help needed with multiple temp sensor data logging project
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darn you beat me before the edit
http://www.hw-group.com/products/sensors/Temp-1Wire_en.html
has got me thinking about telephone hubs
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darn you beat me before the edit
http://www.hw-group.com/products/sensors/Temp-1Wire_en.html
has got me thinking about telephone hubs
@MasterCATZ 1-wire hubs are active, sort of like usb. You dont want your one wire network to be a star topology. You want some thing like railroad tracks, long wires(rails) with short connections to the sensors(ties). The guides i mentioned really are worth a read before you plan too much.
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Other answers. 1 resistor per 1-wire network.
I believe you can still get a/d converter chips, they could probably be used to read an orp or ph sensor. Water level could possibly be read with a capacative sensor, but you are going run into your power problems again.
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Ok that's what I wanted to know as I did read here
http://www.jon00.me.uk/onewireintro.shtml
50mm was as long as you could gohowever, how does that work if the probe wire is long?
would I be better off making my own probe's with 6 wires with
In / Out ? that then links to the next part of the daisy chain ? -
Ok that's what I wanted to know as I did read here
http://www.jon00.me.uk/onewireintro.shtml
50mm was as long as you could gohowever, how does that work if the probe wire is long?
would I be better off making my own probe's with 6 wires with
In / Out ? that then links to the next part of the daisy chain ?The ds2450 adc is out of production. The ds2438 battery monitor is ehat you'd have to use.
This person was going to use the adc, but ill bet the batter monitor could be made to work.
ReefcentralFor connections, a 3 port rj11 might work, in from previous tank, out to next, and one to the tank sensor. I think if you keep the line to the tank under 1meter you are ok, but i have never built a network as long as you are proposing.
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Read this, there is a formula for what they call weight, and they talk about stubs. That would be the part from the main bus wires to the sensor.
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what is your recommendation for the wireless hardware
"Serial WiFi Module ESP8266 module ESP01"
are what I have tried in the past with poor results
I have been thinking I could make a wireless module, disconnect the sensor from 1 wire and I could plug the probes into wifi when I need to?
how do I go about Daisy chaining the probes
are there any simple splice crimp connector out their?
( might use telephone cables or ribbon cables as I don't think I should use RJ45 just incase someone mistakes as a LAN port )I did come across this
but to me, it just looks like its purpose is just to add the pull-down resistor?
does every probe need the resistor or is only 1x needed?
also any probes for PH that work using 1-wire? or water level sensor?@MasterCATZ
I have no experience of the daisy chaining of sensors but as wallyllama has explained, this is pretty much my understanding of the technique, and I'm sure I read recently about the difference between parasitic power connection and normal fairly recently in a post.Radio
MySensors was originally built around the NRF24 2.4 GHz transceivers as I understand it, but there has been considerable interest and development with the RFM69 series transceivers which have better range in the 433MHz area. I suggest you look at Moteino and the Whisper Node I mentioned earlier as they are well thought out designs, radio module incorporated, low power consumption, compact, etc. and seem reliable. There are multiple alternatives folk here have utilised in the uhf bands varying from the ultra cheap chinese no-name to almost professional grade transceivers, it rather depends whether you want off the shelf units with loads of support or want to experiment with fine soldering. I didn't, as too old and shaky for that, so went Whisper Nodes, and just building them and playing with them now in advance of the Gateway arriving.Some things you may wish to consider are temperature transients in the tank so you can establish the ideal sense point, how often you want the data updated (hourly, every ten minutes, every four seconds) as this may need a RTC, collision management for data coming in, and whether the node needs physically protected against the environment.
