Aren't there emissivity and reflected temperature controls to calibrate in the camera?
Frankly the interface is sluggish and not made by Apple. But there are many options to play with.
I guess it's all about what you said, as the DAC chip is surrounded by multiple nearby boards if they act like mirrors that's a problem!
A too big toy for a simple user, that confirms that the Fluke 179 is fine for me! Precise instruments are no easy toys...
https://www.distrimesure.com/fr/cam...mera-infrarouge-160-x-120-chauvin-arnoux.html
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I would tap on the big caps to do that rather than at the output. ZM advises to put a resistor in series with the LED, with a value of 1K per voltage, so roughly 12K for a 12V.I presume it's ok to put an LED across the DC out to use as an on/off indicator or is there a better place to put the LED?
Yes, better to avoid adding the LED's small noise to the output.
Hi Salas, thanks for your work, just installed on my circuit, great..
I was wondering if it's possible put on/off led on D11 or if the best choice to avoid noises remains big caps.
The voltage on D11 is 3.2V circa, and it's suitable for blue led without resistor.
Thanks
Hi, D11 has surge capability for reverse voltage mishap protection that an LED can't match. Plus its noise would go right across the output transistor. Not a good place for an LED.
Thanks Salas, sorry for my low knowledge..
No worries. Red, green, yellow, amber LEDs aren't too terrible for noise (blue or white have more) when put across the output if someone absolutely must. Say its an afterthought and much easier to wire there now for some practical reason.
But if you can plan ahead why not powering all possible LED indicators from the raw DC side and avoid messing with the output side. To program an LED's current follow this simple equation If=(Vdc-LedVf)/R.
Example, if 10V is available say on the raw side, for a green Led of 2V forward voltage drop use 8.2k in series. Near 1mA current will result. Not to be much bright if on a panel. Still from the equation you can size the resistor's value lower for more mA thus brighter light.
But if you can plan ahead why not powering all possible LED indicators from the raw DC side and avoid messing with the output side. To program an LED's current follow this simple equation If=(Vdc-LedVf)/R.
Example, if 10V is available say on the raw side, for a green Led of 2V forward voltage drop use 8.2k in series. Near 1mA current will result. Not to be much bright if on a panel. Still from the equation you can size the resistor's value lower for more mA thus brighter light.
But if you can plan ahead why not powering all possible LED indicators from the raw DC side and avoid messing with the output side. To program an LED's current follow this simple equation If=(Vdc-LedVf)/R.
About raw DC do you mean from big caps, am i right?
Another option: i've available another 9v secondary, if i used it with an AC DC voltage regulator to connect led? Is it a right way?
Thanks Salas..
Hi everyone,
Still trying to read through all fifty pages of this thread...
I ought to be able to power my RPi through the 5VDC connector on the HiFiBerry DAC+ Pro, correct?
Datasheet DAC+ Pro | HiFiBerry
Is there any reason to not use a two pin header connector? I have some with beefy wire from a few past Pi projects.
Thanks!
Still trying to read through all fifty pages of this thread...
I ought to be able to power my RPi through the 5VDC connector on the HiFiBerry DAC+ Pro, correct?
Datasheet DAC+ Pro | HiFiBerry
Is there any reason to not use a two pin header connector? I have some with beefy wire from a few past Pi projects.
Thanks!
Got her up and running. Seems to be working beautifully. Am running an Rpi4, with SSD connected directly to it. Running an Allo Digione hat. Have set the L-adapter to 5.1V under load. 50VA 2 x 9V transformer, secondaries connected in parallel. Might be expectation bias, but I swear music sounds fuller bodied now, smoother and more ‘analogue’ like. VERY pleased! Will find a suitable case for it now. Thanks for another superb creation Salas!
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.
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