Jul 23

I’ve run into a situation a couple of times now where DNS hasn’t been setup correctly and I have no idea what hostname an IP resolves to. For better or worse, windows has the netbios system that keeps it’s own naming services and can be queried from the command line using nbtstat.

nbtstat -A XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX

Where XXX is the IP address that you are trying to resolve.

Jun 17

Right as I started rebuilding WHIA, I realized my goal had been achieved. My loft was now within 2 degrees of my main floor at all times and humidity was flat across the house, excluding the basement! What was the magic bullet you ask? I killed all of the return vents on the main floor forcing return air to only come from upstairs and then installed a 70 inch (!) ceiling fan on the main floor pushing air up into the upstairs. That took care of it, WHIA is still doing it’s thing, but it’s pretty much just running all vents wide open all of the time now. Somewhat of a let down to be real honest. I still have all of the parts and would still like to move on to v2, but it’s hard to say when that is going to happen now.

May 19

I back up my DVDs. I rip them to H264 using handbrake and then store the originals in a DVD holder and hopefully never have to touch, or scratch, them again. But I occasionaly run into a DVD that I can play, but I can’t copy. Shoot Em Up is a good example. So here is how to dump the stream to an mpeg that can then be used in handbrake with mplayer.

mplayer -dumpstream -dumpfile test.mpg -chapter 1-17 dvd://1

Should be pretty obvious, but chapter is the title chapters and dvd://1 is your dvd drive title number 1.

May 8

WHIA V2 has anemometeres, current transformers, a seeduino mega and a bunch of other goodies coming together.  The new baby has slowed things down pretty dramatically, but I had enough time to put together another little project I’m calling Vroomba.  It’s not a toy, it’s a labor saving device.  I’ll have that page up later on tonight.   In the meantime, check out the Dune Bug-E.

Apr 12

I may have run into a small issue with getting the loft temperature in line with the rest of the house.   It comes down to vacuum.  I’m just not getting enough return suction upstairs to recirculate the air that I need.  I’ve actually got WHIA disabled right now and we’re feeling the pain. The loft was 82 degrees tonight with almost 40% humidity, while the main floor was 77F and 35%,  not happy Bob. I’ve also noticed that I have a fairly strong suction in the basement when the HVAC is running. This means that I either don’t have enough total return air available in the ducts or I need to have more vents in the basement.  I’ve tried doing some rough measurements, closing off returns etc, but I have some hotwire anemometers in route that will allow me to get some real data.  My suspicion is that I just don’t have enough return, but I’m drawing a blank on how to get additional where I need it.  So the plan is that when my anemometers arrive I’m going to hook them up in the basement first to an arduino and my laptop and run some tests, opening and closing vents and returns, until I get that system equalized. Then we’ll move back to trying to get air upstairs.

« Previous Entries Next Entries »