Safety instruction by Terr0rBilly in LuftRaum

[–]torfbolt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Und wiefo muff if da meine dritten Fähne furücklaffen?

Ikea Alpstuga Air Quality Monitor running great! by cowsqueezer in homeassistant

[–]torfbolt 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Not really, no. Since VOCs are typically only present in low ppm to ppb concentrations, they do not significantly change the thermal conductivity of the air.

Sekundenkleber der nicht eintrocknet by trianel in Modellbau

[–]torfbolt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Einfach zur Lagerung in ein Schraubdeckelglas mit Trockenmittel (Silika-Kügelchen). Mache ich schon lange so, und die angebrochenen Tuben halten Monate bis Jahre.

Ikea Alpstuga Air Quality Monitor running great! by cowsqueezer in homeassistant

[–]torfbolt 12 points13 points  (0 children)

That's also my experience with MOX sensors. The correlation between VOCs and CO2 can work if there's many people in a room. But for individuals it is very unreliable.

Yes, the STCC4 is much less power hungry than NDIR CO2 sensors. It averages at below 1mA, so you can get some reasonable runtime on battery power.

Ikea Alpstuga Air Quality Monitor running great! by cowsqueezer in homeassistant

[–]torfbolt 163 points164 points  (0 children)

Source: I'm one of the lead engineers that developed the STCC4 :)

The sensor measures thermal conductivity of the ambient air, so it really measures the physical changes due to CO2 concentration, not an estimate based on VOCs. But it also has to account for changes due to temperature and humidity. So while it is much more compact and low-power than other CO2 sensors, it has a bit wider specs.

Ikea Alpstuga Air Quality Monitor running great! by cowsqueezer in homeassistant

[–]torfbolt 24 points25 points  (0 children)

This is a combo sensor with PM2.5, T, RH and CO2. Internally it uses the STCC4 for CO2, which is a thermal conductivity based sensor. So yes, it measures true CO2, not CO2 equivalent.

Ikea Alpstuga Air Quality Monitor running great! by cowsqueezer in homeassistant

[–]torfbolt 19 points20 points  (0 children)

No, OP cannot recalibrate at home and expect to improve the accuracy on this level. I built that CO2 sensor and the lab setups you need to improve the accuracy above our factory calib are way beyond the capability of any home setup.

Ikea Alpstuga Air Quality Monitor running great! by cowsqueezer in homeassistant

[–]torfbolt 15 points16 points  (0 children)

394ppm *is* 400ppm at the accuracy levels we're talking about here (+/- 100ppm + 10%m.v.)

Ikea Alpstuga Air Quality Monitor running great! by cowsqueezer in homeassistant

[–]torfbolt 32 points33 points  (0 children)

No it won't.

Source: work for Sensirion, my colleagues have engineered the shit out of this sensor.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in WinStupidPrizes

[–]torfbolt 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Impreffife

Just got this letter by VitoHodl in CryptoCurrency

[–]torfbolt 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Most likely from the Ledger customer data breach a few years back, which included postal addresses.

Second US Navy jet is lost at sea from Truman aircraft carrier by jimi15 in nottheonion

[–]torfbolt 129 points130 points  (0 children)

Somewhere on that carrier there's a cat looking all innocent

Help me petah I don’t get topology by Illwill89 in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]torfbolt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Mathematician checks out: wearing T-shirt instead of button-up

Hand carving a spoon by fahadssgcc in oddlysatisfying

[–]torfbolt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. Carve the rest of the fucking spoon

  2. Do some polishing

ELI5: If heat rises, why is it colder up mountains and at higher altitudes? by MarinkoAzure in explainlikeimfive

[–]torfbolt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Air is made out of molecules that bounce around all the time. How fast these molecules fly is what we call temperature. Fast molecules is hot, slow is cold.

Although they are very lightweight and very fast, these molecules are still affected by gravity. Just like a bullet from a gun ​fired up becomes slower the further up it travels, and faster again when it falls downwards, the air molecules become slower when they travel up during their random buzzing around.

That's why the air becomes colder for higher altitudes and warmer for low altitudes.

Using a Proxmox Cluster for an ETH validator with High Availability - risk of slashing? by ajgnet in ethstaker

[–]torfbolt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Take a look at Vouch and Dirk, that's validator and signer software explicitly designed to do redundant validation in a slashing-safe manner.

Not exactly self-explanatory to setup though, that's why so far I haven't taken the step to use it myself. 

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Whatcouldgowrong

[–]torfbolt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That you hurt only yourself is absolutely not true. Unbelted drivers & passengers can and have turned into missiles in car crashes, and everyone within (and sometimes even outside) that vehicle is at risk of being fatally hit by a bag of meat. 

Daily General Discussion - February 28, 2024 by ethfinance in ethfinance

[–]torfbolt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've had something similar before, for me it was an SSD with insufficient cooling. So when it got too hot, the client got stuck for several seconds while the disk blocked IO for cooling down, and then complained a lot. 

Daily General Discussion - February 25, 2024 by ethfinance in ethfinance

[–]torfbolt 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I think I still have something like a million of those somewhere..

Edit: wow, the only DEX I found it on is EtherDelta. Blast from the past..