Firebrick43
Well-known member
My 25 year old central AC unit stopped the other day and it needs a new fan motor. In the process of checking everything out I pulled my digital IR temp gun to help figure out superheat and it didn't work. New 9V battery, would start and pull the trigger it would die and restart as if the battery was questionable in current output but another battery same thing. Seen same scenario with digital torque wrenches which is always why I stuck with split beams.
Ended up using the kids rectal thermometer to measure the pressure line (they won't use it again as they are older now) and it did ok. At work I always used a fluke with clamp on thermocouple but my personal fluke isn't that fancy and really don't want to drop coin on another DMM or some fancy thermocouple only device that will be dead the next time I use it. If I was doing it professionally I surely would have a nice fieldpiece digital manifold with the wireless clip on thermometers.
I used a pocket kitchen thermometer to measure Delta T on the plenum and registers(don't tell my wife) and got to thinking, they had to use something like this before the digital age. But how did they hold it against the lines to take the measurements (without just setting there manually holding it for a few minutes)
Doing some google and ebay searches there certainly were analog micron gauges but they looked to be ungainly things. Were they used in the field on residential systems?
All my professional experience came from working on mill water cooled refrigerant chillers for CNC machines well after digital age tools were in play, More curious to what was used back in the day.
Ended up using the kids rectal thermometer to measure the pressure line (they won't use it again as they are older now) and it did ok. At work I always used a fluke with clamp on thermocouple but my personal fluke isn't that fancy and really don't want to drop coin on another DMM or some fancy thermocouple only device that will be dead the next time I use it. If I was doing it professionally I surely would have a nice fieldpiece digital manifold with the wireless clip on thermometers.
I used a pocket kitchen thermometer to measure Delta T on the plenum and registers(don't tell my wife) and got to thinking, they had to use something like this before the digital age. But how did they hold it against the lines to take the measurements (without just setting there manually holding it for a few minutes)
Doing some google and ebay searches there certainly were analog micron gauges but they looked to be ungainly things. Were they used in the field on residential systems?
All my professional experience came from working on mill water cooled refrigerant chillers for CNC machines well after digital age tools were in play, More curious to what was used back in the day.