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Re: Nearly OT: Small, circular, plastic enclosures
- To: <ukha_d@xxxxxxx>
- Subject: Re: Nearly OT: Small, circular, plastic
enclosures
- From: "Adam Stevens" <adam@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 3 Jul 2003 11:49:48 +0100
- Mailing-list: list ukha_d@xxxxxxx; contact
ukha_d-owner@xxxxxxx
- Reply-to: ukha_d@xxxxxxx
> I don't know what sensors you plan to use Adam, but it is worth taking
> a look at
Thanks for the link, but I'm already using 1-wire temp sensors, so I
need something which can accommodate one of those. They do look neat
though.
> Just one other thing regarding temperature sensor location - don't
> mount them on ceilings or very high/low on the walls if you expect
> accurate measurement for control applications. A good guideline would
> be somewhere around existing switch height in most cases, and
> obviously avoid areas above radiators, in direct sun etc. It doesn't
> matter how sophisticated the controls, they cannot operate effectively
> if the sensors are in poor locations.
Yeah, I've found that! :-) Trouble is that it's far neater to be able
to mount them either on the ceiling, or near the floor. What I've done
in rooms where it matters, is mount them in pairs, one at ceiling level
and one at floor level, and then take the average. That seams to give a
reasonably accurate reading. In some rooms I've even quaded them, and
taken the average of the four. The beauty of 1-wire is that it's so
cheap/easy, it's not a problem doing that.
...Not that it really matters too much in my case. It's purely for
interest that I take temperature readings, I haven't got around to
HA'ing the heating system yet (that's a job for next winter... Maybe!).
A.
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HA Site: http://www.the-firs.org/
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