Du bist nicht angemeldet.
RuffHi
Junior Member


PierreV
Junior Member


Dieser Beitrag wurde bereits 1 mal editiert, zuletzt von »PierreV« (3. Dezember 2025, 20:10)
PierreV
Junior Member


Thanks ! The A input of the last switch is fed with the temperature/pump speed I want, in normal operation, i.e. when the deaeration mode is off, i.e. when the input value of "Manual deaeration" is 0.
Citation
This is an interesting and elegant solution. [...] I can't see what feeds the A input of the last X=switch {A,B].
I don't see any other possibility than using the Curve controller mode with the Virtual sensor temperature as controller source, as you said.
Citation
I do wonder if there is a simpler way to connect the output of the Virtual Sensor to the pump speed control.
RuffHi
Junior Member


. I had not really thought through how to activate the deaeration cycle. I normally run my pump at a fixed speed because it is generally stated, and I have confirmed through my own testing, that having the pump speed chase coolant temp or coolant minus ambient delta-T does not improve heat transfer efficiency much, if at all, outside of extremes. If I wanted to run deaeration cycles, I could just switch the pump to Curve Controller, which would already be set to use the virtual sensor as its control data source. The switch to Curve Controller could easily be tied to a profile change.The solution that you show doesn't have such a switch. So I guess that the solution that you show is activated by a dedicated profile, i.e. the deaeration mode is activated by switching to a deaeration profile. In my solution, there is no profile change. The deaeration mode is activated by the input value, which affects the input of the last switch (A for normal operation, B for deaeration mode).
This makes sense and is similar to the curve I set up. The difference is that I set 8 points to 30% (30°C) and 8 points to 100% (100°C). I don’t think doing so was necessary because any curve point not set to 30°C or 100°C will never be sent to the pump. Regarding having to set the output of the Virtual Sensor to °C, I have had to do this before to get around the AQS limitation of only accepting values with a temperature unit. In some cases (like this one), it makes sense to send an integer RPM value or a percentage to the pump for speed control, which is what AQS does when the pump is set to Power Preset. I wish that Aquacomputer would allow data values with units other than temperature to be used in cases like this.
Quoted
I don't see any other possibility than using the Curve controller mode with the Virtual sensor temperature as controller source, as you said.
For the curve, in my view, the simplest way is to set a straight curve with an input temperature going from 0° to 100°C, corresponding to an output power going from 0% to 100%. Only two points would be necessary for such a curve, but it doesn't matter if all the points are used. With such a curve, if the virtual temperature is 30°C, the pump will run at 30% and if the temperature is 100°C, the pump will run at 100%. The same curve will also work with any other temperature.
Congratulations! The Playground is a VERY powerful feature of Aquasuite. The potential is limited only by your creativity. I have seen some really complex Virtual Sensors in this forum. What @PierreV shared is a good example. Another example is calculating the amount of heat, in watts, that a radiator is dissipating. If you put temp sensors at the inlet and outlet of a radiator and you know the flow rate and the specific heat capacity of the coolant, the amount of heat the radiator dissipates can be calculated by the formula Q = ṁ x Cp x ΔT where:Thanks all for the posts. This was my intro the playground - looks like there are a bunch of things that you can do here.
PierreV
Junior Member


Dieser Beitrag wurde bereits 1 mal editiert, zuletzt von »PierreV« (3. Dezember 2025, 20:05)
Ah the how do I add an image to my post in the Aquacomputer forum mystery.@Speedy_Vi : how do you insert the image directly into the post ?
-