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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#9
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Of course that is another way of doing it, but it involves bonding the diode
thermally to the pitot tube, putting a reference diode somewhere in the same general vicinity of the pitot tube to sense ambient temperature, insuring an ambient airflow over the reference diode, an opamp to sense the 2.5 millivolts/°C change, and all of that stuff. I prefer dumb when I can get away with it. As I recall, the pitot heater gets about 50°C above ambient, so you are messing around trying to detect a little over a tenth of a volt change, which isn't rocket science, but trying to explain it in this newsgroup is. Jim "Richard Lamb" wrote in message oups.com... Hi Jim, Question.. Why put the diode in series with the pitot heater power. (Ok, it senses that power if flowing in the heater circuit, but is that necessary?) Couldn't the same thing be accomplished by using the diode as a temperture sensor (thermometer) to decide if the pitot tube was above a certain temperature? No self-heating on the part of the sense diode, and no pitot heat failure if the diode opens up (burns up?). Richard |
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