Mon Mar 10, 2008 9:47 pm

Well, shit. It's about time there is a little progress! You were promising availability back when you didn't have a raindeer painted on your chest - and we all know how long ago that was...



Mylo
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Mon Mar 10, 2008 10:26 pm

You guys are worse than a movie studio pimping the next Marvel movie.

Where can I download your HD trailer?

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Wed Mar 12, 2008 6:42 am

Bub will it work on 220 volts with some minor modifications?
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Wed Mar 12, 2008 10:23 am

awalker wrote:Bub will it work on 220 volts with some minor modifications?

I don't know.... my guess is the transformer providing power to the board would need to be replaced.... I think the relays will handle it though.
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Thu Mar 13, 2008 12:49 am

Thats good news i should be able to manage that
If I need to order a new transformer I am sure I can get one through work.

I look forward to them becoming available
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Thu Apr 24, 2008 11:20 am

When will this be available and how much?

What makes a digital temp probe different from analog?

For fermentation, I am assuming that means you could hook up a chest freezer and light bulb to start a lager at 40, let it rise to 48 over 24 hours, do a diacetyl rest and then cold crash without operator input. Am I understanding this correctly?

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Thu Apr 24, 2008 8:06 pm

Link, I am hearing late summer.
And your description is fairly accurate.
Digital vs Analog.... accuracy and precision, plus ability to program.
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Fri Apr 25, 2008 5:30 am

A thermcouple type probe carries a voltage back to some conditioning circuitry, while an RTD or thermistor type probe represents temperature change with resistance change. This is usually biased by a voltage or forms part of a voltage divider and carried back to the conditioning / measuring circuitry (wheatstone bridge, op-amp, A/D, etc.) and generally need to be calibrated as a system.

A "digital probe" contains a sensing element, conditioning circuitry, A/D conversion, and some sort of micro or simple state machine logic to be able to transport this digitized representation in a serial fashion, all within the probe element. Additionally, they can contain serialization data, which means an individual probe can be identified no matter where in the system it is plugged in so that any calibration data, if needed, can be applied on a per probe basis. Some even have non-volatile memory right in the probe to store cal data there - once again, right in the probe itself. Digital transport of the temp data means no interference from external electrical noise and no worries about probe interconnects changing resistance due to corrosion, moisture, etc.
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