bar passes by. The clearer
 the dip (relative), the better. If the average input level is low, it is not
 a problem as long as the dip is distinguishable.

> This dip will be less clear due to the increased distance if there is an
additional plastic casing. The threshold parameter "lw" can be adjusted by
entering the following URL in a browser (replace the example IP address 1.2.3.4
with your own Youless IP address):

> http://1.2.3.4/M?lw=105

> What this means is that with "lw" set to 105, the Youless device will consider
 a dip of 100/105=0.95 (or a 5% relative decrease) from the average reflection
 level as a pulse. The default factory value of "lw" is 180, so setting it to
 105 increases sensitivity significantly. The "lw" value must be at least
 101.

> The suggested parameter value of 105 usually works well for meters in an
 additional plastic casing. From the reflection graph, you can derive the
 optimal value for "lw" if needed.





[1]: /s/inc/img/YouLess.jpg
[2]: /s/inc/img/YouLessQt.png
[3]: /s/inc/img/siemens-red.png
[4]: https://web.archive.org/web/20230913190310/https://gathering.tweakers.net/forum/list_message/43732209#43732209
[5]: /s/inc/img/analog_meter.png
[6]: http://www.youless.nl/tl_files/downloads/rawmon-0.2.zip
[7]: http://www.youless.nl/blogpost/items/gadget-windows-8.html
[8]: /s/tutorials/HTTP_GET_requests_in_Qt_and_Qml_async.html
[9]: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=nl.youless.powermeter
[10]: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=nl.leafnode.youlessqt
[11]: https://github.com/RaymiiOrg/YouLessQt
[12]: /s/articles/Drawing_a_Circle_in_Qt_QML_three_different_ways.html
[13]: https://youless.nl/
[14]: http://web.archive.org/web/20230915201459/https://www.youless.nl/downloads.html
[15]: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=nl.youless.powermeter

---

License:
All the text on this website is free as in freedom unless stated otherwise.
This means you can use it in any way you want, you can copy it, change it
the way you like and republish it, as long as you release the (modified)
content under the same license to give others the same freedoms you've got
and place my name and a link to this site with the article as source.

This site uses Google Analytics for statistics and Google Adwords for
advertisements. You are tracked and Google knows everything about you.
Use an adblocker like ublock-origin if you don't want it.

All the code on this website is licensed under the GNU GPL v3 license
unless already licensed under a license which does not allows this form
of licensing or if another license is stated on that page / in that software:

   This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
   it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
   the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
   (at your option) any later version.

   This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
   but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
   MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
   GNU General Public License for more details.

   You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
   along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

Just to be clear, the information on this website is for meant for educational
purposes and you use it at your own risk. I do not take responsibility if you
screw something up. Use common sense, do not 'rm -rf /' as root for example.
If you have any questions then do not hesitate to contact me.

See https://raymii.org/s/static/About.html for details.