Brinsea ChickSafe Eco apriporta automatico per pollaio e kit porta, verde

Brand:Brinsea

2.4/5

219.37

Porta in alluminio per esterni 11 x 13 adatta per la maggior parte delle specie. Fare riferimento al PDF allegato di seguito nelle Specifiche tecniche per i passaggi manuali e per la risoluzione dei problemi. Batteria scarica e indicatore di stato della porta visibili a 100 metri di distanza. Intervallo operativo di temperatura da meno 20 a 120 F. Funzione di arresto automatico se un pollo ostruisce la porta. Design All-In_one con sensore di luce integrato: autocalibrante, nessun cablaggio complicato o finecorsa.

Porta in alluminio per esterni 11 x 13 adatta per la maggior parte delle specie. Fare riferimento al PDF allegato di seguito nelle Specifiche tecniche per i passaggi manuali e per la risoluzione dei problemi. Batteria scarica e indicatore di stato della porta visibili a 100 metri di distanza. Intervallo operativo di temperatura da meno 20 a 120 F. Funzione di arresto automatico se un pollo ostruisce la porta. Design All-In_one con sensore di luce integrato: autocalibrante, nessun cablaggio complicato o finecorsa.
Brand Brinsea
Country of Origin United Kingdom
Item model number CS015
Manufacturer Brinsea Products
Material ABS Plastic, Aluminum
Product Dimensions 22 x 13 x 2 inches; 4.05 Pounds
Special Feature Weather Resistant
Specific Uses for Product Outdoor
Target Species Chicken

2.4

3 Review
5 Star
42
4 Star
12
3 Star
14
2 Star
7
1 Star
25

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Scritto da: Gator Girl
Wow! What a lot of work THAT was!
Installing the door should have been easy. Unfortunately, it appears that the motor I received had been damaged at some point. The first clue was that the circuit board was obviously out of place inside the motor. We followed all instructions to the letter anyway in hopes that it would work. To. the. letter. So of course it didn't work. We ended up taking the entire thing apart numerous times. First we placed the board in its proper spot. Still didn't work. We could tell that the string used to open the door was misloaded on the spool. We had to take everything apart again. Once we rectified the string issue to the best of our abilities we were delighted that the whole thing started working. Sooooo. . . the upshot of all this is that someone did a poor job of quality control BUT we were able to disassemble and reassemble the whole contraption and get it to work. I was petrified the whole time that we were voiding any warranty but all's well that end's well. It's run through its cycles perfectly over the past 36 hours and I'm very pleased. Better quality control would have made this a much easier experience, but it's nice to know that it is possible to fix it yourself. BTW, I gave it a good value rating because between my Prime points and Prime day coupon, I was able to get this for about the same price as the sad, flimsy door opener I had ordered elsewhere.
Scritto da: Vieux
Just a basic automatic chicken door.
I have been wanting an automatic chicken door for some time, and when we decided to upgrade our coop for a larger flock, this was the excuse to do it. I chose the Brinsea Chicksafe Eco as it was substantially less expensive than other doors ($150 for the kit). The unit arrived from Amazon in it's basic box, not wrapped, and torn and taped up. It looked like a return. I installed it anyway as the parts were all there and were clean. The unit did not work. The door opened, but would not close when dark. I wasted several days trying to fix it, and wound up sending it back for a replacement. My calls to Brinsea for help went unanswered. The replacement arrived, installation was (by now) easy. The door worked flawlessly. There are no time settings on this model, it is very basic: it opens in the morning light, and closes when it gets dark. There is an adjustment inside for light sensitivity, but the setting from the factory works fine. My chickens are to bed before it closes, and the blinking red light is easily seen and let's you know if it is closed or open. Overall the unit works as promised, a barebones automatic chicken door. As for longevity, that remains to be seen. *UPDATE* 3/21 We have have had the door almost a year. It has performed adequately, but it occasionally gets stuck on closing, maybe once every couple of months, which is not good if you are not around to check. It has never had a problem opening. We check on the coop after dark to see if the door has closed properly as a matter of habit. A chicken door needs 100% reliability. This one gives 98%. Your mileage may vary. *UPDATE* 1/23 The door now continues to work perfectly, although (paranoid) we check the blinking light from our deck at night to make sure it has closed all the way when we are home. Because we use playground sand in the coop, it can be scattered into the door runners during a heavy rainstorm (rare in So. Cal) and block movement of the door. It has happened once and easily fixed by hosing the runners of sand. Change your batteries every year!
Scritto da: Stephanie
fairly good product when it worked
This was a fairly good product when it worked, which was for 7 months but not without some issues that are probably not universal but rather individual problems with many factors involved. The door and frame system isn't the problem but the battery powered light sensor opener is. Not sure why it isn't functioning now, haven't had much time to figure it out so just ran a string system to the door for the time being. My chickens never got the knack of going in before dark so we always had either the whole gang or some stragglers we had to put in at night. Once in a while it wouldn't open in the morning if it didn't reset itself after having to lift it up at night. Don't know if the manual lifting and lowering and resetting etc. had anything to do with it's malfunction or the stretch of 30 below temperatures we had did something to the "gears." It was installed outside but with a covered run for protection against the elements. I am more inclined to purchase one with a timer (if there is such a thing) that can be adjusted as needed rather than the light sensor style that this one is, that way it could stay open for awhile after dark and not close at dark and lock my chickens out. Of note I thought it would go through batteries really fast but we only just recently had to replace them when we had our really cold spell, then about that time it was malfunctioning.

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