Subject: ACR Stick-on data loggers
Walter: Belated response to your comments on my posting about ACR loggers. 1. Real-time readout: I probably oversimplified. When you hook up the logger to a PC, there is in fact a real-time command (as distinct from downloading the accumulated data). But this does presuppose hooking up to a PC. There is also a cable that can be used for a continuous hookup; I'm a bit vague about the details of this (and I don't have the manual here), but I think this can be either hard-wired or possibly used through a modem. 2. Calibrating: Yes, these are supposed to be recalibrated by suspending over saturated salt solutions. This is apparently true of *any* electronic sensor. A less sure way to recalibrate is to compare the readings with some other instrument whose readings you trust, which could lead to almost metaphysical arguments about what instrument do you trust. Someone has finally admitted that sling psychrometers are unreliable, and we know that care and fussy technique are required to get reliable readings from even aspirating psychrometers. If one were starting a program with a number of loggers, one might try to have one electronic humidity meter that was kept calibrated (with salts, presumably) to use (carefully!) as a standard for resetting the loggers if they prove to need it. With any electronic sensor the drift out of calibration should be slow, I think, unless they are exposed to a dose of contamination. 3. Software: Except for certain specific (and probably short-term) diagnostic problems with mechanical equipment, the most important kind of information needed from monitoring (it seems to me) (& unless one is simply checking on conditions that are close to standard) is *trends*: trends by season, by air-handling unit, and long-term trends (that would reflect such things as the deterioration of HVAC equipment). The problem, then, with loggers (as exactly also with conventional hygrothermographs) is that one has for many purposes too much data; trends are difficult or impossible to grasp. I have a slide of an 18" high pile of religiously-accumulated hygrothermograph charts; I ask my students "what do these tell us?" I think one needs to be able to do things like plot each day's high and low T & RH (rather than each 30 minutes' worth) in order to be able to see things like seasonal trends. With ACR's native software, you can only plot all the data points from each download. The most serious limitation, though, is that you can't add data from end to end in order to graph it; in other words, if you download one month's data, you can't add the next month's data to that to get a graph for the two months. With a spreadsheet, of course, you can manipulate (and graph) the data in any way that you want to try to understand what is really happening--with, of course, time & effort. In the example you cite, you couldn't directly compare (i.e., superimpose) graphs of the data from the controlled and uncontrolled areas with the ACR software, whereas you can of course with a spreadsheet. As I may have said in my original posting, getting both reliable and useful information from these new gadgets is no easier than with conventional hygrothermographs; they just require different kinds of fussing. However, I do think that on balance they will provide better info than the old-fashioned kind normally do. Paul *** Conservation DistList Instance 4:57 Distributed: Saturday, May 4, 1991 Message Id: cdl-4-57-002 ***Received on Sunday, 28 April, 1991