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-   -   Wind speed instrument: what voltages should it produce? (https://www.boatbanter.com/electronics/95322-wind-speed-instrument-what-voltages-should-produce.html)

John Seager June 17th 08 09:26 AM

Wind speed instrument: what voltages should it produce?
 

"Richard Casady" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 15:11:45 +0200, "John Seager"
wrote:

Unfortunately, the wiring runs through a very tightly
packed conduit up the mast which will have to be dismantled to get the
wire
out. In the meantime, I'll check the visible ends.


You say the wires are in a raceway on the
inside of the mast? Can you follow the time honored Navy practice of
abandoning the old wires in place, and running fresh ones outside the
bundle. If you get zillion wire cables, they can swing around inside
the mast without breaking eventually. Tape them to the outside of the
mast, until it has to come down for some reason, and run the wires at
that time.

Casady


The wiring is in a conduit on the outside of the mast, so it is relatively
accessible, but independent wiring isn't a bad idea for a temporary
solution. I'm not planning on taking the mast down any time soon, so I guess
whatever I do will have to be done from the bosun's chair.
J



John Seager June 17th 08 09:56 AM

Wind speed instrument: what voltages should it produce?
 

"Steve Lusardi" wrote in message
...
John,
I am not sure this is relevant, but often more than one data inut can be
transmitted on a single wire like speed and azimuth, where speed is
derived as an ac signal (pulse rate) It could be riding on top of a dc
reference voltage used in azimuth calculation. These two pieces of
intelligence could easily be separated using capacitive coupling at the
receiver.
Steve

This starts to sound a bit more complicated to this electronically
challanged sailor! But I think I get your point - this would mean that a
steady DC voltage would prove that the wire is connected (to something) but
an absence of AC pulse might imply that the anemometer has failed?
J




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