Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?

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Sujet : Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?
De : muratlanne (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Jim Wilkins)
Groupes : rec.crafts.metalworking
Date : 10. Mar 2024, 13:43:31
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <usk9ue$2vc2s$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6
User-Agent : Microsoft Windows Live Mail 16.4.3505.912
"Richard Smith"  wrote in message news:m1r0giiqkd.fsf@void.com...
I have a "Fluke" meter with clamp to measure Amps - AC and DC.
Not the point - you are pointing to a project.
I did think of a device to measure voltage - get it to "stab" in at the
torch/gun - and have it speak the voltage so you can run the arc and
weld while having the info.
I bet there are voice devices for saying numbers?
GnuPlot will graph text files of data - my perception there is no need
to keep the data in other than text format.  A compression algorithm
like "bzip2" can get compress the files ot fractions of the former size
- so easy to keep data.
I've done sampling (?) before:
http://www.weldsmith.co.uk/tech/welding/datalog/datalog_weldproc.html
Welding - MIG/GMAW "waveforms" revealed by datalogging
Noting average-Amps x average-Volts does not give average-Power with
systematic pulse waveforms.
Arduino - I was rather delighted about "getting" that one.
Have programmed in "C" before, so head start.
Quickly extended beyond tutorials, using
loops "for..."
conditionals "if..."
to get more interesting things happening.
eg. LED's flashing morse-code
from tutorial getting an LED to light.
Hopefully this will stand as a "proof of concept" and be the start of a
progression - hopefully with the adjective "rapid".
----------------------------
Good, you understand the process and its value already. The other obvious use is a robot that crashes into walls and furniture, which is funny with a toy, less so with a heavy Segway bot. The perpetrator had to autograph the damage which was left as a reminder.
I use a laptop and DMMs with RS232 interfaces to measure and record battery charge and discharge. Since they use slow dual slope A/D converters their measuring rate is 1 or 2 per second, which is fine for a steady load, but too slow for the pulsed output of a solar controller. A digital storage scope captures a short sample of the voltage and current pulses for analysis though it won't integrate current into the battery charge level. For that dedicated battery power monitors serve well enough, at least for the steady discharge current. All do some, none do all.
The high price of commercial data loggers prompted me to consider building my own, which would operate at a much higher sampling rate than the DMMs. A Dataq starter kit sort of works but I prefer a higher resolution and interactive control. I had designed and built a fast 16-bit data logger card that plugs into a Macintosh for work, where they wouldn't allow IBM PCs after being embarrassed by a hacker. They gave it back when done and converting it to a printer port interface is on my to-do list. I have experience building and programming high end industrial measurement systems.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automatic_test_equipment
Most of the measurements are performed by voltage and current controlled power supplies that report their outputs to the computer, as does this:
https://www.amazon.com/RD-Bluetooth-Step-down-communication-DPS5020-USB-BT/dp/B099ZJ1MZG
With battery discharge and welding the voltage drops from high current are a concern. You don't want welding current taking a short cut through the measurement leads. For the ATE we had to limit measurement and return lead currents to a few milliAmps.
That experience served me well when Mitre took up digital radio, which is much like a 2 channel digital oscilloscope. Unlike the radio engineers and techs I knew how to use high speed A/D converters and connect them to a TMS320C30 digital signal processor, I had designed an IC that let both use the same memory simultaneously. Digital radio was the enabler for cell phones.

Date Sujet#  Auteur
9 Mar 24 * Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?16Peter Fairbrother
9 Mar 24 `* Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?15Jim Wilkins
9 Mar 24  +- Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?1Richard Smith
9 Mar 24  +* Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?7Richard Smith
10 Mar 24  i+* Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?2Peter Fairbrother
10 Mar 24  ii`- Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?1Richard Smith
10 Mar 24  i`* Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?4Jim Wilkins
10 Mar 24  i `* Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?3Richard Smith
10 Mar 24  i  +- Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?1Jim Wilkins
10 Mar 24  i  `- Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?1Jim Wilkins
10 Mar 24  `* Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?6Peter Fairbrother
10 Mar 24   `* Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?5Jim Wilkins
10 Mar 24    `* Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?4Peter Fairbrother
11 Mar 24     `* Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?3Jim Wilkins
11 Mar 24      `* Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?2David Billington
11 Mar 24       `- Re: boat propulsion - miniature computer-controlled steam plant?1Jim Wilkins

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