MEW 269 Temperature controller

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MEW 269 Temperature controller

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  • #358100
    Martin Connelly
    Participant
      @martinconnelly55370

      Grizzly, Alt + 0216 is useful as well for the diameter symbol. I can't do the diameter symbol with my pad's keyboard but it does have a degree symbol.

      Martin C

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      #358105
      duncan webster 1
      Participant
        @duncanwebster1
        Posted by not done it yet on 16/06/2018 19:44:05:

        BODMAS (or BIDMAS) is the mathematicians rule.

        The man's correct, but I'm not giving up on proper notation, Neil will just have to live with it!

        #358116
        SillyOldDuffer
        Moderator
          @sillyoldduffer
          Posted by Martin Connelly on 16/06/2018 20:10:32:

          Grizzly, Alt + 0216 is useful as well for the diameter symbol. I can't do the diameter symbol with my pad's keyboard but it does have a degree symbol.

          Martin C

           

          A new level of pedantry coming next, shock horror!

          0216 isn't the diameter symbol, it's a Latin O with stroke – Ø

          2205 is the real McCoy – ∅

          See the difference ∅Ø∅Ø∅Ø! That nasty embellished Ø would never appear on a proper technical drawing. In future marks will be deducted for getting this wrong…

          smiley

           

          Edited By SillyOldDuffer on 16/06/2018 22:20:07

          #358117
          Bazyle
          Participant
            @bazyle

            Nowadays it would be more sensible to use SQRT(…. and similar.

            #358126
            Michael Gilligan
            Participant
              @michaelgilligan61133
              Posted by SillyOldDuffer on 16/06/2018 22:15:35:

              A new level of pedantry coming next, shock horror!

              0216 isn't the diameter symbol, it's a Latin O with stroke – Ø

              2205 is the real McCoy – ∅

              See the difference ∅Ø∅Ø∅Ø! That nasty embellished Ø would never appear on a proper technical drawing. In future marks will be deducted for getting this wrong…

              smiley

              .

              Interesting, Dave …

              I checked your big 'Unicode Table'

              Searching for 'Diameter Sign' returns U+2300 not U+2205

              U+2205 is identified as the 'Related character' for an Empty Set

              MichaelG.

              .

              P.S. neither of them seems to be available in some popular fonts.

              #358128
              not done it yet
              Participant
                @notdoneityet

                Temperature should present no problem – just use the Kelvin scale and all these superscripts are unnecessary.

                Trouble with this thread is that the writer is likely a hobbyist, not a specialist in the field. Practical, not so theoretical, so if it worked it was near enough for most. Probably sufficiently precise as well – even if not absolutely accurate. smiley

                #358164
                Anonymous

                  If I recall correctly ALT plus a decimal code on the numeric keypad used to work on this forum. Now it takes me to my browser home page. WTF? I'd argue that an inserted symbol is not formatting and therefore the publishing software should not remove it. Of course the best way to reduce errors is for the author to approve a proof prior to publication. That is standard for professional technical journals, but not really practical for ME or MEW. Although I have done it once for ME, with an article that contained some involved equations. To avoid hiccups Diane sent me a proof to check before printing.

                  To get back to the original thread topic I've now had a quick read through the article. It may well be true that a given set up is good enough, and only the user can determine that. But no mention of using independent temperature measurement is made, so presumably we have no idea how far out the control may be. Sadly it is also clear that the author doesn't understand PID controllers. The initial graphs showing underdamped, critical and underdamped responses are mislabelled, and in the case of underdamped wrong. Unfortunately the text description is also incorrect. While I wouldn't expect MEW to be overly theoretical it ought to at least be technically correct. disgust

                  Andrew

                  #358202
                  Gordon W
                  Participant
                    @gordonw

                    Would it not be easier and quicker to just write "deg. cent." or "dia." than go thru' all those codes ?

                    #358210
                    Michael Gilligan
                    Participant
                      @michaelgilligan61133
                      Posted by Gordon W on 17/06/2018 16:16:02:

                      Would it not be easier and quicker to just write "deg. cent." or "dia." than go thru' all those codes ?

                      .

                      Yes of course it would, Gordon … but Dave introduced a magnificent pedantry, which I felt obliged to follow-up.

                      MichaelG.

                      #358212
                      Anonymous

                        Bother, the diameter symbol in my CAD package is definitely a circle with a diagonal, but it certainly isn't lower case. sad

                        The whole point of using symbols is that it is easier, and less prone to misinterpretation, than words. It'd be a right royal PITA if one had to write out in full the kilograms, metres and seconds and so on every time you used an SI unit, rather than just using the agreed abbreviation.

                        Andrew

                        #358218
                        Neil Wyatt
                        Moderator
                          @neilwyatt
                          Posted by Andrew Johnston on 17/06/2018 11:05:26:

                          If I recall correctly ALT plus a decimal code on the numeric keypad used to work on this forum. Now it takes me to my browser home page.

                          Ø

                          Looks like a browser issue, not one with the website…

                          #358220
                          Neil Wyatt
                          Moderator
                            @neilwyatt
                            Posted by Gordon W on 17/06/2018 16:16:02:

                            Would it not be easier and quicker to just write "deg. cent." or "dia." than go thru' all those codes ?

