Our story

Learn about Faikin WiFi controller, its purpose, the targeted customer, and operational information. Learn how to save electricity and install extra features.

Faikin WiFi smart controller

Why “Faikin” became “Faikout”

The original project name was Faikin, created by RevK as an open-source Wi-Fi controller for compatible Daikin systems. After the project became popular, RevK’s online sales channel was taken down by the marketplace host following a trademark complaint, with no procedural fairness or right of reply.

While we can’t speak for the complainant or the marketplace’s internal process, the outcome was clear: continuing to sell under the original name created unnecessary risk and disruption.

To keep the project moving and reduce friction, RevK shifted to the name Faikout for the hardware/firmware and related products. The goal was straightforward: keep the technology available, keep it open.

We’ve experienced similar trademark pressure ourselves. In our case, we were given a right of reply and we used it.

We’ve been able to continue operating in a way that respects trademarks while preserving a mutually beneficial coexistence. This is the outcome we prefer.

It’s also worth noting that a re-brand is expensive and time-consuming, especially once you account for the intangible assets that build up over time: SEO investment, product reviews and awareness, domains, hosting, documentation, and support content. Then there’s the physical side: existing stock, packaging, labels/stickers, printed materials, and even website code and product listings that all need to be updated. As such, we are transitioning to the Faikout brand, but we’ll do it gradually over time. During the transition, you will see Faikin and Faikout used interchangeably.

What is Faikin?

In a few words, Faikin makes your air-con smart.

You don't have to replace a perfectly good air conditioner to access smart home technology, just install a Faikin.

It is a Wi-Fi smart controller that connects inside your Daikin indoor unit (to the control circuit board). It gives you wireless control without relying on an app, internet connection or questionable cloud service data centres.

No logins, passwords, or personal data needed. 🍾

Faikin can run entirely on your local network. It does not require an internet connection, and it does not send your data to third-party servers. You can control your air conditioner from a phone, tablet, or computer via the built-in web interface, and you can optionally integrate it with platforms like Home Assistant for automation.

Control over the internet can be acheived using your own VPN.

The Faikin project was started by RevK, who remains the lead designer and primary developer. A large, active community contributes to the project.

Faikin Australia is run by Andrew, one of the contributors. Andrew developed the cable sets and distributes Faikin hardware and cables across Australia and the wider region. He originally found Faikin while looking for a better alternative to cloud-tied controllers for an Airbnb property, and has been supporting and supplying Faikin since.

Homeowners can remotely operate on/off and temperature controls with your device from wherever you are. It enables local + automated control of the AC unit through an Embedded web integration, Home Assistant App or MQTT. Enable home automation systems, smart connectivity, WiFi, geofencing, outdoor temperature display, time-ready for daylight savings.

Go to Faikin and cable sets.

My wife operates an Airbnb and, over the past 12 months, we installed a Faikin, made observations, and ran some tests. Based on the consumption data we collected, we saw around a 40% reduction in energy use per hour of runtime.

A Home Assistant–integrated Faikin can:

  • Turn the AC on when guests arrive
  • Turn the AC off when guests depart
  • Set back the temperature when a room is unoccupied

Solving guest inefficiency with presence logic

Scenario:
A guest turns the AC on, then opens the doors. The conditioned air goes straight outside. With time-of-use or wholesale electricity tariffs, and where guests effectively have “unlimited power”, this can become very expensive very quickly.

With Faikin, you can automate a sensible response. For example, if a door is left opened, Faikin can:

  • turn down or turn the AC off,
  • switch to fan mode, or
  • pause for X minutes before resuming operation.

Air conditioners waste the most energy conditioning empty space. Presence logic helps remove that waste.

Occupancy sensing (privacy-friendly):
Presence logic can be driven by an occupancy sensor such as mmWave, which detects whether someone is in the room, while preserving guest privacy.

Managing peak pricing with demand control

Without the energy bill being top of mind, guests often aim for comfort rather than efficiency. One practical tool here is demand control, which limits the system’s maximum output. Think of it like a car where the accelerator can’t be pushed all the way down.

By default, many systems will run up to full capacity when trying to reach the setpoint. With demand control via Faikin, you can cap maximum output (for example, 70% during peak tariff times, or even down to 30%). It won’t cool or heat as aggressively, but it can maintain reasonable comfort while reducing energy use during the most expensive periods.

