h a l f b a k e r yExtruded? Are you sure?
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And a resistor. Them being futile, and all. |
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The analogue method is really clever. I like it. Is it your own? |
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Does it move or run away by itself? If it doesn't it should. |
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Rotating-disc thermographs have been baked for a while in industrial plats, but this sounds nice. A scrolling false-colour display would be the thing. |
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If the rate of temperature change over the last five or ten minutes is enough to show up on a bar graph, I would suggest closing the door. With central heating/cooling, your house should be comfortable all day, and this device would only serve to settle kids' squabbles. |
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I would go for a charting thermometer, though, especially for my greenhouse. |
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The analog version is quite nice. |
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Does this really indicate rate of change or is it really the direction, trend, of change? |
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Does the necessity for such an instrument really matter, [dalek]? The novelty of the idea is enough for me. |
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//bris: Does this really indicate rate of change...//
ish. |
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//dalek: ...last five or ten minutes..//
You may have a point there. In which case, I'd make the big bar bigger and go for half an hour instead. |
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//dalek: I would go for a charting thermometer...//
No problem. It's all a matter of taste anyway. |
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"ish?" You no like my comment? |
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bristolz: as described, the slope would indeed indicate the rate of change (as well as the direction, of course). |
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Bris: I could have said, "The slope of the pointer approximates rate of change at a point in time between the mean time taken by each bar to react on a scale defined by the mechanism of the thermometer." I thought, "ish." said all that more succinctly. It wasn't a critisism. Meh. |
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A few more ideas:
1. Use one bi-mettalic strip, but make the pointer very bendy and put it in clear gel. The end of the pointer will take longer to move, and so it will show a curve.
2. Use two mercury thermometers, with different time constants (i.e. one big, one small). Very similar to the proposed idea. |
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