Well I have owned, and currently own, a real thermoregulator that does keep temp inside +/- 0.1 deg F. And I assure you, even a hundred
bucks wouldn't even buy the empty shell of the housing for that thing. There's a bit more to it than just adding another zero to a readout LED.
Amazon ratings are about as professionally informed as a phD dissertation on flying a jetliner written by an armadillo.
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
DREW WILEY;1953741280....................... Amazon ratings are about as professionally informed as a phD dissertation on flying a jetliner written by an armadillo.[/QUOTE said:
PID = Proportional Integral Derivative. Three different temperature control feedback methods, based on how close or far away the actual temperature is to the set point. Prevents oscillations and hunting around a set point when trying to control temperature using a feedback system.
~Joe
As best as I can tell, this item is just a controller.
What would one actually hook this up to in order to actually warm or cool the chemicals?
Thanks for that, Joe! I wondered what PID means. Not exactly your simple on-off thermostat.
Matt, a heating element. Like those cup of coffee coils.
These STC1000 controllers are legendary among brewers. I have 2 of them driving my fermentation fridge. As previously mentioned, control has as much to do with the system as it does the controller. These offer thermostatic control with programmable calibration offset, deadband, and compressor delay, which is all you need in 99.9% of process control applications, certainly for photography.
Or you can use a crock pot. and plug it directly into the unit's AC socket.
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