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#41
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On Sat, 20 Aug 2011 19:11:12 -0500, G. Morgan wrote:
Why 6 sensors? You would just need two on each tank, like how limit switches work in garage door openers. Or are you going for greater resolution? Seems to me, if the work is going to be done to fit sensors, one may as well measure with greater granularity, than less. |
#42
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#43
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#44
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#45
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SF Man wrote:
Hmmmm... that would be bad news. I 'thought' each sensor would be a different 'zone' so that the warning light would be a ladder of sorts. For example, zone 1 triggers at, say, 1/6th the tank, zone 2 triggers at 2/6th, zone 3 at 3/6ths, etc., until zone 6 triggers at full. Yes, you can do it like that. Waterbugs are submersible, that's why they say can "detect ABSENCE of water". I've been in the business a while, and they are reliable (first hand experience). The other Winland environmental sensors are great too. |
#46
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On Aug 21, 5:25*am, G. Morgan wrote:
SF Man wrote: Hmmmm... that would be bad news. I 'thought' each sensor would be a different 'zone' so that the warning light would be a ladder of sorts. For example, zone 1 triggers at, say, 1/6th the tank, zone 2 triggers at 2/6th, zone 3 at 3/6ths, etc., until zone 6 triggers at full. Yes, you can do it like that. *Waterbugs are submersible, that's why they say can "detect ABSENCE of water". *I've been in the business a while, and they are reliable (first hand experience). * The other Winland environmental sensors are great too. Yes, he can do it like that. But as I recall, there are two tanks in question and they are 100 to 200 ft from the house. He wants to know the level of water in each of the tanks. Let's assume they are just connected directlyh together, in which case the water levels are the same. To get that level with a reasonable degree of accuracy he's need about 6 of these sensors. Then, he'd still need to somehow get the results back to the house. Which means either running these waterbugs individually back to the house, or else using wireless networking with an I/O device to read the status of the waterbugs and then send it to the home network. Even if he does individual runs, then what? He still needs something to display the status because from the spec sheets neither the WB200, nor the WB350 has a display. If he wants to go that route, he could use 8 sensors and the WB800, which appears to have a suitable display. But doing 6 or 8 runs of wire 100 - 200 ft outside sounds like a PIA. Plus, don't know how he feels about the price, but online a WB800 plus another 4 sensors is ~ $260 And if he goes the wireless route, instead of a bunch of sensors he could use one transducer that measures water pressure in the bottom of the tank and know exactly how much water he has. He just has to interface that to an ethernet I/O device that is compatible. |
#47
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#48
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SF Man wrote:
On Fri, 19 Aug 2011 05:00:57 +0200, Sjouke Burry wrote: put reed relays along the pipe, which switch a row of say 10-20 leds. That should give you a nice display I'm amazed at the ingenuity of the suggestions! This idea seems elegant. A pipe with a floating magnet (either inside the pipe or a ring outside the pipe). As the magnet moves up and down, differnet switches are turned on or off. Are you suggesting that the one switch which is 'active' would be the water level? I guess that would take a lot of reed switches ... to cover about 5 feet of water level travel ... but the result 'would' be an interesting display in the kitchen! I was thinking immersed thermisters. Self heat generators just like a gas tank. You might be able to use a small bank, how many do you need, there are temperature sensors that have an adjustable range, with on on off output. Same as magnetics without need for magnet. Greg |
#49
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a different approach add a tank for non essential uses like watering
lawn etc. when its dry you dont irrigate. this would add capacity and be realtively simple to implement. no sensors needed other than protection for the pump irrigation..... i did something similiar when just out of high school my mom depended on a cistern which would spill water when full. i added a tank to the spillage line, and mom used the waste water to irrigate her garden. the cistern was on top of the hill so no pump was needed of course drip type irrigation would cut water use dramatically |
#50
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On Aug 21, 1:49*am, SF Man wrote:
On Sat, 20 Aug 2011 18:16:01 -0700 (PDT), wrote: The weight of the water in the tank creates pressure and that is what you measure with one transducer. *That pressure tells you the exact level of water in the tank. I like that idea. It's simple, and linear. Now to find the sensor ... I'll google. Another simple possibility. If you don't mind running a wire from the tank to the house, you could probably use an off-the-shelf water pressure gauge for auto or marine. You get a transducer and a gauge that work off 12V. You'd need one that reads from 0 to about 25 psi and I think you could find one close to that. Then you'd have a gauge that shows the water level. |
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