Author Archives: Andi

Using OpenHAB with a Raspberry Pi

Nowadays it is common to have smart home products that you can remotely command to control, adjust, and to switch on and off. The single board computer, Raspberry Pi or RBPi is suitable for building a touchscreen command center to interface with such smart products and to provide a suitable interface for control and task scheduling. As an introduction, the project will consist of a Wi-Fi enabled RGB LED strip. It will interface with an RBPi running OpenHAB. This will allow wireless control to switch the LED strip on or off from a smartphone or any other computer on the network.

With OpenHAB, you can interface with over 150 different existing smart home products. Moreover, OpenHAB is very flexible, is open source, and is free to use. Although you can use OpenHAB on an RBPi, it can easily run on any platform – Linux, OS X, or Windows. That means the same setup can be run from any old laptop or desktop you may have lying around.

For this project, the main components you will need are an RBPi and its touchscreen. An RBPi2 is recommended and you can use the 7-inch Raspberry Pi Foundation touchscreen. Some of the additional things you will need are a microSD card, a USB Wi-Fi dongle, a power supply for the RBPi, the NeoPixel LED strip starter pack, a logic level shifter, an ADAfruit HUZZAM ESP8266, and some hookup wire.

To begin, assemble the screen to the RBPi. This can be somewhat tricky if you do not have instructions. There will be two flat ribbon cables, a large one for the display, and a smaller one for the touchscreen. The large cable from the display connects to the display controller board, and the smaller cable from the display controller board connects to the display. Once this is done, you can screw the display controller board with the RBPi on its back on to the standoffs on the back of the screen. The ribbon cable from the controller board connects to the display connector on the RBPi. Power to the display comes from the GPIO pins on the RBPi, for which you need to connect the 5 V and the GND pins via two jumper wires of red and black color, respectively.

Flash the microSD card with the latest build of Raspbian from the Raspberry Pi website and boot up the RBPi with it. You can now connect your keyboard, mouse, and the Wi-Fi adapter. Configure the RBPi to connect to your Wi-Fi network and get the touchscreen to work. For this, you may need to update and upgrade your OS.

The next step is to install the home automation control software, OpenHAB, and its add-ons – follow the instructions here. Next, solder the logic level converter between the ESP8266 and the NeoPixel LED strip. This is necessary, as the strip works on 5 V, whereas its controller, the ESP8266 works on 3.3 V. Make sure the logic level converter is connected the right way. After this, you will need to flash the ESP8266 with the Arduino IDE.

Now, you can download and install the OpenHAB app on to your phone and set it up to control the RBPi on its IP address.

What is Geomagnetic Indoor Positioning?

Thanks to Google and our smartphones, almost all users are aware of GPS or global positioning systems. With GPS, we can locate our position on a map displayed on our smartphones with an accuracy of about 200 m. This technology serves us well while traveling – when we have to reach a destination from our present location or when finding the best route between two locations. However, GPS is not a very suitable technology for either indoor use or when the smartphone is offline.

For instance, it is not easy to navigate successfully through a large shopping mall, a superstore, or an airport unless there are way-finding directions available. In fact, marketing research has pointed out that stores lose considerable business (nearly 15%) because customers are unable to locate their required products in the stores. In the US, customers spend about $500 billion annually, on personal care, groceries, and various sundries. Over time, adoption of indoor location and related initiatives could influence this indoor market by well over $10 billion.

Therefore, there are over several startups competing for attention in the emergent arena of indoor location and proximity marketing. Additionally, there are multiple technologies for bringing offline analytics and indoor location to malls, stores, sports stadiums and other venues. Although these technologies include LED lighting, inaudible sound waves, Bluetooth beacons, Wi-Fi, and Cameras, magnetic positioning leads the way.

All other technologies need installation of additional hardware and hence, involve additional expenses. In comparison, magnetic positioning makes use of the Earth’s magnetic field to enable the compass in the user’s smartphone to locate the individual precisely within indoor spaces. It does not require additional hardware and is compatible with almost all smartphones.

In nature, animals make use of the Earth’s magnetic field to locate themselves in relation to their destination. That is how migratory birds and fish return to their breeding grounds every year even when they are thousands of kilometers away. Smartphones are similarly capable of detecting and responding to magnetic field variations inside buildings.

