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Temperature monitor and alarm

11/4/2016

4 Comments

 
This was one of those projects that should have taken an afternoon and didn't, however it's now complete and working rather nicely.
Picture
I already had a box from a defunct project that had the 4x20 LCD display installed and power switch, mains transformer and a mains IEC socket on the rear so I decided to re-task it for this.

Inside is a PIC18F25K22 running this show, and the device can monitor up to three channels. Each channel has a 5-pin din connector and cable that connects to a Maxim DS18B20 temperature sensor.
You can set the alarm temperature independently on each channel, and the project starts beeping and flashing the LCD backlight if a maximum is exceeded. I also included a relay that can be used as a power interrupter for the project under test. This way I can leave a project on soak but if it starts to over heat, the power can be cut automatically.

The reason it took longer than anticipated was for some reason the PCB never etched correctly and I had some messing around to do. The software only took around an hour to write and debug. I love Proton BASIC.

...and the reason it's three channels and not more, well I happened to have three 5-pin din sockets in my junk box. If I'd had more... who knows.

If anybody is interested I'll make available the circuit diagram, PCB foil and PIC firmware but this really is an easy project to design and build.

So, now that's up and running, I can get back to the original task of designing a decent voltage boost converter.

4 Comments

Just because it works... dosn't mean it's working properly...

6/1/2012

0 Comments

 
I use a DS18B20 temperature sensor IC in several of my projects and I encountered an interesting problem recently. This IC runs over Maxim’s 1-Wire interface and should, in theory, work over cable lengths of several hundred meters or more.

However, when I tried to run one of these sensors over a cable longer than around 50cm it refused to work. Shortening the cable always brought the sensor back to life.

In desperation I tried a different sensor and hey-presto, it worked on my test 5M cable.

So, I purchased 10 sensors off EBay and gave them a try. Each one worked perfectly on my 5M cable so I can only assume that I’d been unlucky to have a semi-faulty sensory IC.

I’ve binned this IC as whilst they are rather expensive if you buy from a regular supplier, at less than £2 each off EBay, I wasn’t going to risk having the IC suddenly fail on my at some point in the future; and there’s obviously something wrong with it.
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    A software and hardware engineer who loves retro computers.

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