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Wide operating temperature range: -20 to +250 Celsius degree
Dielectric strength: 1,500V AC for one second
Short thermal response time in water, high stability in moisture
Suitable for use in high-temperature and moisture environments
High accuracy, Different tolerancr available ,Cost-effective
UL approval ,RoHS compliant
Climatic category:IEC60068-1
Resistance tolerance :+/-1% to +/-5%
Insulation resistance: Greater or equal 100Mohm
Dissipation Coefficient : 2.6-15mW/Celsius degree in still air
Time constant : 25-65 Seconds in still air
Moisture resistance: 40Celsius degree 95% RH 1000 hours
Recommended Applications:
1. Temperature measurement in household appliances:
air condtioner,refrigerator,dryers,cooker,small appliance
2. Automobile
3. Temperature sensors for industry control
Satellite: Sentinel-2. Sensor: MSI (MultiSpectral Instrument).
Visualization RGB: bands 4 (red), 3 (green), 2 (blue). Optimized Natural Color.
La imagen tiene 98 km de ancho (aprox.)
Adentrándose en el mar para separar las aguas del Atlántico de las del Cantábrico, Estaca de Bares es el punto más septentrional de toda la península ibérica.
Desde este promontorio gris, verde e imponente se domina una vista espectacular. Estaca de Bares es uno de los mejores puntos de observación de aves de Europa, de hecho cuenta con una estación ornitológica permanente. Miles y miles de aves pasan por aquí cada año, en especial de septiembre a diciembre, por lo que para especialistas y aficionados de todo el mundo este es el paraíso. (www.turismo.gal/que-visitar/espazos-naturais/zonas-de-pro...)
Esta imagen ha sido procesada con el navegador EO Browser (apps.sentinel-hub.com/eo-browser) de Sentinel Hub. Sentinel Hub es un motor de procesamiento de datos satelitales, dentro del programa de observación de la Tierra Copernicus (copernicus.eu) de la Unión Europea, operado por la empresa Sinergise. EO Browser es gratuito y fácil de usar. El norte siempre está arriba.
This image has been processed using the EO Browser (apps.sentinel-hub.com/eo-browser) by Sentinel Hub. Sentinel Hub is a satellite data processing engine, within the European Union's Earth observation programme Copernicus (copernicus.eu), operated by the Sinergise company. EO Browser is free and easy to use. North is always up.
A before/after shot to show dust on my sensor. I swiped the sensor with an Arctic Butterfly brush before the after image. Not bad, not bad at all.
I am trying my sensor in my arm for the first time. It hurts a little but I suspect that will go away soon.
My circuit is almost complete, so measuring where my RGB LED strips need to come off the circuit, the stripboard will be cut down and where/how the barometric sensor will be attached on outside of skirt via a small piece of stripboard attached by flywires.
TS is the temparature sensing node of the SeeMoto system. It provides accurate, realtime temperature information to the system and has logging capabilities for off-line use. The TS-Temperature sensor is battery operated, and requires no wiring and is thus very easy to install on any location.
* Transportation and storage of fresh and frozen food (EN 12830, EN 13485)
* Remote monitoring
* Buildings and warehouses
* Condition monitoring
Picture taken at 50mm f:22, over a white roof. PP whit Camera Raw to show dust spot more crearly.
The picture was flipped to show the sensor as seen from the lens bayonet in a way to make easier the clean up.
Some very big spot on the right center side.
Caterpillar's 777 dump truck uses these and other sensors to navigate around job sites autonomously.
150306 Les Corts. Jornada festiva a les superilles de la Maternitat i Sant Ramon per la sensibilització sensorial. Carrer Benavent i la plaça de les Ceràmiques Vicens. Barcelona 06/03/2015 Foto: Robert Ramos
Backup sensor that is offered as an option to the satellite navigation system. As the car moves closer to an object, the graphical display turns red and an audible signal becomes quicker and louder.
Creo que tengo el sensor lleno de polvo, ah no son pajaros ¡¡¡
I think that i have the sensor full of dust, oh no they are birds ¡¡¡
[need to view full size]
One thing I found with the nikon D300 and now with my D700 is that the built in sensor cleaning function is pretty useless.
First of all, the camera comes out of the box with the cleaning option set to off by default... c'mon Nikon! ... I now have it set to clean the sensor when I switch on and off.
Well, it's taken about 1800 shutter activations and several outdoor lens changes... I finally got a spot showing on moderate apertures.
I've cleaned my other camera sensors plenty of times but I always get nervous with a new camera. I used Eclipse E2 solution and pec pads taped to a spatula - a used digipad swab [see note below]. But now I have a full frame sensor I thought I'd try 'Just - 24mm Sensor Cleaning Swabs' from warehouseexpress.co.uk. I'm impressed with them, they are individually sealed and have about the right amount of bendiness for want of a better word.
The top frame shows the spot before cleaning. The second frame the spot is gone but some dust has been distributed elsewhere on the frame - this is pretty standard. Finally, most dust is gone, a few spots near the edge but nothing that will affect my shoots this weekend. Ignore the blotchy look, that's the white paper and digital noise I guess. I have increased the black level a lot to enhance the spots - this enhances blotchiness.
I think I might change my process next time, I might use a narrow spatula with a pec pad taped to it for the edge and a 24mm spatula for a final sweep... or the other way around... hmm. Either way, the 24mm spatula only just fits through the shutter. Maybe the next size down will work better.
Incidentally, anyone reading this thinking of cleaning their sensor for the first time should read about it online. Read about the Copperhill Method, sensor brushes [I don't bother with them] and others before you try it :D The forums are a bit mixed, there are a lot of people who make recommendations and actually have no idea themselves so it's hard to get good advice there - but trawl through them anyway.
*about digipads - I used a spatula from a digipad with a pec pad taped around it for my D300 cleaning process. The digipads - as they came out of the bag - were rubbish. They come with material attached like most cleaning pads, but they left more dust on the sensor then they removed. Maybe I had a bad batch, I dunno.
Trying to reverse engineer how toy sword circuits detect a swing motion and do not trigger for a tilt motion, using only two cheap tilt switches installed perpendicular to each other. Am going to place some tilt sensors on a board in various orientations, wire them to LEDs, and swing the board while watching the blinking LEDs for a pattern.
Before I do this experiment, my hypothesis follows: Software loop detects state change on tilt_sensor1 and starts a timer. Timer will count down to zero then stop, setting a flag. If tilt_sensor1 state changes again, the timer is restarted.
If software loop detects a state change on tilt_sensor2 AND the timer flag is cleared (timer is running), then swing is detected.
Timer length will be adjusted for sensitivity.