According to IndoorAtlas, promoting and deploying magnetic positioning, each building or structure, with its reinforced concrete and steel structures, presents a unique magnetic fingerprint. This is based on the way the materials of the building affect and distort the Earth’s magnetic field. Once these patterns are precisely assigned to a building floor plan, users of smartphones can be located accurately inside indoor spaces such as airports, malls, hospitals, and retail stores. In short, this is like indoor GPS, and much more precise.

In comparison to GPS, geomagnetic indoor positioning is capable of 1-2 m accuracies in indoor environments. According to IndoorAtlas, mapping an area of roughly 25,000 square feet requires an hour to offer six-feet accuracy through sensors streaming data into a cloud storage. As a store or building interior is remodeled or changed in any way, the indoor maps are updated automatically using the sensor data.

Apart from tracking shopper location, geomagnetic indoor positioning offers direct blue-dot navigation to an area of product on the shelf or in an aisle. Therefore, customers are able to locate their desired products, bringing immediate benefits to the retailers.

What is the IEC 61800-5-1 Safety Standard?

Almost all industrial applications require using electric motors in some form. You can see them being used in factory robotics, compressors, blowers, cooling and recirculating pumps, lifts, hoists, mixers, cranes, paper mills, printing presses, conveyor belts, fans and in many other applications. Worldwide, over a 300 million electric motors are in use, and their numbers are growing steadily every year.

When dealing with adjustable-speed electric power-drive systems, it is necessary to isolate the low-voltage control system from the actual motor as it most often runs on a higher voltage. Such smart motor-control systems have other names also, such as AC motor drives or variable-frequency drives. Instead of running the motor at a fixed speed or using mechanical elements to control it, smart control systems employ sophisticated power electronics to control the speed, torque, and position of a motor. Adjustable speed drives improve the efficiency and controlling of motor drive systems substantially, and therefore, are widely used in motor drive applications.

The IEC 61800-5-1 is a safety standard specified by the International Electrotechnical Commission for adjustable-speed electrical power drive systems. It covers the safety aspects related to electrical, thermal and energy. In the part covering electrical safety, the standard defines requirements for ensuring proper insulation between circuits carrying voltages higher than 50 V and any drive system connectors or parts that humans may be able to access. What this means is any part of the system that a person can touch – motor, panel, switch, connector, cable, etc. – must be adequately insulated, if it is carrying a voltage higher than 50 V.

Most adjustable-speed electrical power drives use isolators as one of their key electronic components. For instance, by employing isolated gate drives, isolators control the turning On/Off the power transistors such as MOSFETs or metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors used in the power stages. In addition, there are isolated ADCs or analog-to-digital converters and isolated amplifiers to convey voltage and current feedback from the high-voltage inverter output to the low-voltage control system. Moreover, power drives also need general-purpose communication links, where isolators transfer information from high-voltage circuits to earthed circuits. In this capacity, isolators also act as insulators.

An adjustable speed motor drive system has a grid input, which is typically a three-phase AC power supply typically at 400 V, 690 V, or 830 V at frequencies of 50 or 60 Hz. This is followed by a rectifier stage that converts the AC voltage into DC, filtered by high-voltage DC capacitors. A three-phase inverter usually follows, made up of IGBT, insulated gate bipolar transistor modules. IGBTs have isolated gates through which gate drivers provide the necessary drive voltages to turn the IGBT on and off. The control system uses a closed-loop and receives feedbacks through isolated voltage and current sense elements.

To conform to the IEC 61800-5-1 safety standard, the designer of a motor drive system needs to understand a few definitions such as creepage, clearance, system voltage, working voltage, and overvoltage category. Most industrial motor drives fall under Category-III, as equipment is connected permanently to supply mains, downstream of the distribution board.

Rolly: Rollup Your Keyboards

Anyone who has typed on a touchscreen with his or her thumbs can certify that it gets rather tiring after sometime – especially if you have to hold the smartphone also. At such times, one wishes they had a regular keyboard to allow the use of other fingers also to aid the thumbs. Although a number of keyboards are available, which are small enough to fit easily in the pocket along with the smartphone, LG’s Rolly Keyboard is unique – you can roll and fold it.

LG is coming to the market with an innovatively designed product, the first wireless portable solid keyboard of the industry, which is also roll able. LG’s Rolly Keyboard can easily fit in your pocket, purse or briefcase. It also has two arms that fold out to support your tablet or smartphone, leaving all your fingers free for typing.