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RFM69 does look promising even if
I have to power it -
looks like I will have to make my own sensors that Daisy chain directly off the sensor
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so what I think I will do is
use a trimpot at the start so resistance can be adjusted as sensors/length are altered
cat5 wiring
Dry end has 2x rj11 ends
*example
rj11 (in) pins 1,2,3,4
rj11 (out) pins 5,6,7,8Pin 1 (White/Green) - Power return or ground
Pin 2 (Green) - +5V
Pin 3 (White/Orange) - Power return or ground
Pin 4 (Blue) - DQ (data in)Pin 5 (White/Blue) - 1-Wire return or ground
Pin 6 (Orange) - +5V
Pin 7 (White/Brown) Power return or ground
Pin 8 (Brown) - DQ (data out)all wires join onto the DS18B20 and waterproofed
then up at the dry end use rj11 joiners, they can be pulled apart and have resistors added if needed and if I need to take a sensor out of the daisy chain, it is just a matter of bypassing a joiner
or I just do the STUBS thing 100-150Ω resistor inside a 3 way splitter and have a normal premade waterproofed sensor used with rj11 connector
either should work in the fish room tanks are on racks stacked to each other
so how would I go about doing a 1-wire breakout, as each rack would be pushing the length and I have 14x racks ~3m long 4 tiers
I might be possible to do the daisy chain per 2 racks
is their a way to do it without using multiple Arduino , is there some hardware that would allow multiple runs of 1-wire ? -
another thing does anyone know if putting capacitors in the daisy chain will cause any issues?
I figured haveing a capacitor near a sensor would help keep the power stable?
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There are 1wire "hubs" that would help, they basically turn on or off parts of the network, so each run could be the max distance.
Each network would need only 1 digital pin and resistor, i think you could define multiple pins and do a onewire.begin for each (using different names each of course) i think you would run out of memory or clock cycles before you ran out of pins even with a pro mini.
Using a dedicated 5v line is probably better than a capacitor and parasitic power, especially with long runs and lots of sensors. Unless you can live with really slow polling times. With the complexity you are talking about, I wouldn't be surprised if takes a couple of minutes to poll everything reliably with parasitic power. If it works (i havent tried it) using several pins on the arduino, each controlling a 1wire network might help out considerably. You could service 1 network, while the others are being "charged".
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If you search "1-wire hub", there are premade options, and diy.
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thanks for your guidance
parts arrived yesterday and just got the probes readinghow ever I could not get OWFS to work,
https://www.domoticz.com/wiki/1Wiresudo i2cdetect -y 1
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 a b c d e f
00: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
10: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
20: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
30: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
40: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
50: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
60: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
70: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --but using /sys/bus/w1/devices
they are therecat w1_slave
a2 01 4b 46 7f ff 0c 10 49 : crc=49 YES
a2 01 4b 46 7f ff 0c 10 49 t=26125edit
actually quite happy, using 5v and daisy chained a heap of cat5 cables together for testing, over 100m all working good
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thanks for your guidance
parts arrived yesterday and just got the probes readinghow ever I could not get OWFS to work,
https://www.domoticz.com/wiki/1Wiresudo i2cdetect -y 1
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 a b c d e f
00: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
10: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
20: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
30: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
40: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
50: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
60: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
70: -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --but using /sys/bus/w1/devices
they are therecat w1_slave
a2 01 4b 46 7f ff 0c 10 49 : crc=49 YES
a2 01 4b 46 7f ff 0c 10 49 t=26125edit
actually quite happy, using 5v and daisy chained a heap of cat5 cables together for testing, over 100m all working good
@MasterCATZ :smiley_cat:
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another thing does anyone know if putting capacitors in the daisy chain will cause any issues?
I figured haveing a capacitor near a sensor would help keep the power stable?
@MasterCATZ I'm following this with interest as looking at a WAY smaller scale use with the small 3 legged 18B20 to give individual room temperatures in the house, 4 upstairs, 6 downstairs.
Had originally considered individual room nodes, but this seems a slightly simpler solution (other than lifting parts of the upstairs floor). -
@MasterCATZ I'm following this with interest as looking at a WAY smaller scale use with the small 3 legged 18B20 to give individual room temperatures in the house, 4 upstairs, 6 downstairs.
