palerider wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2019 2:43 pm
biomed wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2019 11:57 am
it to the sim card
One is amazed that someone who alleges to be so technical as yourself, doesn't know the difference in a SIM card and a SD card.
palerider wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2019 2:23 pm
biomed wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2019 9:52 am
I'll eventually find out why the Respironics sensor readout isn't available, at least in OSCAR.
It's not available because Respironics chose not to record the data. If it'd been recorded, it'd be displayed in sleepyhead, and now Oscar.
biomed wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2019 9:52 am
. It "almost" worked.
uh....
biomed wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2019 9:52 am
Depending on how forcefully I exhale, the pressure does drop to 7 and actually undershoots if I puff.
Your home made toy isn't accurate enough to measure this accurately, thanks to the mass you've added to the equation.
biomed wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2019 9:52 am
So, the actual setup behaves as the Philips control loop people and any other servo designer might expect. Given enough time to settle, the loop does, in fact, go from 10 to 7 and back.
Your allegation is inconsistent with Philips Respironics own documentation on the subject.
Dear palerider,
I'm trying to be respectful, not a smart**s. All those plug-in thingies look the same to me. The difference is - I'm a hardware "puke" who can tell you exactly what's in them. I retired from a major semiconductor company that made them. Somewhere in the late 60s, when I reminded myself I loved analog hardware more than software or digital design, I quit writing code.
If you'd provide a link where Philips engineers, not sales types, document servo behavior to be significantly different from what I've casually observed, I'd be grateful.
If you're talking about the mass of the water in the manometer, it certainly adds a delay, but if that delay is less than the spool up-down time of the CPAP blower, and you insure the manometer response is critically damped, I'd expect it to track pressure well enough to get a decent idea of what happens. I'm sure it has little effect on the main pressure/flow. I have plenty of instrumentation to back up everything if desired. Then we can both tell if I'm full of it or not.
Two of many ways to get an idea of what's happening, 1) notice how back pressure feels when you exhale, 2) listen closely to the blower - its displacement and pressure are roughly proportional to speed - maybe not linearly, but close enough to tell what the loop is doing.
I'm not ready to argue or even discuss CPAP medical terminology. I'm too new to the process.
The reason the vacuum cleaner motor "almost" worked - unlike most small blowers, it has a large pressure near stall. That's why it sucks well as a vacuum
cleaner. When there was a sparsity of reasonably-priced used CPAP blowers online, I decided to try it. A 16 Volt vacuum cleaner motor is still pretty noisy at 4 Volts. I didn't get around to closing the loop with one of my pressure sensors, but everything is still in the garage.................