Spyke
feddit.org

Dog always gets that expression when the beardy dude that lives with him has one of his strange ideas, like in this case waving a blue box with a handle around. Makes no sense at all, but, humans, y'know.

He is the best boy, of course, no need to measure that. But I verified the low snoot temperature with a snoot boop.

14
lemmy.world

But I verified the low snoot temperature with a snoot boop.

I find your methodology intriguing. It merits a thorough peer review. Is anyone willing to boop their pupper snoot and report back on their findings? For science, of course.

5

So this snoot is not measured with infrared so I can’t confirm the temperature that way however upon booping the snoot I can in fact confirm it was cool and moist.

Fascinating

4

"3.8 goodboyes, but that's as high as the meter go..."

"3.8, not great, not terrible."

Later...

"It's not 3 goodboyes, it's fifteen thousand."

5
oortjunkreply
sh.itjust.works

How about that? Did you expect a hamster in infrared?

No.

Nobody ever does....

....sigh.

46

On the contrary, this is exactly what I expected to see in the comments of this post.

1
lemmy.world

Looking for a phone with this, a Geiger counter, and a light spectrum analyzer

Also a hardware keyboard, headphone jack, and runs Linux

93
lemmy.world

If I'm paying a subscription fee over 10 bucks a month the carrier should subsidize the cost

11

And it must have absolute privacy. Run everything on the phone like a phone carrier and server combined.

6

That office has headphone jack and 2 sim slots, and some physical buttons for using the phone when it’s wet or under water, oh and a laser level, etc

5
jballsreply
sh.itjust.works

Is the sock drawer the same temperature as the toilet water? Logically I would think so, but a weird part of me is saying the toilet water would be colder for some reason.

4
lemmy.world

Check where the heat loss is occurring in your house.

66
97xBamreply
feddit.online

I don't get it. What is that?

Edit: For those that don't know, they are referencing a meme . If you don't know the meme, you probably won't find it funny.

9
lemmy.world

I have a phone with a thermal imager too!

I mostly use it to brag to people about how I have a phone with a thermal imager!

But here is a demonstration that glass will reflect a bit of thermal radiation, but is completely opaque to thermal behind it:

As long as you aren't touching the glass, wherein the glass will conduct your thermal signature:

And then if you take the hand away, the signature remains on the glass for several minutes!

As a bonus, my phone also has a microscope, and I learned that my facial hair is sometimes triangular:

60
Agent641reply
lemmy.world

Ulefone Armour 27T pro.

You can even skip some gym days because the bugger weighs half a kilo.

25
kungenreply
feddit.nu

I thought I'd need to skip the gym because all my money would go to the phone, but it seems relatively priceworthy.

7
Agent641reply
lemmy.world

The hardware is great but the OS is shit and buggy. Don't buy Ulefone unless you're an android expert and know how to force shitty system apps into submission.

14

That's sad to hear. It looks like a pretty good phone otherwise.

2
dubvee.org

You can't not say what phone has FLIR. Need details please! lol

There was a discontinued (and discounted) CAT phone I was looking at a while back. The phone itself was mostly unimpressive, but it did have a decent FLIR camera which is why I was looking at it.

56
dubvee.org

Okay, nice. So it is the same one I was looking at. Cool, but "bummer" at the same time. Was hoping there was a current/supported model with FLIR.

15

I know it's not the same thing, but there is an external Flir camera that you can attach to your phone by USB-C.

17

There's a few models with thermal cameras, my doogee gt31v has one. I think ulefone and unihertz have models with them.

Don't expect software updates.

6

Do you own any "Hot Wheels" toy cars? If so, how hot actually are those wheels?

In the absence of "Hot Wheels" toy cars, I'd also be interested in other objects which claim to be hot, but likely aren't i.e. a "Hot Topic" clothing item, or bottle of "Hot Sauce".

36
lemmy.world

No wheels or topics here, but a whole collection of hot sauces straight from the fridge

A drop of Tha Bomb: Beyond Insanity on a plate also looks quite disappointing

However, put some of that straight into my mouth and let me tell you, I'm in a world of regrets right now.

118

I'm so glad I don't have one. I can't imagine the amount of time I'd waste play acting splinter cell.

too bad they never released a game after chaos theory.

