REFLECTOR: [Fwd: [FlyRotary] UV-Tron Fire Detection System]
Alex Balic
alex157 at pwhome.com
Tue Aug 30 21:20:10 CDT 2005
Hey Jim-
Thank you for the information- I am definitely interested in the device
to go along with my Halon system- only thing though- uses a DC/DC power
supply that supplies high voltage to the sensor tube at 20 hz- wonder if
this might cause some sort of interference somewhere- can you ask the
guy Mark who has one if he can test around radio, nav equipment ect.....
Alex
-----Original Message-----
From: reflector-bounces at tvbf.org [mailto:reflector-bounces at tvbf.org] On
Behalf Of Jim Sower
Sent: Tuesday, August 30, 2005 2:03 PM
To: Velocity Builders list; Cozy Builders Mailing List
Subject: REFLECTOR: [Fwd: [FlyRotary] UV-Tron Fire Detection System]
Thought this might be of interest ...
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [FlyRotary] UV-Tron Fire Detection System
Date: Tue, 30 Aug 2005 08:04:25 -0500
From: Mark R Steitle <mark.steitle at austin.utexas.edu>
Reply-To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary at lancaironline.net>
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary at lancaironline.net>
Last week we were discussing various methods of dealing with fire
dangers in our aircraft. I decided to try out the Hamamatsu UV Tron
flame sensor, and promised to report my findings to the Fly Rotary
group.
I located a pre-assembled circuit board from Superdroid Robots, a
company that supplies a variety of parts for robots. They were the only
place I could find that carried the Hamamatsu C3704 flame detector and
driver card. So, I ordered both along with a relay board. (Attached is a
picture of the boards.) The UV Tron sensor is the clear glass "bulb" in
the foreground. The small board on the left is a voltage converter,
allowing it to be connected directly to 14v.
I hooked it up to a 12v cordless drill battery and tested it using a
propane fire starter. It could easily "see" a flame from 6' away (maybe
more, but I didn't test it beyond 6') and up to 90* right or left. I
didn't test up/down, but the spec sheet indicates that it is about the
same in the vertical and horizontal planes. I could not get it to false
trip by using a fluorescent or a halogen light. There is about a .5
second delay before it trips the relay. The tech rep at Superdroid
Robots indicated that the UV Tron sensor could be remotely mounted up to
3' away from the board. I plan on mounting it in a small box on the
firewall with the leads running though the firewall to the circuit
boards inside the cabin, wired to a big red flashing LED on the panel.
Everything in the picture (including s&h) ran $150. I look at it as
cheap insurance. Hopefully, I will never need it.
Mark S.
More information about the Reflector
mailing list