I have some siding, poynting and roof leaks, whose repair would be a
lot less costly if I could get a cheap imaging analysis.
- = -
Vasos Panagiotopoulos, Columbia'81+, Reagan, Mozart, Pindus, BioStrategist
http://www.panix.com/~vjp2/vasos.htm http://www.facebook.com/vasjpan2
---{Nothing herein constitutes advice. Everything fully disclaimed.}---
[Homeland Security means private firearms not lazy obstructive guards]
[Urb sprawl confounds terror] [Phooey on GUI: Windows for subprime Bimbos]
>
>I knew someone who got some used fancy oilfield devices and imaged
>houses to find leaks using not only infrared but some pretty fancy
>math to compare how the images changed as the temperature changed
>during the day to night cycle. I gotta wonder if this has advanced
>much in the decade since.
Well, the cost of the imagers has come down. The Extech/FLIR line has
one below $2K now. I keep trying to come up with a good enough excuse to
get one ...
http://www.tequipment.net/ExtechI5.html
--
Rich Webb Norfolk, VA
I don't see how you expect IR devices to find roof leaks on your
house. IR devices are commonly used to find areas of poor thermal
insulation.
I called the expert, who I respect a lot, and he basically offered to
look at it at his hourly rate. His expertise is probably worth more
than the equipment, but I have to compare that cost to the cost of
just adding a new layer of siding (with energy stimulus). And,worse
of all, I have a co-owner who is reluctant to do anything.
How is water going to tell you where the leaks are. It will just
disappear into the house, not show up on IR imaging?
That cool IR cam Rich posted really got my engineering interest alerted!
PS, water keeps a leak damp and has a different temperature signature
than the rest of the wall. But that is why a day and night IR picture
helps track the different temperature changes.
In <e12236pavip9h2nuu...@4ax.com> by Rich Webb
<bbe...@mapson.nozirev.ten> on Sun, 04 Jul 2010 18:18:56 -0400 we
perused:
*+-On Sun, 4 Jul 2010 21:32:46 +0000 (UTC),
*+-vjp...@at.BioStrategist.dot.dot.com wrote:
*+->
*+->I knew someone who got some used fancy oilfield devices and imaged
*+->houses to find leaks using not only infrared but some pretty fancy
*+->math to compare how the images changed as the temperature changed
*+->during the day to night cycle. I gotta wonder if this has advanced
*+->much in the decade since.
*+-Well, the cost of the imagers has come down. The Extech/FLIR line has
*+-one below $2K now. I keep trying to come up with a good enough excuse to
*+-get one ...
*+-http://www.tequipment.net/ExtechI5.html
Rit dye.
David A. Smith
If you want to experiment with it yourself, consider an appropriate infared
filter for your camera.
Photographic film and silicon image sensors do not respond to low
temperature thermal infrared. Usually over 99.98% of that is of
wavelengths longer than 3,000 namometers. Film that responds much past
1,000 nanometers is about as common as hairy eggs. Silicon image sensors
only go out to about 1100 nm, faintly to maybe 1300 nm.
--
- Don Klipstein (d...@misty.com)