Old Grey wrote:That's right - even 600 is way overkill for nearly everybody -, but think about a flowing a 300cfm head. You can now do it at 38"Brucepts wrote: Not everyone has a need for 600cfm@28"
A 300cfm plate at 16" is 2.35" diameter, a 300cfm plate at 2" is 4.0" - well within everyone capacity -.Brucepts wrote:A 600cfm plate at 16" is 3.326" diameter, a 600cfm plate at 2" is 5.593"
Using 38" I'm allowed 7.5" on the orifice with my 46.6 limit, and that equates to 2.85", which gives me some range to overlap orifices.
Just looking at this sheet on page 3 the graph shows that the sensor is more accurate at 1" than 16", so I don't see any need to change sensor, but I do think more work is needed in getting the orifice more stable sooner.Brucepts wrote:8.5" was less stable and creates a large orifice hole at 600cfm, 40" was to much depression we felt, 16" seemed to work out fine with good hole sizes in the 6" square aluminum plate. We did not do any scientific studies I built a DM using each sensor, tested them out and we discussed the findings and settled on the 16" sensor. A 16" sensor allows you to use the whole sensor range on a given plate, if you use a 40" sensor on a 16" range or 2" as you suggest you are only using a portion of the sensors range.
http://www.datasheets360.com/pdf/6060859169405517462
There appears to be more to this where sensors are concerned....
Through research and discussions regarding pressure sensors certain things that I had previously taken as gospel / accepted on faith from lack of personal desire to dig deeper have come to my attention. What works has variables attached to the approach and one of those variables is cost, another is sensor accuracy. The sensors themselves play a huge role in the approach in terms of cost, hardware requirements and the coding to pull it all together for end users...
It's interesting to note that the Performance Trends Box uses a 1 PSI/28"W/C sensor and a 5PSI/140"W/C sensor. The 3rd sensor being optional. Accuracy and stability of those units I have no personal experience with. Still, their reputation precedes itself in the industry..
There are always different ways to a solution & costs vary with the approach. However, sometimes the initial costs buy you other benefits.