Although roll able keyboards are not new in the market, most of these silicone gadgets feel more like an extension of the onscreen keyboard. Their tactile feedback is entirely different from the real feel of a desktop keyboard. That has also led to keyboards with origami-like designs to fit into your pocket. However, LG has managed to combine the feel of a real keyboard with the flexibility of rolling it up.

LG’s Rolly Keyboard, model KBB-700, is made from impact-resistant polycarbonate and ABS plastic. When spread out for use, four rows of keys become visible along with an elongated rectangular box sitting at the top of the keyboard. Inside the box are the two arms that fold out to hold your tablet or smartphone. The box also holds the single AAA battery for powering the keyboard for over three months of normal use. When not in use, the four rows of keys roll up around the rectangular box to form a stick. You can carry the stick easily in your pocket or purse.

Rolly Keyboard uses Bluetooth 3.0 to connect wirelessly to mobile devices. You only have to unroll the keyboard to activate it. Once paired up, any subsequent pairing function works automatically with a specific device. Additionally, you can pair up the keyboard with two devices at a time. A single button press allows you to switch over the keyboard to the other device. Rolly can be powered down simply by rolling it up. The keyboard then forms a stick, making it portable and easy to carry.

Although a portable device, Rolly has a pitch of 17 mm. This, according to LG, is very close to the 18 mm pitch for a desktop keyboard. Pitch being the distance between the centers of any two neighboring keys. That makes typing on Rolly as comfortable as typing on a real desktop keyboard. Additionally, Rolly offers the same tactile feeling as does the desktop keyboard when pressing keys on it. They markings on the Rolly keyboard are high-contrast type and therefore, readability is not an issue.

With Rolly, users can forget the onscreen keyboard on their smartphone. They can keep their smartphone on Rolly’s arms just as they would place a monitor in front of a desktop keyboard. That makes typing on smartphones much simpler than having to use the cramped up keyboard on the screen.

WD PiDrive for the Raspberry Pi

Most users of the RBPi (Raspberry Pi) prefer to use the single board computer for small and simple tasks suited for their low powered hardware. It is also possible for RBPi users to upgrade their hardware for augmenting functions that need more power. For example, users looking for additional memory space can use traditional SD Cards and USB drives. Now, Western Digital is upping the ante with their PiDrive, a one terabyte hard drive, compatible to the RBPi.

PiDrive is somewhat different from the average storage drive commonly seen in desktops and laptops. In place of the usual SATA interface that comes with a typical hard drive, PiDrive employs a USB 3.0 header, modified for the purpose. That means you can connect the drive to the USB port of the RBPi. However, PiDrive goes a step further. You can connect it to the power port on your SBC. The advantage is that you can now power both the RBPi and the PiDrive from the same source, using a single cable.

Since the SBC RBPi cannot boot from any source other than its microSD card, the WD PiDrive also has a built in 4GB microSD card. You can place an operating system on the card, so that the RBPi can boot from it. WD PiDrive is compatible to both RBPi Model B+ and RBPi 2 Model B.

PiDrive consists of a WD Passport drive with a built-in USB controller in place of the usual SATA interface and comes without any plastic enclosure. Earlier also, others have already toyed with the idea of an RBPi that can boot from and store information to a hoard drive. However, most such ventures needed a powered USB hub to transfer power to the drive. WD has removed the need for the USB hub, making the newly equipped RBPi much neater.

The 1TB PiDrive is available in the form of a kit. Along with the 2.5-inch USB hard disk drive, the kit consists of a 5V power adapter, a USB Micro B to Type A power cord, a WD PiDrive cable and a Class4 4GB microSD card with an SD adapter. However, the star attraction of the kit is the WD PiDrive cable. This specially designed cable supplies the necessary power to the PiDrive and the RBPi at the same time. The included power adapter has adequate capacity to handle the power required by both the SBC and the drive. WD provides a Quick Install Guide for making all the connections easily and correctly.

The microSD card with the PiDrive ships blank and you can install another operating system on it safely, without compromising the existing SD card of your RBPi. That means you can test another OS without losing the files or programs on the original SD card.

To use the WD PiDrive with the RBPi for the first time, you will need to partition it, format the partitions and mount them. You can also store your OS on the drive. For that, you must let the boot loader remain on the SD card, writing only the OS on the PiDrive. The WD Labs Community offers detailed instructions for doing this.

