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#1
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![]() Owen Duffy wrote: On 4 Dec 2006 06:07:44 -0800, "Denny" wrote: ... So I purchased an Infrared measurement gun... fascinating little instrument - did you know that on a clear day with the air temperature +12.1 F and zero wind, that a 5 foot diameter black rubber tractor tire facing the clear sky to the North can have a surface temp of -2.6 to -3.0 F? I didn't but that is what I found... OK, I digress again It is not such a digression. You should do make measurements of the temperature of different materials that you know are at the same temperature, and see what results you get from your non-contact thermometer. The emissivity of the surface is an important factor that limits the absolute accuracy of these things. It is an interesting experiment that you have described, though I am not sure that surface temperature (if it is accurate) alone is a good indicator of the power flow to the air. For example, would you expect that the temperatures of natural coloured and black aluminium heatsink to be the same if dissipating the same (non zero) power in the same environment? Extending that to your experiment, is dark enamelled copper wire (as may be used in a coil) a better black body radiator than bright aluminium (as may be used in a capacitor). Owen -- Actually, unless the heat sink gets pretty hot relative to its surroundings, a large percentage of the heat loss is convective, not radiative, assuming we're operating in air at normal atmospheric pressures. It all gets much more interesting in a good vacuum. If I got the numbers right, for example, blackbody radiation at 280K is about 35 milliwatts/cm^2, and at 300K it's about 46 milliwatts/cm^2. So 20C above roughly room temperature ambient gets you a whopping net 11 milliwatts/cm^2 to radiation. (Fins facing each other don't help radiation, but do help convection.) Cheers, Tom |
#2
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![]() Owen Duffy wrote: On 4 Dec 2006 06:07:44 -0800, "Denny" wrote: ... So I purchased an Infrared measurement gun... fascinating little instrument - did you know that on a clear day with the air temperature +12.1 F and zero wind, that a 5 foot diameter black rubber tractor tire facing the clear sky to the North can have a surface temp of -2.6 to -3.0 F? I didn't but that is what I found... OK, I digress again It is not such a digression. You should do make measurements of the temperature of different materials that you know are at the same temperature, and see what results you get from your non-contact thermometer. The emissivity of the surface is an important factor that limits the absolute accuracy of these things. It is an interesting experiment that you have described, though I am not sure that surface temperature (if it is accurate) alone is a good indicator of the power flow to the air. For example, would you expect that the temperatures of natural coloured and black aluminium heatsink to be the same if dissipating the same (non zero) power in the same environment? Extending that to your experiment, is dark enamelled copper wire (as may be used in a coil) a better black body radiator than bright aluminium (as may be used in a capacitor). Owen -- (I apologize for not thinking of this in time to include it in my previous posting...) Remember, too, that what looks "black" to us in the visible spectrum may be quite different over the spectrum including most of the radiation, especially when the object is only about 250K to 350K. At 300K, the peak of black body radiation occurs at about 10 microns, less than 1/10000th the frequency of visible light. I suppose heat sinks are dyed black more because we think they should look black than because it does any good thermally. And avoid buying heat sinks that are PAINTED black; the paint just adds to the thermal resistance. Cheers, Tom |
#3
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![]() K7ITM wrote: Owen Duffy wrote: On 4 Dec 2006 06:07:44 -0800, "Denny" wrote: ... So I purchased an Infrared measurement gun... fascinating little instrument - did you know that on a clear day with the air temperature +12.1 F and zero wind, that a 5 foot diameter black rubber tractor tire facing the clear sky to the North can have a surface temp of -2.6 to -3.0 F? I didn't but that is what I found... OK, I digress again It is not such a digression. You should do make measurements of the temperature of different materials that you know are at the same temperature, and see what results you get from your non-contact thermometer. The emissivity of the surface is an important factor that limits the absolute accuracy of these things. It is an interesting experiment that you have described, though I am not sure that surface temperature (if it is accurate) alone is a good indicator of the power flow to the air. For example, would you expect that the temperatures of natural coloured and black aluminium heatsink to be the same if dissipating the same (non zero) power in the same environment? Extending that to your experiment, is dark enamelled copper wire (as may be used in a coil) a better black body radiator than bright aluminium (as may be used in a capacitor). Owen -- (I apologize for not thinking of this in time to include it in my previous posting...) Remember, too, that what looks "black" to us in the visible spectrum may be quite different over the spectrum including most of the radiation, especially when the object is only about 250K to 350K. At 300K, the peak of black body radiation occurs at about 10 microns, less than 1/10000th the frequency of visible light. I suppose heat sinks are dyed black more because we think they should look black than because it does any good thermally. And avoid buying heat sinks that are PAINTED black; the paint just adds to the thermal resistance. Cheers, Tom Shoot, make that "less than 1/10th the frequency of visible light," but still darned little radiated in the visible region. There's cool 'speriment using a spherical flask of visibly opaque liquid to focus IR radiation to a point where you can feel it very easily. What you see in the visible spectrum isn't what IR "sees." Cheers, Tom |
#4
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K8DO writted: :-)
So I purchased an Infrared measurement gun... So what kind and price? 73 Yuri |
#5
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On 4 Dec 2006 06:07:44 -0800, "Denny" wrote:
fascinating little instrument - did you know that on a clear day with the air temperature +12.1 F and zero wind, that a 5 foot diameter black rubber tractor tire facing the clear sky to the North can have a surface temp of -2.6 to -3.0 F? I didn't but that is what I found... OK, I digress again Hi Denny, More fascinating was that everyone missed the significance of the reported temperature. The coil was found to be +12.9 to +13.1 F and the condenser plates were +31.5 to +32.3 F... A result which sent me away mumbling to myself... Not what I expected... OK, another surprise. we all know that condensers are 100% efficient and coils are lossy - right?... Of course, and then the conversation went towards power factors and such. Didn't Georg Simon Ohm die for all your sins, folks? You need another specialized piece of test gear - in tribute to our departed Reggie's folk-hero: a Kelvin Bridge Ohm Meter. Don't ask for one at Radio Shack. When (and if) you get one, try measuring the resistance of your home made cap (and I don't mean lead-to-lead, but lead-to-plate, and for each plate, and for each lead connection). For those who would press a Radio Shack Ohm Meter into this service, a gratuitous -Chuckle- 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#6
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Richard, I doubt many of us have to go buy a Kelvin Bridge Ohmmeter
from eBay to get what you're after. I've got a Radio Shack meter with a 300mV scale; I've got a hefty power supply with current limit, and I've got a 55 watt, 12V fog lamp. I'll admit, I had to think pretty hard to figure out where I had a load resistor to keep my power supply from going into overcurrent shutdown, but it's on the premises, so it counts ;-) I think I can do milliohm measurements of no more dubious accuracy than the voltage and current accuracy of my Radio Shack meter in the vicinity of 4.5A and 4.5mV Long live four wire resistance measurements! Denny, I'd be interested in whether or not lead resistance was a major loss component if you want run a few amps DC through your cap lead / plate connection and measure the voltage drop. 73, Dan |
#7
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On 4 Dec 2006 22:20:34 -0800, "
wrote: Long live four wire resistance measurements! Hi Dan, A Cigar to the man who knows how to parlay Radio Shack into a winner! 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#8
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![]() In my usual habit I'll reply off the bottom of the que... Lots of good comments and suggestions... In no particular order: I suspect the surface of the black tire had cooled below ambient by convective radiation... Happens to my windshield on mornings above freezing ambient whilst the windshield will be a skim of ice... Though the thought of what the tire might read under non-convective conditions occurred and was duly filed away in that great container in my head for further inspection... Actually I use the Rubble Method for filing information.. That is everything in my head is tossed on a great heap of rubble, and as I stir through the pile looking for one item, interesting bits of flotsam and jetsam flow back to the top of the heap for inspection, "oooh ya, I remember that!" Yes, the thought that there might be unwanted resistance in the connections to the condenser plates occurred and remains to be investigated... The connecting wire is the #10 magnet wire forming the coil and is firmly bolted with #8 brass hardware and flat washers to a 1"x1" tab formed on the edge of the plate when I cut the plates from a sheet... For Yuri, congratulations on the CQ160 win(s), nice job my friend... Drop me a description of his antenna setup... Wanna be's like me are always looking for an edge... On the IR gun, it was in the ~$65 range on sale, as their economy model, I don't remember who the internet vendor is, I can get you the make and model if you need it... But just do a search, lots of sources and prices... The little bit I have used it I have been satisfied with the readings - nothing rings my 'no-way, Jose!' meter, so far... The 35' long radiant tube heater in my shop shows ~375-385 F at the mid point from 8 feet away, which is about right as it will not ignite paper on contact I tried though it makes it brown - paper has an ignition temp of ~454 F per Ray Bradbury at least... The gun has a laser spot so you can see where the detector is aimed and the size of the spot is proportional to the area being measured at that distance... I suspect that dielectric loss in the soda glass is the prime contributor to the temperature rise on the plates... There is a significant amount of joules passing through the glass as strain in the dielectric.. Oh yeah, the question on the type of glass... Bad habits as an old lab rat surfaced when I wrote that... Common window glass is float formed on molten tin, and that is what my old chemical stained brain popped out as 'stannous'... On differential IR readings from the surface of various materials - well I can't say for sure as my credentials in thermodynamics are shaky at best (picture me shuddering in pain at the memories of Schrodinger equations and those IBM punch cards we used to program the computer in the physics lab 40 years ago - 'the horror, the horror'..... But, all the materials in the tuner were within a few tenths when at ambient, so I have no reason to suspect a gotcha when midly warmed... denny / k8do - often confused but never in doubt... |
#9
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Brain fart - substitute "radiation cooling" for 'convective cooling' in
my last post.. The thought struck me as I was wandering down the hallway that I had a senior moment when I used the term convective for cooling to the sky by radiation, duh... denny - hey, even Einstein had his moments see Cosmological Constant |
#10
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K8DO wrote:
For Yuri, congratulations on the CQ160 win(s), nice job my friend... Drop me a description of his antenna setup... Wanna be's like me are always looking for an edge... On the IR gun, it was in the ~$65 range on sale, as their economy model, I don't remember who the internet vendor is, I can get you the make and model if you need it... But just do a search, lots of sources and prices... The little bit I have used it I have been satisfied with the readings - nothing rings my 'no-way, Jose!' meter, so far... Any info on the IR gun would be appreciated, sounds, like right one for what I want to use it (check the loading coils etc.) Thanks! Wal's station rocks, even with this rusty OF. I put some pictures on our Tesla web site www.TeslaRadio.org, click on PHOTOS and W8LRL. It will be our goal to beat it from N2EE. We just came back from some slave labor of love, clearing more brush in freezing windy WX, leveling the field for RF :-) Waitng for the swamp to freeze so we can walk around and fix the antennas. 73 Yuri, K3BU |
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