For the first 12 years of my professional life, I was involved with the Instrumentation and Controls industry, primarily at Nuclear Power Plants. (If any of you worked in this industry, drop me a line!), before moving over to software.
I calibrated a LOT of gauges. I learned a thing or two about them. I'm going to pass on one important aspect of using an analog (the simple dial gauge you may be using) - not to be confused with a digital gauge (which may use thermocouples or RTDs, etc).
You need to take a calibrated finger, preferably your favorite finger, and 'thump' the face of the dial of that gauge each time you go to read it.
There's a couple of reasons for that, some of which are interesting, and some of which are important.
The interesting first: There's actually some friction involved, so that dial needle indicator is going to have a tendency to get stuck, if there's not a lot of difference in temperature involved. So it's going to stick a little bit, then jump when the pressure difference caused by the temperature overcomes the friction. It may jump 5 or 10 or 20 degrees, depending on the quality of your gauge.
A 'thump' with your favorite finger will cause it to move past this friction point, and allow you to see the actual temperature. I know, I know, for a bunch of you social rejects, you are gonna have finger envy, but that's just something you are going to have to deal with on your own.
The important information: When you thump that dial indicator, it's going to do one of three things:
If it jumps up: then your temperature is trending up. You may want to back down on your dampers a little bit.
If it jumps down: then your temperature is trending down. You may want to open up your dampers a little bit.
If it doesn't move: then your dampers are set correctly.
So, it's REAL IMPORTANT to FIRST READ THE TEMPERATURE, then thump it, THEN READ IT AGAIN so you can an idea of the trend.
Happy Smok'in!
I calibrated a LOT of gauges. I learned a thing or two about them. I'm going to pass on one important aspect of using an analog (the simple dial gauge you may be using) - not to be confused with a digital gauge (which may use thermocouples or RTDs, etc).
You need to take a calibrated finger, preferably your favorite finger, and 'thump' the face of the dial of that gauge each time you go to read it.
There's a couple of reasons for that, some of which are interesting, and some of which are important.
The interesting first: There's actually some friction involved, so that dial needle indicator is going to have a tendency to get stuck, if there's not a lot of difference in temperature involved. So it's going to stick a little bit, then jump when the pressure difference caused by the temperature overcomes the friction. It may jump 5 or 10 or 20 degrees, depending on the quality of your gauge.
A 'thump' with your favorite finger will cause it to move past this friction point, and allow you to see the actual temperature. I know, I know, for a bunch of you social rejects, you are gonna have finger envy, but that's just something you are going to have to deal with on your own.
The important information: When you thump that dial indicator, it's going to do one of three things:
- It jumps up.
- It jumps down.
- It doesn't move.
If it jumps up: then your temperature is trending up. You may want to back down on your dampers a little bit.
If it jumps down: then your temperature is trending down. You may want to open up your dampers a little bit.
If it doesn't move: then your dampers are set correctly.
So, it's REAL IMPORTANT to FIRST READ THE TEMPERATURE, then thump it, THEN READ IT AGAIN so you can an idea of the trend.
Happy Smok'in!
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