It's what the sell on adafruit. The data sheet shows those two as normally open.
To be honest I always plug in the other side and verify which pins go to which contact. My guess only one is needed for the shell ground.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
It's what the sell on adafruit. The data sheet shows those two as normally open.
Same here :0) .To be honest I always plug in the other side and verify which pins go to which contact. My guess only one is needed for the shell ground.
The historical values are hourly average, hence can be of higher precision (like the average of 45.2 and 45.3 is 45.25) than the actual readings. Though I have seen couple of time higher precision in current readings due a glitch. If you are experiencing that, let us know, its a bug.I have a small question if you all don’t mind. Reef-pi reports temperature to four decimal places, but the sensor only has a resolution of 0.0625°C, which converts to 0.1125°F. If reef-pi could round the temp data to .1°F (one decimal place) there would be no loss of resolution, and the graphs would be easer to read. Any thoughts on this?
I have this issue on current temperature display. Right now I am getting 4 decimal display. I have seen more. I am running version 2.1 so if it was fixed after this than it is my fault for not upgrading.The historical values are hourly average, hence can be of higher precision (like the average of 45.2 and 45.3 is 45.25) than the actual readings. Though I have seen couple of time higher precision in current readings due a glitch. If you are experiencing that, let us know, its a bug.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01CVGD4UI/Can anyone recommend good 3.5mm panel mount jacks that can be mounted to a 3mm thick panel? The adafruit ones don't quite work...
I hear you. I dont have anything immediately planned, but when I start working on temperature calibration (after ph driver is finished), I may touch upon this. I think if we use a moving average of some sort that will eliminate those cases where ds18b20 gives bad data in the very beginning. As for this particular case, do you think setting the limit on alerts (throttle setting under telemetry) will help? I'll keep noting down these signals so that I can attack them collectively (as many as I can) when I work on that part.I changed my host name and rebooted and now none of my temperature sensors are showing up.
My temps are still on my dashboard and being read properly but I am being spammed with email alerts.
If I try and add a new temperature I can't because the sensors aren't showing anymore.
***EDIT- I tried to reboot but it didn't work so I powered off and back on and all my sensors are working as they should be.
Some of this can also happen due to celsius to fahrenheit conversion logic.Thank you very much for your response. I do not know if it is a glitch, but my temperature graph is out to 4 decimal places. I am running version 2.2 on a Pi Zero W.
I think 1 digit is enough. The resolution of the sensor is 0.11 F. Showing precision beyond the resolution might make someone feel good but it has no meaning.Some of this can also happen due to celsius to fahrenheit conversion logic.
Do you all think two decimal precision is enough? I personally think so. If we all agree I can make that a standard thing across all reef-pi metrics.
The specs for this state it's for panels up to 0.075in (2mm). This is gonna be a tough nut to crack. I could countersink the hole, but it would need to be done by hand, as there isn't enough room for my drill to get into where it needs to be.https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01CVGD4UI/
these should be ok
Tap the panel and don't bother using the supplied nut.The specs for this state it's for panels up to 0.075in (2mm). This is gonna be a tough nut to crack. I could countersink the hole, but it would need to be done by hand, as there isn't enough room for my drill to get into where it needs to be.
Think I found ones: https://www.arrow.com/en/products/54-00081/tensility-international
The datasheet shows 7.1mm threading (plus 1.5mm for chassis), so I think these will work. For $2 each and free shipping, I'll give them a shot
I generally use dremel for the same jobThe specs for this state it's for panels up to 0.075in (2mm). This is gonna be a tough nut to crack. I could countersink the hole, but it would need to be done by hand, as there isn't enough room for my drill to get into where it needs to be.