R
Robert Macy
Guest
On Apr 5, 9:00 am, Jim Thompson <To-Email-Use-The-Envelope-I...@On-My-
Web-Site.com> wrote:
Web-Site.com> wrote:
Isn't Doppler less intrusive?On Thu, 5 Apr 2012 05:52:39 -0700 (PDT), Robert Macy
robert.a.m...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Apr 4, 7:15 pm, Jamie
jamie_ka1lpa_not_valid_after_ka1l...@charter.net> wrote:
Robert Macy wrote:
On Apr 3, 3:13 pm, Jamie
jamie_ka1lpa_not_valid_after_ka1l...@charter.net> wrote:
...snip...
if air current movement is all that is being looked for, then, the
simple mass air flow sensor I made with 0.005 bronze wire as the sensor
would work great..
That was so sensitive with a 6 foot center tapped wire that one could
stand ~ 10-15 feet away and blow just slightly through their lips and it
would react to it. Of course, that meant setting the threshold to a
critical point.
jamie
FASCINATING! Elaborate?
Where did you get 36 Awg bronze wire? What is the mechanism of
conversion from air mass movement to electrical signal? How accurate
must the center tap be? ....
I have an advantage when it comes to getting the wire, I work at a
place where we make many cables, wires etc, products. Fine bronze wire
is just one of those components we use in braid. I just walked out and
grab some from stock
Any way, you can get it on small rolls from various places. We used a
comparator circuit. We just set a fixed reference that can be trimmed on
one input and a voltage divided reference via the bronze wire on the
other input.
If you place one half of the tapped, lets say the lower side in the
area of interest but not in the breeze way, it'll be able to be at the
ambient temperature as the top half. The top half will be exposed to
the expected air flow.
The top side of this voltage divider is connected to the (+) rail
where a small amount of current will be present and cause the wire to
heat up
just a little bit.
When the top wire cools due to air flow around it, the R value on the
top side will drop. This drop will of course cause more current and
force the lower side to heat up even more and raise in R at the same
time. So the effect works for you in both aspects.
In the end, you get a nice effect and it reacts very quickly.
Since comparators and op-amps have such a high gain to start with, it
does not take much to fully switch the state. One could clean it up a
bit with a little hysteresis added.
If you need a basic ASCII schematic I can plop one where.
Jamie
EXCELLENT description. I never thought of running current through the
wire!
Is that an ASCII netlist? like PSpice .cir file?
If in LTspice, the .asc file is also ASCII, starts with line that says
version 4.
post here or send direclty to me
....apologies to original poster for hijacking his original thread.
However, I still recommend to him to get a fast updating altimeter -
that is a low frequency microphone. Didn't say how low? I think it's
called a geophone, or something like that.
For my Bachelor's thesis at MIT (in conjunction with Harvard Med
School) I used two very small thermistors on the end of a catheter,
one with current to heat it, one without, to measure blood flow in the
heart...
www.analog-innovations.com/BS_Thesis_JE_Thompson_1962.pdf
...Jim Thompson
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