On 4/19/17 3:34 AM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi


On Apr 18, 2017, at 8:33 PM, jimlux <jim...@earthlink.net> wrote:

On 4/18/17 3:55 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi

On something like a 500’ spool of coax, the question will always be “what 
temperature is it where in the spool”. A single sensor will
only give you precise information if the temperature ramp is *very* slow (as in 
days …).


measure the DC resistance of the spool, and you'll be able to get a sort of 
"average" temperature.

I’d want to be pretty sure what the center conductor was made out of. I’ve seen 
some stuff
in coax that “one would think” should not be there (copper over steel …).


One would want to calibrate your "coax as temp sensor" just in case you've got some exotic stuff with silver plated over stainless steel (used in cryo applications). But you could probably do that with a short length.

Copper is about 0.4% /degree
Iron is about 0.6%

So, over a -10 to 60 degree swing you'd see about significant (30-40%) change in the resistance, and it would be easy to tell if it's copper or iron or NiCr or something really exotic.

The Belden catalog says that RG58/U type coax is about 7-8 ohms/1000 ft. So a 10 foot length is 0.07 ohms - A bit tricky to measure that low, but not impossible, and certainly within the scope of a time-nut skilled in the electronics arts.





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