As promised in my intro post, I have written an article on how to achieve accurate temperature control very cheaply.
DisclaimerThis article involves mains electricity and water, if you are not 100% confident do NOT attempt this
I am based in the UK so please bare this in mind if you are considering this and are based elsewhere as things may be different
The problem:
We all want and need accurate temperature control for our developing, however its not that easy using hot and cold water while watching the thermometer and the stopwatch. My first attempt was to use an aquarium heater, however I soon found that it was inacurate and took far too long to react to changes in temperature.
The solution:
I decided to use a digital temperature controller, designed for process control it simply and effectively monitors the temperature and switches on the heating element when needed.
The exact one I have is this
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/290971685906?ssPageName=STRK:MEWNX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1439.l2649 under £10
A few years ago these would have been very expensive but not now
I also have a small (50w) heater, in my final setup this will be replaced with two 200w heaters, so I can heat the water up faster
The heaters are just set at the maximum they will go to, printed as 37 dec C I have maintained a tank at 38 deg C for C41 no problem, but I have been using 25 deg C in the small setup
Below is a picture of a demonstration setup, I do not develop at the kitchen sink but the light is way better than my darkroom
I have it connected to a double socket so I can use two heaters for bigger tanks, the controller can switch 10A so even 400w of heaters are fine as it can switch 2.4kw in theory
As I said, this is a demo setup, currently the temp probe is hanging off my thermometer, I'm going to get a different sensor I can attach about a third of the way up the tank, as this give the best representation of the temperature
I intend to get a deep back box for the double socket and mount the controller in that, then extend the probe wires so the socket can be further from the tank. I will also screw it to the worktop in my new darkroom, making it a more permanent install.
I haven't included details of the wiring as its very simple, but if anyone wants them I will go into more detail
I hope this may be of use to someone