Volumio: Control Your Hi-Fi through a Raspberry Pi

Traditionally, amplifiers connect to loudspeakers through wires. The wires carry the electric currents that make the loudspeakers work to produce sound. So far, wires were also necessary to feed amplifiers from different sources such as CD players, TV sets and others. By placing amplifiers within the speaker enclosure, part of the ugly wiring was taken care, but the wires from the source persisted until wireless methods were discovered.

Introduction of the Walkman and other portable players changed the music scenario forever, bringing it out of the living room and allowing people to carry their music with them. However, there was a limit to the number of songs one could carry on their person. The advent of the smartphones and the Internet opened another door. People could stream music over the net, leaving their collection at home. This was the age of iTunes, Spotify and Beats Music, facilitating listening to music wherever you may be.

Most often, these new methods prove expensive for those on a budget, and they are forced to bypass the newer ways of consuming music. An RBPi (Raspberry Pi) is a great help in these cases, simply because the single board computer is affordable, flexible and of a convenient size. Its flexibility makes it a perfect fit for use as a home audio solution and you can control your music wirelessly without having to invest in expensive high-fidelity stuff.

An RBPi gives you many modes of selecting songs to play and the manner in which they are played. For this, the RBPi uses a specially tailored Operating System by the name of Volumio. The major attraction is the nice and simple cross-platform web interface through which you can control music.

The RBPi sits as a controller just in front of the amplifier. It can pick up songs from a USB stick plugged into one of the USB sockets, select it from your local home NAS or take your picking from Web Radio. For the last part, you will need a Wi-Fi dongle to connect the RBPi to the Internet.

Volumio is easy to set up, as not much of advanced functions or graphics are to be handled. Simply download the Volumio disk image, transfer it to your microSD card and use it to boot up the RBPi. You will not require a keyboard, mouse or monitor to set up the software, as the entire configuration is possible through the web interface of Volumio.

Use your computer to connect to Volumio. You can find it by connecting your computer to the same network where you have your RBPi plugged in. You may also use Volumio over a wireless network, for which, you will have to first connect to the RBPi via Ethernet to configure its settings for use with a Wi-Fi dongle. This also allows you to control the software with the browser on your smartphone – simply type in the URL ‘http://volumio.local’ in your browser.

Using the RBPi makes it simple to select songs and set up other parameters for playing them on your home Hi-Fi system. As an advanced arrangement, this is affordable and one can easily modify it to suit specific needs.

Let Spinpod & Hobie Hold Your Smartphone

Smartphones are getting smarter all the time and their camera functions are improving too. With 13MP+ cameras becoming common in phones, it is possible for anyone to capture stunning photographs. The only requirement to get those shots just right is to have steady hands – especially with panoramic shots. However, gadgets such as the Spinpod and Hobie are now available to take care of that. These are portable motion control unit making it easier to create panoramas. At the same time, you do not have to spin on the spot holding your smartphone.

Independent time-lapse panoramas

You can use the Spinpod for shooting motion time-lapse videos. A simple device with a rotating dock holds your smartphone in the proper position, while allowing it to rotate with a continuous motion. The rotation is smooth and you control the pace, which means there are no more overlaps, disruptive seams and lost pixels, all so usual with handheld panoramas.

Although the slot is 64×13 mm, it fits most Apple and Android phones and a thumb-wheel locks the phone in position. Smaller or larger phones can also be fitted with adapters. Users can use these adapters for holding their smartphones horizontally also. After the device is locked in position, controlling the Spinpod is simple, as it has capacitive touch buttons and LED indicators.

For shooting difficult panoramas, you can delay the start of rotation by 5, 10 or 15 seconds. That gives you ample time to place the Spinpod in its proper position to start the panoramic selfie. In the time-lapse mode, you can set the device to rotate in steps of 0.5, 1, 2, 5 or 10-second intervals. The re-chargeable battery can last for 10 hours of panoramic shoots or 100 hours of time-lapse photography.

Tilted time-lapse photography

However, when you want to tilt your smartphone at any angle for the panoramic shot, you will have to use the Hobie. Looking more like a modified kitchen timer, Hobie is a smartphone-holding gadget that allows users to capture panning time-lapse photos at almost any angle.

