A Anjalikrishna1985 New Member Feb 11, 2007 #1 hai frends, please give me the steps for constructing a digital thermometer for the range 0-125 degree celsius. bye anjali
hai frends, please give me the steps for constructing a digital thermometer for the range 0-125 degree celsius. bye anjali
6502Dude New Member Feb 12, 2007 #2 Anjalikrishna1985 said: hai frends, please give me the steps for constructing a digital thermometer for the range 0-125 degree celsius. Click to expand... Step 1 - try google search Step 2 - do your own homework assignments
Anjalikrishna1985 said: hai frends, please give me the steps for constructing a digital thermometer for the range 0-125 degree celsius. Click to expand... Step 1 - try google search Step 2 - do your own homework assignments
Mike - K8LH Well-Known Member Feb 13, 2007 #3 There's a simple PIC demo on this Microchip Forum thread; DS18B20 Temperature Readings? **broken link removed** **broken link removed**
There's a simple PIC demo on this Microchip Forum thread; DS18B20 Temperature Readings? **broken link removed** **broken link removed**
M mvadu New Member Feb 14, 2007 #5 Using DS 1621 **broken link removed** Thermistors and game port http://www.allthingsspiny.co.uk/pcthermometer.html
Using DS 1621 **broken link removed** Thermistors and game port http://www.allthingsspiny.co.uk/pcthermometer.html
C cadstarsucks Banned Feb 15, 2007 #6 Anjalikrishna1985 said: hai frends, please give me the steps for constructing a digital thermometer for the range 0-125 degree celsius. bye anjali Click to expand... The chip mentioned in another post is a Dallas Semiconductor IC from when they were a worthwhile company, IE before they were bought out by the sloths at Maxim. A google on "diode thermometer" produced this hobbyist page: **broken link removed** I had forgotten about the National LM34 IC... D.
Anjalikrishna1985 said: hai frends, please give me the steps for constructing a digital thermometer for the range 0-125 degree celsius. bye anjali Click to expand... The chip mentioned in another post is a Dallas Semiconductor IC from when they were a worthwhile company, IE before they were bought out by the sloths at Maxim. A google on "diode thermometer" produced this hobbyist page: **broken link removed** I had forgotten about the National LM34 IC... D.