Nothing nearly that exciting. Hundreds of laptop power bricks.
On 10/01/2014 11:05 PM, Roberto Spadim wrote:
Well its a radio station? Or a sound amp?
Em quinta-feira, 2 de outubro de 2014, Jerry Scharf
<sch...@lagunawayconsulting.com
<mailto:sch...@lagunawayconsulting.com>> escreveu:
Hi,
Thanks for all the input. I am guessing my experience with slow
reads is
due to the long buses I have with my current setup.
The bus will be very short because all the load resistors are on a
rack
with water cooled heat sinks. I can make the main power and ground
lines
any gauge I want, and the data line will be <20 feet. A couple amps is
easy to push around. The completed system will be sucking over 20kW of
power and dumping it into the load resistors.
As for temperature change, when you dump 65W into a resistor that
is has
a surface area of about 15mm square, the heat can change pretty
quickly.
I was hoping to poll all the sensors at least every 30 seconds. I need
to measure both the resistors that exceed a threshold and the
difference
between the coldest and hottest part. I expect the parts to be running
at 90-110C, so I will be able to use almost the full range of the
chip.
There will be relays that can cut the power to any resistor that
starts
to run away, so I just need to catch it in time. (carbon resistors
resistance drops with increased temperature, so as they start to get
hot, the resistance drops and the power through it goes up...)
I am looking at using the Z version (SO) mounted to a board and
the load
resistors bent over backwards. The board will have a hole that
allows a
bolt to go through and bolt the board, 18b20 and TO247 load
resistor to
the aluminum extrusion with two pipes of cooling water built in. This
will give a relatively accurate measure of the resistor temperature.
Trying to handle over 300 thermocouples becomes a real chore. The only
risk I see is that we start having the load resistors getting well
past
125C and cooking the 18b20s.
I promise to send pictures when we are done.
jerry
On 10/01/2014 03:52 PM, Roberto Spadim wrote:
> if it's not to control a process, i think could use without
problems,
> like paul told, temperature don't change too fast, only if you are
> controlling something, in this case should check system update rate
> using modbus devices i got ~20ms to read 8 termocouples with rs485
> (serial) 9600bauds
> i think it's a good number to think about, 60~50Hz update rate
is very
> good to control systems using temperature termocouples
>
> 2014-10-01 19:01 GMT-03:00 Paul Alfille <paul.alfi...@gmail.com
<javascript:;>>:
>> I've done over 100 DS18S20's (passive) on passive, active, Link
and DS9490
>> successfully. It isn't fast, but then your temperature changes
aren't that
>> fast.
>>
>> On Wed, Oct 1, 2014 at 4:53 PM, Roberto Spadim
<robe...@spadim.com.br <javascript:;>>
>> wrote:
>>> that what i stored here some years ago when testing ds1820 devices
>>> in other words 300*.01 = 3 seconds
>>> maybe less maybe more
>>>
>>> what update period you need?
>>>
>>>
>>>
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--
Roberto Spadim
SPAEmpresarial
Eng. Automação e Controle
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