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I used six wires (three pair) for the sensor (Vs+, Vout, Gnd). I twisted colored pairs together to give me the three conductors.
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qark123, if you do DC analysis, there's practically 0 current. But, there is current in transient analysis. The problem is that a long cable can have a lot of capacitance, and when the little lm35 needs to change the Vout, it has to charge or discharge that capacitance to change the voltage. This series resistor will help limit how much current it drives at once. Another other (& maybe more important?) reason for an external resistance (instead of the device just having a larger output resistance of it's own), is in case there's any transient reflections from driving into a transmission line like a cable. The reflected voltages can cause a potentially harmful (to the lm35 or receiving device) voltage level. Finally, like solarmax referred to by saying 'stabilize', since the R slows the driver down, avoiding/minimizing reflections in the cable, the sampling won't see an incorrect voltage due to reflections either.
Anyway, you can see that avoiding transmission line effects is a good thing. The net effect is that a larger R like this will make it a tiny bit slower for a new Vout voltage to show up since it's being slowed by the resistor. But, you'd probably have to have a bigger R &/or much bigger capacitive load before the slower responsiveness was noticeable.
you convert mV to V by dividing mV by 1000. which would give us .0167V.
the LM35 is .01V/C, so we then divide our .0167V by the .01 and we get 1.67V/C then you can convert to F from there.
http://www.maxim-ic.com/quick_view2.cfm/qv_pk/2815
They also have a bunch of software to read from them. they can be tagged with XML. if needed. you can put a bunch of them on a wire and they can tell temps for each one due to a 64 bit serial number. you can cobble together a serial interface for a couple of bucks instructions here:
http://martybugs.net/electronics/tempsensor/hardware.cgi
there is a opensource app called digitemp for/linux/winDOZE
link here :
http://www.digitemp.com/software.shtml
enjoy,
skillett
I've had good luck just sticking them in adhesive-lined heat shrink tubing. Heating that will seal around the cable and then I crimp the outer end of the tubing with a pair of pliers while it is still soft. The plastic won't have the same temperature conductivity as the copper, but if you aren't looking for fast response, it's OK.
Another thing I've done is use the 8-pin SMT version of the LM35 and for the resistor. They end up being a smaller package that slips into the heat shrink. Don't drink coffee before you solder up the leads.
BTW, some guys have taken the output of this sensor (10.0 mV/°C) and multiplied it (using a LM324 op-amp) to give a 0-5V output. Then taken that and plugged it into an analog input of a robot controller. http://tinyurl.com/62lvoc (.pdf)
BTW - $1.69 USD at Jameco - http://tinyurl.com/64zjkt