30
lemmy.dbzer0.com

you can sometimes use these as a stud finder, depends on the wall

If you ever do electronics repair and are good at soldering these are a lifesaver for quick diagnosis if the resolution is high enough. Look at the board, apply power, and the part that is shorting out will often quickly get stupid hot. Sometimes it will be a complex repair you can’t easily do like a bga chip but you’d be surprised how often it’s just a random capacitor that went bad in your phone or switch or whatever and swapping it out (or even just getting rid of it if it’s an extra filter) fixes the issue. The hard part is finding out the value bc there are never schematics

A less easy to use alternative to this that I use bc thermal cams are expensive is squirt isopropyl alcohol or flux on the board and apply power. It’ll boil at the point where the part is shorting. Harder to determine but much cheaper. If you already have the camera though

26

My go to is to upside-down spray canned air at the PCB. once the canned air boils off, it leaves a layer of frost and you can immediately tell what is hot because it melts the frost.

11
lemmy.world

My house is entirely made out of brick, I doubt it'll be very effective here but I'll definitely check

8
dohpaz42reply
lemmy.world

This was an educational rabbit hole to go down.

It seems not all brick houses have wall studs, but most do.

It makes sense to me to have studs to help run utilities (electrical, air ducts, etc) and for hanging drywall.

7
feddit.org

but most do.

Never seen a brick house that has studs around here. Most houses around here are built like this:

Concrete floors/ceilings, bricks in between, utilities get carved into the brickwall and are covered when the inside plaster is applied. The inside plaster is usually made up from two or three layers and is around 3cm thick.

6
dohpaz42reply
lemmy.world

Unfortunately I can’t see the image. But I understand what you’re saying.

1
d00eryreply
lemmy.world

Studs, in the UK at least, create a gap between the brick wall and the plasterboard this is often filled with insulation and it's where electrical cables and pipework can run.

3

In newer houses yes. In older ones... Well let's just say I'm getting tired of carving channels into solid red brick whenever I do electrics.

6
freebeereply
sh.itjust.works

The insulation is usually applied on the outside of the building so the protected volume is more homogeneous, avoiding cold bridges where walls/ceilings join, cause that's where mould tends to grow

1
d00eryreply
lemmy.world

In all the new build houses I've worked on the insulation is on the inside, in the UK at least. Though it's been at least 10 years since I've been on site.

Also usually external insulation is quite visible and I still see lots of domestic properties with bare external brickwork.

1
freebeereply
sh.itjust.works

That's interesting. In Germany and Belgium many renovations involve putting insulation (PUR blocks often) on outside of the building and also for new buildings it's usually outside insulated and then an outside layer that protects the insulation. Inside insulation happens, but it's considered less good than outside, because of leaks and they say outside insulating helps the bricks/concrete "save" the heat like a battery when they are part of the protected volume instead of outside of it.

https://www.bonner-energie-agentur.de/fileadmin/_processed_/f/2/csm_AdobeStock_132638304_schulzfoto_M_152a598f94.jpg

3
lemmy.world

Totally random thought, but check the temp of different things both directly, and also in a mirror reflection. I wonder if it'll sense the same temperature via a mirror reflection...

22

If you actually want to measure a glass surface, stick a bit of painters tape or other tape with a rough-ish surface to it.

15
lemmy.world

I definitely noticed some objects like a coke can reflecting heat from nearby sources. Let me check my mirror

6

Fun fact: the heat measured is just infrared light, which tell you the objects temperature with the principles of Black Body Radiation, so if an object is reflective, it most likely also reflects infrared and you will see the reflected objects temperature.

If your first thought was "wait, infrared like tv remotes?" Yes! Point the tv remote at your camera to see how "hot" it gets (it's not hot but it's sending a lot of infrared through other means)

12

It is pretty much like taking a normal picture of a mirror.

5
lemmy.ca

How warm is your empty chair after you've sat in it for an hour

19
IninewCrowreply
lemmy.ca

Was that your bed after lying on it ... or do you just have a misshapen butt?

8
IninewCrowreply
lemmy.ca

I'm guessing you're a guy .... or you had a heated accident after that hot sauce

This is the most thrilling dullness I've seen in the community ... thank you for your service.

14

And that's how my dog learned that silently sneaking off the couch a few seconds before I entered the room weirdly didn't cut it anymore one day.

7
lemmy.world

First thing I sent to my gf of course, but not posting here. She said it was the best dick pic she'd ever received

38
jballsreply
sh.itjust.works

Don't post the pic, but what's the temp difference of balls to the rest of you?

1

Go around the house and look at all your outlets. You’ll find that GFCI outlets put out a small amount of heat. (Something to do with their function that is unavoidable.) Regular outlets that are warm and under no load may require investigation.
You can also spot heating conduits in walls, roughly figure out what power adapters are not very efficient, and even use them to gauge how well heated blankets and the like are working. I used mine to look at studs in the wall to figure out (well, be certain about) how some old renovations were handled.