Had originally considered individual room nodes, but this seems a slightly simpler solution (other than lifting parts of the upstairs floor).@zboblamont I will be able to test the lengths today, making another 20x temperature sockets and I have a heap of 20m cat5 cables to chain from
I am using a trim pot to adjust at the breadboard, so far still 4.7
if I was going to do it again would use a 5 or 10k high precision the 5% pot too dodgy
still yet to use resistors on each drop and I have a 10v 1000uf capacitor on each ground / vcc, no idea if it helps or not
you could also run a 100mbs LAN plus temp probes each using 4x of the 8 cat5 pins
http://www.108relays.ca/dl/1_Wire_Design_Guide_v1.0.pdf
edit
it looks like you have to keep the lengths and probe numbers equal if your splitting them off like a tree
if I had 1 side 6m longer with more probes than the other side a probe read 0 deg
added more probes on the other side and they read fine again
( touch wood )I have placed a probe at the end with no capacitor, can not get it to connect
when I make more probes tomorrow will try that spot again with a capacitor
for now will try the one with out capacitor at the first split near the pi to see what happens, it's pitch black now time for bed :P
strange thing just tried another stock probe with no capacitor and can not get that to work either and I was running these ones inside all day
for some reason voltmeter reads neg millivoltsnow I just want to build another cap probe to see whats going on
edit , either I wired something backwards or maybe i just hit the limits adjusting trim pot now as even the DS18B20 on the bread board stopped responding
edit, somethings not right pulled the main link and its receiving 0 deg from sensors not even plugged in.
new probe and bread board temps working tho
set @ 4k , tried adding another probe at 1st split all died again,
I'd say at my limits without the 100~150 resistors trying to push 6x 20m cables
voltage still 4+but I am sus as to why a probe felt warm where a cap was done, unsure if it was still from the soldering heat or not so I might have something miss wired as I was running as the day light was dropping fast
( this setup is for monitoring tanks in my polytunnels no lights apart from the flash light in my mouth )the goal was 3 x 20m on each side split at the breadboard with ~5m long branches running of each join with 2x probes about every 1 m with 1m long lengths approx 60x DS18B20 and about 210m of cable
unfortunately, I was 1 section short the 5th section would not work
so 50 probes 175m cableI'll try again in a daisy chain formation later on
currently using raspberry pi 2 B and domoticz
I ended up doing rj45 as they worked out cheaper than the rj11/14
I paid $20 for 100 , also why I did not add the capacitor inside like I was going to so they could be used in other areas for LAN, hopefully, no one tries to plug a laptop into them -
might be best to NOT buy the ones I got , just discovered 1x port of just about all of them was not working correctly
( pins on slight angle off setting alignment )causing the probes to be in parasitic mode
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might be best to NOT buy the ones I got , just discovered 1x port of just about all of them was not working correctly
( pins on slight angle off setting alignment )causing the probes to be in parasitic mode
@MasterCATZ I should not have the same issues as the scale in my case is small, but will set up a test with the devices individually just in case before installing. This is the type on it's way (not from this supplier), I can only hope they are genuine components. link text
I will also have to read the guide again as the devices placement and harmonics were a bit of a puzzle, and on one hand they recommended Cat5e yet went on to say twisted pair was better. -
anyone know the correct way I should be using an external power source
I powered them up directly with + - still running to the pi and blew the external 2a 5v power pack ( it also powered up the pi and I believe back-feeding this way removes surge protection )
then I tried with the GND and DQ connected with the pi doing the pull up , external PSU ( 30A rated 5v rail 450w 3.3v 12v 5v ) looked like it was shorting out dropping .2v per probe and changing sound as tho it was under load how ever I am currently using its 3A port
I then tried with just the DQ connected not much luck
then I moved the bread board over the PSU and had the 4.7k pull up on its end and DQ / GND connected to the pi , I seem to have some connections, but getting a lot of unknown vendor type errors
but PSU does not seem to be under loadhttp://datasheets.maximintegrated.com/en/ds/DS2482-100.pdf
I might get one of these I2C one wire bridge that can adjust the strength of the pull-up dynamically as the network growshttp://videos.cctvcamerapros.com/voltage-drop-calculator
has got me thinking I might double up on the strands 24 gauge has too much voltage drop @ 5v
should I just treat each pair as a wire or should I have ground on each twist ?
ie
( p1,p2 GND) Green pair
( p3,p4 VCC ) Blue pair
(p5.p6 DQ ) Orange pair
( p6,p7 GND ) Brown pairor
(p1 ground p2 VCC ) Green pair
(p3,ground p4 VCC ) Blue pair
(p5,ground,p6 DQ ) Orange pair
(p7,ground,p8 DQ ) Brown pairor any other combo, I would rather use a 2amp PSU than a 30 amp .. but thats so far the only way to keep these things powered up in a daisy chain