sjohnr
Marine/Ocean
- Sep 12, 2003
- 18
The Bosch ovens in Europe used to have a knob to turn that set the desired temperature. Their would be about 10 or 12 clicks per rotation. But the neat thing was that the electronics would increase the rate of change of the desired temperature according to how fast those clicks were coming in. So if you turned the dial fast, each click would correspond to say, a 10 degree jump, or even higher. But as the click rate fell, each click would cause a 1 degree change in set temperature. Man, it was really neat. Now the cleverness was in the electronics, and the knob, complete with clicker, must have been a fairly simple device.
I have stumbled into an application where this exact arrangement would work really well. The problem is, I can't find any vendor who sells the rotary switch, which is what it really is when you get down to it. I imagine the switch would have a single common with a contact each for clockwise and anticlockwise rotation. A dozen indents or cams internally would mechanically fire the contact as the thing was rotated. Does this make sense? I am on the point of building my own (I'm getting frustrated) but I'm putting the question here before launching myself into that. Does anybody know of such a switch?
Thanks in advance, and apologies for being long winded.
I have stumbled into an application where this exact arrangement would work really well. The problem is, I can't find any vendor who sells the rotary switch, which is what it really is when you get down to it. I imagine the switch would have a single common with a contact each for clockwise and anticlockwise rotation. A dozen indents or cams internally would mechanically fire the contact as the thing was rotated. Does this make sense? I am on the point of building my own (I'm getting frustrated) but I'm putting the question here before launching myself into that. Does anybody know of such a switch?
Thanks in advance, and apologies for being long winded.