17
lemmy.world

I'm dealing with this exact issue right now. I don't have thermal imaging, but I used an IR thermometer and recorded temps as much as ten degrees lower in the places with water staining than in other parts of the wall/room/house. Any tips for finding the leaks/improving insulation? Right now my best idea is cutting holes in each cavity and blowing in insulation, but I'm not an expert at all.

3
feddit.org

Nah, sorry. So far I've only been living in houses made from stone and concrete, I have no experience with improving insulation in framed buildings. Someone else, maybe. Sound like just adding insulation isn't a great idea though as that will push the dew point into the wall. You'd have to separate the insulation layer from the humid air inside at the same time, otherwise you'd just get the water in the insulation and therefore wet insulation and mold.

6
lemmy.world

Now, this technology is new to me, but I believe that's Homer Simpson in the oven, rotating slowly. His body temperature has risen to 400 degrees. He's literally stewing in his own juices!

15
lemmy.world

None of these cameras measure things in Kelvin, the only temperature scale that matters. Disappointing.

14
lemmy.world

They do actually, it's just that they convert it to Celsius right before displaying the value on the screen

15
lemmy.world

It doesn't count if you can't see it!

Kelvin is the only legitimate way to measure temperature. Everything else is trivia. Duh.

Edit: I don't have time for your downvotes. It's 277 degrees outside and I don't have a clean sweater.

8
Alfredolinreply
sopuli.xyz

You are actually upvoted, it's just shown in Celsiusvotes.

23
lemmy.world

I just said Kelvin was the only legitimate way to measure temperature. Of course 277 degrees Kelvin.

5
itslilithreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

I was making a joke, if a pedantic one. You don't measure Kelvin in degrees, it's not °K, it's just K. So 4 degrees Celsius is 277 kelvin.

9

If you have a pet that isnt allowed on the bed but you know she gets on it when you are not there, now you have the tools to get that proof. >=)

14
feddit.org

Look at IR reflections on matte steel surfaces - you'll probably find that the longer wavelengths get reflected quite well on a surface that is matte in visible light.

12
feddit.org

Stainless steel surfaces in the kitchen are usually a candidate - kitchen hood, front panel of the oven, the side of the microwave, the freezer, something like that.

5

I found an uninsulated stud space in my friend's house using one of these. He couldn't figure out why the room was always cold, they are neat

9

$300 for a phone with flir sounds like a good deal considering flir cameras are 300 and up

5
lemmy.world

I want a phone with a thermal imager but I'm worried it would be a shit phone if I did because it'll be a 10 year old industrial affair

7

How important is it to have it built in? Could just get a FLIR add-on module

6

That's a really neat idea for a horror device. You can see evidence of the creature(s) in your walls, but it's very blurry (heat signature spreads out when moving through the drywall), and also delayed (takes time to radiate from warm spots, and also to form new spots).

I'd love to try making a horror game with that angle, but ADHD has me by the balls 😞

6
Naz
sh.itjust.works

I have a FLIR camera too and my gas range runs at 250°C confirm?

6

I have 3 glassbottles in my fridge, that I use for filling up my water bottle I carry around. I have a pixel 8 pro with a thermometer. And I use it to check which bottle have the coldest water if Iam I doubt.

6

Coolest thing to look at is running tap water, switch from hot to cold

6

I bought one just to check equipment after I've run it all day. Checking the baler and combine for bad bearings periodically will hopefully prevent an expensive fire.

6

The water coming out of the shower head or faucet when it’s warm enough to be comfortable, but not so hot that it’s scalding.

5
lemmy.ca

Write "HI" with sunscreen on your chest and take a pic of your shirtless self with the heat camera

3
IninewCrowreply
lemmy.ca

As an armchair scientist .... I have no idea what I'm talking about ... but you're probably right.

3

Check for the cabels and outlets to see if there is anything wrong with the electrics in your home

3
lemmy.world

This makes me think of my pizza from Saturday. We ordered Mod, so my wife and I got individual pizzas. I didn't grab them well from the delivery guy, and they went upside down off the porch. Mine was out of the box, upside down in the snow.

You know what? I ate it anyway.

2

I've seen these added onto phones, but you bought a phone WITH it already on board? That's sick. I've not seen anything like that in years... They just keep pumping out bullshit over and over again, year after year.

1
phxreply

Shit. Now I want an 8. It'd help me figure out where the drafts are coming from in the house

2