Because the sensor signal is digital, you don’t get any signal degradation even over long distances! These 1-wire digital temperature sensors are fairly precise (±0.5°C over much of the range) and can give up to 12 bits of precision from the onboard digital-to-analog converter. They work great with any microcontroller using a single digital pin, and you can even connect multiple ones to the same pin, each one has a unique 64-bit ID burned in at the factory to differentiate them. Usable with 3.0-5.0V systems.
The only downside is they use the Dallas 1-Wire protocol, which is somewhat complex, and requires a bunch of code to parse out the communication. If you want something really simple, and you have an analog input pin, the TMP36 is trivial to get going.
We toss in a 4.7k resistor, which is required as a pullup from the DATA to VCC line when using the sensor. We don’t have a detailed tutorial up yet but you can get started by using the Dallas Temperature Control Arduino library which requires also the OneWire Library.
Cable specs:
Stainless steel #306 tube 6mm diameter by 40mm long
Cable is 5 ft long / 150cm long
Contains DS18B20 temperature sensor
Three wires – Brown connects to 3-5V, Black connects to ground and Blue is data.
DS18B20 Technical specs:
Usable temperature range: -55 to 125°C (-67°F to +257°F)
9 to 12 bit selectable resolution
Uses 1-Wire interface- requires only one digital pin for communication
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Can you please tell us what is the goop sealing the cable to the stainless steel capsule?
Thanks!
epoxy