• 3 Posts
  • 108 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: July 3rd, 2023

help-circle





  • With better tools, it would be easier to troubleshoot more precisely. An oscilloscope would help you understand what’s going on, for example.

    From what you describe, I’m actually starting to suspect the other end (the controller?) to be the problem.

    One idea you could try before buying anything is to disconnect the sensor, supply it with 5V and ground (double check with data sheet!) and see what’s happening on the output when there is flow. If you don’t measure anything, as I would expect since the pin alternates between a floating state and ground, you then add a 10k or 50k ohms pullup resistor between 5v and output and measure again, and should get the levels you expected to see in the first place.

    Don’t know if you’re comfortable doing this, but maybe you can find somebody to help you out?



  • These flow sensors are usually hall effect sensors, with two or four magnets attached to a rotor with a little water wheel. When water flows, the magnets turn and create something like a PWM signal at the output (actually it’s high level when magnet is there and low level when magnet is not there or vice versa). Measuring the pin with a slow multimeter, this would indeed give you approximately half the supply voltage when water is flowing, depending on a few other factors. So- readings sound sensible to me. To note that if the rotor stops with a magnet close to the hall effect sensor, you will read 5V (or VCC) at the output, but always VCC/2 when flowing.

    Most of these sensors employ an open collector output stage, but that doesn’t need to bother you with the readings you’re getting, I think.




  • Tangent, unsolicited:

    Music lessons over video call, that has to be a real pain. I can’t find it now, but there’s an Adam Neely video where he talks about why online recording sessions can’t work, as transmission latency works against the immediacy needed to play music together. He said it better than I can.

    Except if your idea is to play in turns, but then capturing the thing you want to show… Can’t you find another teacher closer to you?








  • I think your heart is in the right place, but I wonder how you feel about tools and their quality vs. cost.

    There are many easily made arguments to pay extra for quality, as you pay less in the long run, which is an idiom (“cheap tools you always buy twice”) but also very true in most cases. Then what about paying extra for ergonomics, reducing strain on your body and preserving health?

    And then there’s the question where the line is between a hammer and a table tennis racquet.

    Again, I think your heart is in the right place. There are few things more ridiculous, I feel, than absolute beginners of a sport in full brand gear from head to toe, even the stuff nobody who really practices the sport won’t actually use. But then you’ve been playing table tennis for a few years. How much is your current gear holding you back? True it takes a lot of effort to learn about what you like and need, but it definitely pays off. Why don’t you borrow a racquet from one of the other players once in a while for a match to get a feel for what you like?