
Motorised Pergola Wind & Rain Sensors UK: How They Work and Which to Buy
If you've invested in a motorised pergola, you probably want it to respond intelligently to the weather. Wind and rain sensors are the key to making that happen—they automate retraction when conditions turn rough, protecting your motorised system and extending its lifespan. But how do they actually work, and which ones integrate with your pergola setup?
Why Weather Sensors Matter for Motorised Pergolas
A motorised pergola with no weather protection is a liability waiting to happen. Wind above a certain speed can damage fabric or louvres, strain motors, and potentially injure people underneath. Rain, meanwhile, can soak seating areas or create a false sense of shelter while water pools on the retracted canopy. Good sensors catch these conditions and trigger automatic retraction—or, in the case of some systems, simply alert you to close manually.
Modern sensors don't just prevent damage; they integrate with your control system, so you can set rules like "retract when wind exceeds 25 mph" or "bring in the roof if it rains," and the system acts without you needing to press a button.
How Wind Sensors (Anemometers) Work
A wind sensor, or anemometer, measures wind speed using a simple principle: three or four cups mounted on horizontal arms rotate around a vertical axis. The stronger the wind, the faster the cups spin. A magnet inside registers each rotation, converting that spinning motion into an electrical signal that your control system can read.
Most anemometers designed for pergolas output a 0–10 volt signal—the voltage increases linearly with wind speed. A controller interprets this signal and triggers retraction when it crosses your set threshold (typically 20–30 mph for pergolas). The whole process is mechanical and robust; these sensors have no complicated electronics and rarely fail.
The best models for pergolas are:
- Sealed or rated for outdoor weather (IP54 minimum)
- Featuring adjustable sensitivity (so you can fine-tune when retraction happens)
- Compatible with 0–10V control systems
- Weatherproof connectors to prevent water ingress
How Rain Sensors Work
Rain sensors use one of two approaches. The older method—still common in budget systems—uses a hygroscopic element that swells when wet, triggering a simple on/off switch. These are cheap but crude; they either detect rain or they don't, with no gradation.
The better option is a capacitive rain sensor. A thin conductive surface on the sensor detects moisture as rain lands on it, generating a proportional electrical signal (again, 0–10V). This allows for sensitivity adjustment, so light drizzle doesn't trigger unnecessary retraction, but a genuine downpour does.
Some advanced sensors combine both anemometer and rain detection in a single unit, which simplifies wiring and installation. These combo units are ideal for pergolas because they handle the two weather conditions that matter most.
Integration with Existing Control Systems
The good news: if your pergola uses a common motorised system, weather sensors are likely compatible.
Somfy systems (very popular in the UK) support sensors natively. Somfy's own wind and rain sensors work with their RTS or io-homecontrol receivers, and the setup is straightforward—the sensor pairs wirelessly, and you set wind/rain thresholds in the Somfy app or controller. Somfy also accepts third-party sensors on 0–10V signal lines if you prefer to use an alternative brand.
KNX systems (more common in high-end smart homes) can integrate sensors via a KNX gateway. You wire the sensor to a KNX dimmer or controller, and the gateway converts the 0–10V signal into KNX protocol. This is more complex but gives you tighter automation—wind and rain can trigger not just the pergola, but coordinated reactions across lighting, blinds, and heating.
Standard motorised systems (non-smart pergolas) work with simpler on/off sensors wired directly to the motor controller. Many budget pergolas come with a basic rain sensor already fitted; upgrading to a wind sensor requires splicing it into the same wiring harness.
Check your pergola's manual for the control-signal specification—it will say 0–10V, 4–20mA, or simple switch. This determines which sensors you can use.
Retrofit Options and Installation
If your pergola didn't come with sensors, retrofitting is straightforward. Most anemometers and rain sensors mount on a bracket (usually supplied) fixed to a nearby fence post, wall, or the pergola structure itself. They need to be positioned where they read genuine wind and rain, not sheltered or blocked by nearby buildings.
Wiring runs inside conduit from the sensor to your control unit—typically 2–3 metres. For Somfy wireless systems, no wiring is needed at all; the sensor simply pairs and transmits. For hardwired systems, burying cable under a concrete path is common; conduit on the surface works too, though it's less neat.
Most installers charge £200–£400 to add sensors to an existing pergola, including wiring and calibration.
What to Look for When Buying
Prioritise these features:
- Outdoor rating: IP54 minimum; IP65 is better for exposed locations
- 0–10V output: The most widely compatible signal type
- Adjustable thresholds: So you can customise sensitivity without changing hardware
- Sealed connectors: Prevents water damage to internal electronics
- Accuracy: Anemometers should be ±2–3% of true wind speed; rain sensors should respond within 10 seconds of rain
- Warranty: At least 2 years; established brands often offer 5
Avoid very cheap sensors (under £50 for an anemometer); they often lack weatherproofing and drift in accuracy over time.
The Bottom Line
Wind and rain sensors transform a motorised pergola from a manual system into a genuinely smart one. Whether you're choosing them at purchase or retrofitting later, understanding how they work helps you pick the right type for your control system and set sensible thresholds. Most pergola owners find that automatic weather response—without the fuss of manual retraction—makes the investment worthwhile.
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