According to Mattia Ciuccaiarelli, the designer of Hobie, using a kitchen timer for time-lapse photography is like giving an existing product a new life. However, Hobie does include some clever features and functionalities.

Hobie comes across as a large static wheel mounted atop a kitchen timer. The wheel holds a crossbar with bungees that can rotate 360 degrees. You use the bungees to secure your smartphone (8 cm and below only) in place – that means, no phablets. The rotating crossbar allows the smartphone to be angled in almost any angle, overcoming the limitations of products such as the Spinpod.

As the timer operates on its wind-up mechanism, no batteries or charging are involved. However, you cannot alter the speed of rotation – it always takes 15 minutes to turn 90-degrees. With Hobie on the kitchen timer, you can take still pictures or moving time lapses.

Hobie is a simple, cheap and portable means of capturing time lapses and panoramas with a smartphone. Expect it to start shipping this November.

Farming With Drones & Robots

According to Heidi Johnson, crops and soil agent for Dane County, Wisconsin, “Farmers are the ultimate “innovative tinkerers”.” Farming, through the ages, has undergone vast changes. Although in developing worlds, you will still find stereotype farmers planting his seeds and praying for rain and good weather while waiting for his crops to grow, farm technology has progressed. Therefore, we now have twenty-four hour farming and driverless combines and autonomous tractors have moved out of agro-science fiction. Farmers now are good at developing things that are close to what they need.

For example, the Farm Tech Days Show has farmers discussing technology ranging from the latest sensors to cloud processing for optimizing their yield and robotics that can improve manual tasks. Most farmers are already aware of data analytics, cloud services, molecular science, robotics, drones and climate change among other technological jargon. The latest buzz in the agricultural sector is about managing farms that are not a single field, but distributed in multiple small units. This requires advanced mapping and GPS for tailoring daily activities such as the amount of water and fertilizer that each plant needs.

That naturally leads to observation, measurements and responding in real time. Because such precision farming means technological backup, with data being the crux of the issue to respond to what is actually happening in the field. A farmer would always like to know when his plants are suffering and the cause of their suffering.

For example, farmers want sensors that can tell them about the nutrient levels in the soil at a more granular level – potassium, phosphorus and nitrogen, etc. They also want to know how fast the plant is taking up such nutrients – the flow rate. This information must come in real time from sensors and there must be diagnostic tools to make sense of the data.

Although NIFA, the National Institute of Food and Agriculture were talking about the Internet of Ag Things, the concept is not new to farmers. In fact, farmers are already collecting information from both air and ground. They are doing this by flying drones, inserting moisture sensors into ground and placing crop sensors in machines when spraying and applying fertilizers.

Presently, what farmers are lacking is a cost effective, adequate broadband connection. Although Internet connectivity exists even in remote areas, thanks to satellite linkages, these are not cost effective to the farmer, as they have to deal with increasing amounts of data flow.

The current method farmers use is to collect data from the field on an SD card or thumb drive and plug it into their home computers. They transfer this data for analysis to services where crop consultants or co-operative experts are available. The entire process of turnaround takes a few days.

What farmers need is end-node farming equipment with the necessary computing power. This could help with processing and editing the raw data and sending only the relevant part direct to a cloud service. This requires an automated process and a real-time operation. With farms getting bigger, farmers need to cover much more acreage, while dealing with labor shortage and boosting yields in their farms.

Superconductivity Temperatures Get Higher

Superconductors have the capability and the potential to revolutionize our lives through improved technology. That includes superior thermal conductivity, remarkable magnetic properties and nearly zero electrical resistance. However, all that is only possible at cryogenic temperatures, that is, at temperatures in the region of absolute zero, at -273°C or -459°F.

Researchers at the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz and the Max Plank Institute for Chemistry are working on material, which will work as superconductors equally well at room temperature. They have developed a record high-temperature superconductor, but it smells like rotten eggs.

Although superconductors are useful in all aspects of life – from fusion reactors to MRI scanners, the major deterrent is they work below -234°C or -389°F, which rather limits their application. Although all engineers want is superconductors that work at room temperatures, until now, the best they had is cuprates or copper oxide ceramics working under normal pressures at -140°C (-220°F) or under high pressures at -109°C (-164°F).

