Props and the cold of NH
Ravenkallen
Posts: 1,057
After i move in to the new place i am going to set up my lab in a more permanent way. I have always wanted to make a cool weather station(Using a Prop of course).
Then i remembered something.. Oh, yeah. How would a Prop and its peripheral components handle the often bitter New Hampshire winters. The temperature can drop below 20 or 30 below here easily. I looked through the Prop datasheet and it had info about the Prop functioning fine with the internal oscillator at some temperatures, but i couldn't really glean that much from it. So, what is the lowest temp that the Prop can handle? Also, would the electrolytic filtering capacitors/ Batteries freeze up first? I have heard that they can't handle extreme cold...Should i consider making some sort of "house" for the Prop that has heating? Maybe like a greenhouse or something like that? Perhaps even throw on a couple of solar cells for power/ heat? Any suggestions are appreciated
Then i remembered something.. Oh, yeah. How would a Prop and its peripheral components handle the often bitter New Hampshire winters. The temperature can drop below 20 or 30 below here easily. I looked through the Prop datasheet and it had info about the Prop functioning fine with the internal oscillator at some temperatures, but i couldn't really glean that much from it. So, what is the lowest temp that the Prop can handle? Also, would the electrolytic filtering capacitors/ Batteries freeze up first? I have heard that they can't handle extreme cold...Should i consider making some sort of "house" for the Prop that has heating? Maybe like a greenhouse or something like that? Perhaps even throw on a couple of solar cells for power/ heat? Any suggestions are appreciated
Comments
A greenhouse isn't going to work well at night unless it's specifically designed for heat storage and extremely well insulated. If you're going to have the insulation, the electronics itself may furnish enough heat. If you're running everything off batteries, you're not going to be able to afford to produce heat from battery power. Usually then you're trying to make the batteries last longer by minimizing the amount of battery power used to produce "waste" heat.
Keep in mind that NiCads, although they may operate down to -40C, have a reduced capacity at those temperatures. Read the datasheets carefully.
If you want the unit to work reliably at -30C, you really need to use expensive industrial grade parts (-40C to 85C).
Oh and when i said 20 or 30 below i meant Fahrenheit, not Celsius...Chuck, i am wanting to power the device off of a battery of some sort. A heating element would suck up to much power(unless i could really insulate the container)..
Maybe a small lightbulb would generate heat but it would also use electric.
I've heard of people using a blanket over top of their car engines in the winter. I suppose it is insulation.
I've also heard of people using bubble wrap for their windows in the winter. It keeps a layer of warm air as a barrier.
Anyone know of any chips that generate heat?
I would probably look for styrofoam boxes.
A heating element could be on its own circuit.
You could do an experiment - put a thermometer and a resistor in the box and measure the temp when the box is sealed up. Set it up to make 1W of heat and see what the temp goes to. A one ohm resistor (maybe a 5W one) on a nicad will produce about 1W for a couple of hours (V=IR, V=1.2V, R=1) Approx 1800 to 2200 mAh. Or use a plugpack and work out the right resistor V=IR and W=IV.
You might find that the propeller produces enough heat itself.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_management_of_high-power_LEDs
http://www.reptilebasics.com/flexwatt-heat-tape/
Aluminum foil tape can take a lot of heat and fasten down heating elements:
http://www.reptilebasics.com/aluminum-foil-tape.html
They sell heating pads for reptiles so it could keep electronics warm.