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RE: 1-Wire
Under the soffit is ideal as it is sheltered for the worst of the weather.
Variations in height will make little difference in a domestic setting - in
the past I've had to mount external sensors on rooftop plantrooms of high
rise buildings and have found little variation in temp readings compared to
those at lower levels.
Neil B.
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From: ukha_d@xxxxxxx [mailto:ukha_d@xxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
Hawes,Timothy Edward (GEG)
Sent: 27 January 2006 12:04
To: ukha_d@xxxxxxx
Subject: RE: [ukha_d] 1-Wire
I extended my patio last year, or it might've been the year before, and
sunk a sensor into the grout between a couple of slabs. I'm not entirely
sure why I did it, other than it wasn't much effort and I had a spare
sensor, and I haven't used it in anger yet. Because of the thermal mass
of the slabs around it I don't know if would be any good at predicting
black ice etc. I really need to get it permanently connected and monitor
it for a while.
I'm also planning on putting one outside for air temperature and
wondered whether underneath the upstairs soffit would be representative
(easy access to a Cat5 run). How much does the temperature vary over a
5m height from ground level?
Cheers,
Tim.
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