At Pano (a pretty big Mtn with 4000' vertical), we have had a very simple temperature profile system in place for the past 8 years. It's proven very rugged & works perfectly over some very noisy old phone-lines. The temperature sensors connect to a transmitter which converts the signal to a frequency signal. 1200Hz=0DegC, A change of +1.0 DegC adds 10Hz (ie +10.0 DegC = 1300Hz, -10.0DegC = 1100Hz). The transmitter uses an opto-coupled current-source (25mA) to connect to a receiver located in the base office. The current signal is opto-coupled to a small computer, which converts the frequency signal back to temperature, displays current conditions on a small lcd screen in the ops-office foyer (always accessable), and logs the data for trend reporting (on-line)
It works regardless of any network stuff fuckin' up & is easy.
It's rugged, but I remove the summit transmitter during non-ski-season, due to regular intense lightning.
The design is ready for a revamp (adding a touchscreen graphics for the base station & an embedded web-server for on-line access). It would work well for wet-bulb (or dual we/dry), as wet is always lower than dry, so I'd program the tranasmitters to send Twet for 1Sec, then Tdry for the next second. RelH sensors have recently become very cheap. Need 1 pair of cu per transmitter.
I've got a logging hour-meter design (dry contact input) that records every start-stop event along with a date/time stamp. In addition to recording hours, it also counts starts. All memory is non-volitile & output is via a serial port & local lcd display. the thing mounts in a standard electrical box with a decora plate. This design is also due for a revamp (more memory via MMC card, TCP/IP access, etc), but I just don't have the bloody time. This might be good for a no BS, ultra-simple logging of your operator stops.
M
oceanwanderlust, on Nov 5 2008, 09:00 AM, said:
mthornton and all, thankyou for your help! My project got approved!!!!
Some notes, so I can start contributing back to this community:
1) Wet bulb sensors will be very useful; where can I make snow?
2) Operator generated stops are of interest for now.
3) Communication over existing copper can be done with DSL
Some notes, so I can start contributing back to this community:
1) Wet bulb sensors will be very useful; where can I make snow?
2) Operator generated stops are of interest for now.
3) Communication over existing copper can be done with DSL