Customers who choose to install a Faikin automatically have better control over comsumption of electricity. The Faikin stops humans doing deeply inefficient human things.

Here are the actual ways a Faikin can reduce electricity costs.

Wasting Power Problem: The most common way to waste power is when an operater runs the AC unnessisarily, with a thermostat temperature too low/high, and keeps the unit powered on. During an electricity pricing spike the unit will continue to consume expensive power. Stop that annoying run-it-flat-out-all-day behaviour.

Saving Power Solutions

  1. Solution: Faikin can reset the machines' total power output to a lower percentage so it does not have to work as hard consuming power. By default, the machine is set to 100% output. This means the AC will continue to run at 100% capacity during all expensive electricity pricing spikes. Instead, the installed Faikin can run the AC at 70% output - it wont cool as much - but just enough during those expensive extreme times. The result is reasonable cooling/heating with less power consumed.
  2. Buyers who hold wholesale and time-of-use contracts with their energy providers can synch the AC unit to react automatically to pricing spikes, lowering the temperature of the machine, or turning it off completely.
  3. Customers can choose to install an external temperature sensor for the AC unit. By default, the AC has a temperature sensor inside the white box, however, this is not always the best place to read the temperature of a room. Power can be saved when temperature is recorded elsewhere, with accurate products like Sonoff, controlled by Faikin.
  4. Customers can save and set a 'default' range of thermostat control for the AC. For example: A teenager has chosen to alter the AC settings to instantly cool the room more. During an electricity pricing spike, this is likely to be a costly move. The owner of the AC can instead set the default 'temperature range' to take over, and reapply the default back to the appropriate range.

Go to Faikin and cable sets.

How to control Faikin: choose the setup that suits you

Faikin can be used in a few different ways, depending on how much automation you want and how technical you’d like to get. All options start the same way: Faikin connects inside the indoor unit, to the control circuit board, using the correct cable for your model.

⚠️ Safety first: Always turn off power at the isolator/breaker before opening the unit. There is mains voltage inside.

Option 1: Local control (simplest)

Use the built-in Faikin/Faikout web interface.

  • Connect Faikin to your Wi-Fi during setup
  • Open the web interface from any device on your home network (phone/tablet/PC)
  • Control just the basics: on/off, mode, set temperature, fan, but full control is there if you want it.
  • Great if you want local control without any cloud accounts

This is the “plug it in, set it up, and it just works” option.

Option 2: Home automation (moderately tecchy)

Use Home Assistant if you want automations and dashboard control, with minimal setup.

  • Use the official Home Assistant Daikin integration
  • Gives you the main climate controls and supports the usual automations (schedules, presence, energy-aware logic, etc.)
  • Trade-off: you generally won’t get the full suite of extra sensors and switches that are available via the Faikout web interface or MQTT

In other words: most automations are possible, except those that depend on the extra telemetry not exposed through the integration.

Option 3: Full-feature control (MQTT and advanced automation)

Use MQTT if you want maximum visibility and control.

  • Works with Home Assistant via MQTT, or other tools like Node-RED and custom scripts
  • Compatible with other platforms that use MQTT
  • Exposes more sensors and switches (depending on your unit and firmware), which enables richer automation logic
  • Ideal for advanced use cases like energy-price response, more detailed monitoring, and more customised behaviour

Most “smart” automations are achievable in Option 2 as well, but Option 3 is what you choose when you want the extra sensors/switches and deeper control.

Not sure which path to take? Send us your model number and what you’re trying to achieve (simple control vs automations), and we’ll point you to the best option.

Hand drawn illustration of air conditioner units and remote controls.

We fixed it.

Andrew RansomOwner of Outback Digital and contributor to project ESP32-Faikin.

"My electronic skills and keen interest in project Faikin revealed a gap.

The customer was required know how to assemble their own Faikin connection cable – an impossible barrier for some people.

To fix it, I created the first connection cable to bridge between Faikin and the AC unit.

There are seven cable varients I have designed which are reliable and seemlessly integrated, and service a wide range of AC units.

We want everyone to just plug it in... and go."