Data Logging: Types of Monitors

Doug Horgan runs down a list of sensors his team uses to troubleshoot building performance problems.

1 MIN READ
The HOBO ZW system setup is complex and requires an on-site computer, but the system can be monitored live over the Internet.

Doug Horgan

The HOBO ZW system setup is complex and requires an on-site computer, but the system can be monitored live over the Internet.

Flow meters, micromanometers, power monitors, and circuit sensors are all in Doug Horgan’s bag of tricks for sleuthing out and tightening up building performance. In this third installment of a four-part series on Green Building Advisor, Horgan runs down some of the specific instruments his team relies on to measure what the rest of us usually guess at.

Omnisense has a somewhat expensive but very practical (i.e. easy to use) setup designed to record wood moisture content over the long term. Another method is to wire up a piece of wood with pins connected to a reader—this measures long-term moisture within insulation or other locations where common humidity meters are not suitable. (Standard humidity sensors are only suitable for places where condensation doesn’t happen). Read more.

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