The team led by the Max Plank Institute is using H2S or Hydrogen Sulphide as the new record-holder. Although a colorless gas, H2S is usually associated with the smell emanating from rotten eggs. The team has found that H2S, when cooled and subjected to high pressures, acts like a superconductor. The super high-pressure chamber consists of a cryogenic cell of dimensions one-cubic centimeter placed between two flat-faced diamonds.

The super-cooled liquefied hydrogen sulphide placed in the cryogenic cell is subjected to high pressure by squeezing the two diamond faces together. As the pressure reaches 1.5 megabars, the super-cooled liquid H2S becomes a superconductor. This happens at a record new high temperature of -70°C or -94°F.

Scientists placed electrodes in one of two identical cells to measure the electrical resistance and magnetic sensors in the other to measure the magnetic response of the super-cooled liquid. With this arrangement, they were able to arrive at the exact combination of pressure and temperature that caused the liquid to transition to superconductivity.

According to the team, H2S under pressure transforms to H3S, which contributes to the superconductivity. They explained the relatively high temperature of the superconductor to be mainly because of the presence of hydrogen atoms in the compound. Among all elements, hydrogen has the highest frequency of oscillations. As the gas solidifies under high pressure, it causes crystal lattices to form with strong atomic bonds in the molecule, transforming the gas to solid H3S.

The team is now setting their sights to producing superconductors with still higher transition temperatures. In their opinion, this will mean increasing the pressure to at least twice that used in their current experiment. That may also mean they will no longer be able to use H2S and instead have to use other substances such as pure hydrogen or compounds such as hydrogen rich polymers. With the latter, superconductivity may be possible at high temperatures but without the accompanying necessity for high pressure.

Head of the working group, Mikhael Eremets feels that other material may have a lot of potential for performing as conventional superconductors at high temperatures. While theoretically, there is no limit for conventional superconductors to achieve transition temperatures, the experiments conducted by the team give adequate reasons to hope that superconductivity at room temperatures can be a reality.

Ohm Battery: A Battery That Refuses To Die

A dead battery in the car is a misfortune any driver would willingly avoid. When it is important to reach a destination, a car that does not start because its battery is dead gives a terrible feeling. Most people do not want to think about the car battery too much, preferring rather to have it just work every time they start the car. The smart battery from Ohm Laboratories, Silicon Valley, does just that and makes sure you do not have to replace your car battery almost ever.

In spite of modern advancements in car technology, the car battery is still the same huge, heavy electromechanical block that it has been from generations. Although it requires replacement sometimes, it does its job quite well, and does not give you much trouble, unless you have forgotten to switch off the car lights.

One of the major reasons for a dead battery, when it has not yet reached the end of its life cycle, is when you accidentally leave the car lights on making the battery drain itself overnight. The Ohm battery, being smart, can detect when the energy in the battery is reaching its critical level, and shuts itself off. Therefore, next morning, there is still some reserve power left over to allow you to start your car. While driving, the Ohm battery recharges just as any other battery will.

The self shut-off feature is useful while the battery is within its effective life cycle, but it cannot deal with the end of life situation. Therefore, Ohm Laboratories has also provided the battery with a replacement warning system. When the system starts beeping, you know that it is time for a replacement. According to Ohm, the beeper offers a more accurate and quicker warning as compared to the battery warning light on the car dashboard.

Instead of the typical car battery with a lead-acid construction, Ohm offers a unique combination battery consisting of LiFePO4 or lithium iron phosphate and super-capacitors. The super-capacitors deliver the quick burst of energy necessary for starting the car. The LiFePO4 part of the battery keeps the super-capacitors topped up when the engine is off. Therefore, the battery system is ready to go when you perk up the key for ignition.

According to Ohm, the combination of super-capacitors and LiFePO4 has a seven-year lifespan. This is nearly twice that compared to the average life of a lead-acid battery. Ohm claims its battery also performs better in cold weather.

There is another advantage to the Ohm battery. Compared to the lead-acid type, the Ohm battery is a lot lighter. A group size 35 lead acid battery can easily weigh as much as 16 Kg. Therefore, an Ohm battery, at 2.7 Kg, may seem light as a feather in comparison. Not only does that make your vehicle lighter, handling an Ohm battery is easier during replacements.

Ohm Laboratories have made the body of their battery the same size as that of a typical lead-acid battery, which makes it a drop-in replacement. The only downside to their design is the small 10Ah reserve capacity, because of the self shut-off feature. That does not allow running electrical equipment with the engine turned off.