                            I also try and strip out things like that which affect the readability of text, as well as abbreviations like 'BMS'* (if used a lot I will add expand the abbreviation once for the sake of beginners. I am not perfect and sometimes miss examples.

                            Neil

                            *BMS is particularly ambiguous as some people use it for 'bright mild steel' and others for 'black mild steel'.

                            #358227
                            SillyOldDuffer
                            Moderator
                              @sillyoldduffer
                              Posted by Michael Gilligan on 16/06/2018 23:01:48:

                              Posted by SillyOldDuffer on 16/06/2018 22:15:35:

                              A new level of pedantry coming next, shock horror!

                              0216 isn't the diameter symbol, it's a Latin O with stroke – Ø

                              2205 is the real McCoy – ∅

                              See the difference ∅Ø∅Ø∅Ø! That nasty embellished Ø would never appear on a proper technical drawing. In future marks will be deducted for getting this wrong…

                              smiley

                              .

                              Interesting, Dave …

                              I checked your big 'Unicode Table'

                              Searching for 'Diameter Sign' returns U+2300 not U+2205

                              U+2205 is identified as the 'Related character' for an Empty Set

                              MichaelG.

                              .

                              P.S. neither of them seems to be available in some popular fonts.

                              Good spot! The plot thickens:

                              U+2300 = ⌀

                              U+2205 = ∅

                              Unicode is a sort of unifying super-font. Older fonts were limited by technology to 8-bit characters (max 256). Unicode is extensible and able to use 8, 16 or 32 bit numbers to represent gigantic numbers of different symbols. The latest version defines about 150,000 symbols.

                              Older software and printing technologies are stuck with less flexible font systems; to get more characters you have to load another font. Having to manage multiple fonts is limiting and causes serious incompatibility problems. One reason Word documents are so big is they often include a copy of the fonts used as well as what was typed. 

                              Unicode isn't perfect, but it does much to reduce the problem. Being universal, it's a feature of systems rather than individual documents, and it doesn't have to be copied about. Unfortunately, rather a lot of software has yet to catch up with Unicode, and – even when it does – we're probably stuck with the older font systems for ever. The number of legacy documents produced with ancient versions of MSWord must be enormous.

                              Dave

                               

                              Edited By SillyOldDuffer on 17/06/2018 19:58:32

                              #358277
                              duncan webster 1
                              Participant
                                @duncanwebster1

                                Don't tell me, I need to get a life, but this unicode thing got me interested. I use Libre Office running under Windows 7. The U+ doesn't work, but if you type 2300 then hold down the alt key and type x, release both and wait for a split second it converts the 2300 to a diameter sign. How neat is that. It seems to work with the other unicodes, but obviously I've not tried them all. Could someone who runs Word under Windows try this out and see if it works?

                                #358281
                                David Jupp
                                Participant
                                  @davidjupp51506

                                  Duncan, yes that seems to work in Word.

                                  #358283
                                  Fowlers Fury
                                  Participant
                                    @fowlersfury

                                    Duncan:-
                                    'wasn't aware of your 'trick' ~ good one !. That below is a cut'n'paste from Word 2007 apart from the italic text.

                                    Using Windows 10 with Calibri (Body) type face:-

                                    (Alt+2300), release Alt = strange character like O with umlaut

                                    “if you type 2300 then hold down the alt key and type x, release both and wait for a split second
                                    it converts the 2300 to a diameter sign.” = ⌀

                                    #358293
                                    Anonymous
                                      Posted by Neil Wyatt on 17/06/2018 18:37:04

                                      Looks like a browser issue, not one with the website…

                                      Updating the browser on two different computers made no difference. So much for progress.

                                      Andrew

                                      #358294
                                      duncan webster 1
                                      Participant
                                        @duncanwebster1
                                        Posted by Fowlers Fury on 18/06/2018 09:44:49:

                                        Duncan:-
                                        'wasn't aware of your 'trick' ~ good one !. That below is a cut'n'paste from Word 2007 apart from the italic text.

                                        Using Windows 10 with Calibri (Body) type face:-

                                        (Alt+2300), release Alt = strange character like O with umlaut

                                        “if you type 2300 then hold down the alt key and type x, release both and wait for a split second
                                        it converts the 2300 to a diameter sign.” = ⌀

                                        I found that alt+ inserts extended ascii characters, not unicode, but not the ones listed in the table at

                                        **LINK**

                                        for instance if I type alt+234 I get Û whereas I should get a greek omega, and the table I found runs out at 255 (8 bits)

                                        #358307
                                        JasonB
                                        Moderator
                                          @jasonb

                                          All this talk of the diameter symbol could get confusing as this was originally an electronics article what with the same symbol being used to represent "phase" as in 1-phase or 3-phase, the layman may think you were talking about the diameter of a motorsmile p

                                          #358311
                                          Michael Gilligan
                                          Participant
                                            @michaelgilligan61133
                                            Posted by JasonB on 18/06/2018 13:14:14:

                                            All this talk of the diameter symbol could get confusing as this was originally an electronics article what with the same symbol being used to represent "phase" as in 1-phase or 3-phase …

                                            .

                                            You had me worried for a moment there, Jason … but I think you will find that it's the Greek letter phi that's used for phase. [the cross-stroke being vertical]

                                            MichaelG.

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