Zizzle
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I suspect there are some techies/engineers here that would get something out of this post. Pat actually asked me to do this in laymans terms, but that is harder, and may come later.
I got the temp control unit from brissybrew which is great, but at about the time I set it up, ambient temps were swinging below 12 over night and over 25 during the day. I didn't really have an idea of how warm/cool it was getting downstairs. I figured I would really needed to cool and heat, but the simple little controller will only do one at a time.
I've got a Systems Engineering degree so I figured I could probably sort something out. So after scouting arount, I worked out I could get a digital multimeter with RS-232 output for about $50. Not bad, but that would be only one sensor. Low speed data aq gear can be had for $25 to hook up to a PC. But I would need to buy and wire thermocouples.
Then I found the DS1820. It can be wired up to a PC pretty easily. 1-wire bus with parasitic power it very cool. Linux drivers. I was set.
http://www.linuxfocus.org/English/November...rticle315.shtml
Now price in aus: $20 each. WTF? Go to the dallas semi website and they are listed at US$3. That is quite a markup for something the size of a transistor. But wait, they send out FREE samples. Great.
So the plan is, put some sensors in the fridge, wire up some relays to switch the fridge and a globe inside, write some software to controll it from a PC. Easy.
Then I discover the old laptop I have been saving for just such an occasion has a dead hard disk.
Plan B: run enough cable up stairs to a PC there. Also to make cabling easier by using CAT5, and so RJ45 sockets at each end.
Wire the circuit to drive the DS1820 into the serial port plug.
Next snag, I need to drive 2 relays, but there is only one output left on the DB-9 RS-232 port. Need to get some more outputs from the parallel port. Oh well not as neat but will do the job:
I find an 8-way relay board in my junk boxes. Should do the job. The relays are rated 5A. I will wire 2 pairs up in parallel just to be sure.
Relay coils need a fair bit of juice. Not really, but more than I want to draw from the poor old PC parallel printer port. The box will have mains in it, so simple to add a small transformer. Jaycar $7. Jam some leds on the front for power, heat, cool. Couple of 3.5mm audio jack for connecting the DS1820s to the bus. All in a jiffy box.
Bit of heat shrink tubing around the DS1820s:
Total spend: about $20. Plus a few hours stuffing around soldering and drilling holes in the case.
Results:
So it turns out that after all that, that the temps inside are actually quite stable, and around the right value.
Oh well it was fun anyway.
I got the temp control unit from brissybrew which is great, but at about the time I set it up, ambient temps were swinging below 12 over night and over 25 during the day. I didn't really have an idea of how warm/cool it was getting downstairs. I figured I would really needed to cool and heat, but the simple little controller will only do one at a time.
I've got a Systems Engineering degree so I figured I could probably sort something out. So after scouting arount, I worked out I could get a digital multimeter with RS-232 output for about $50. Not bad, but that would be only one sensor. Low speed data aq gear can be had for $25 to hook up to a PC. But I would need to buy and wire thermocouples.
Then I found the DS1820. It can be wired up to a PC pretty easily. 1-wire bus with parasitic power it very cool. Linux drivers. I was set.
http://www.linuxfocus.org/English/November...rticle315.shtml
Now price in aus: $20 each. WTF? Go to the dallas semi website and they are listed at US$3. That is quite a markup for something the size of a transistor. But wait, they send out FREE samples. Great.
So the plan is, put some sensors in the fridge, wire up some relays to switch the fridge and a globe inside, write some software to controll it from a PC. Easy.
Then I discover the old laptop I have been saving for just such an occasion has a dead hard disk.
Plan B: run enough cable up stairs to a PC there. Also to make cabling easier by using CAT5, and so RJ45 sockets at each end.
Wire the circuit to drive the DS1820 into the serial port plug.
Next snag, I need to drive 2 relays, but there is only one output left on the DB-9 RS-232 port. Need to get some more outputs from the parallel port. Oh well not as neat but will do the job:
I find an 8-way relay board in my junk boxes. Should do the job. The relays are rated 5A. I will wire 2 pairs up in parallel just to be sure.
Relay coils need a fair bit of juice. Not really, but more than I want to draw from the poor old PC parallel printer port. The box will have mains in it, so simple to add a small transformer. Jaycar $7. Jam some leds on the front for power, heat, cool. Couple of 3.5mm audio jack for connecting the DS1820s to the bus. All in a jiffy box.
Bit of heat shrink tubing around the DS1820s:
Total spend: about $20. Plus a few hours stuffing around soldering and drilling holes in the case.
Results:
So it turns out that after all that, that the temps inside are actually quite stable, and around the right value.
Oh well it was fun anyway.