jesawdy,
Thanks! I had a great time writing the articles and doing the rebuild.
The PID is indeed on the lsm. I have done some documentation and another (single) article will be written.
It will cover:
- PID selection
- SSR selection
- Thermocouple choices (including some ideas for placement.)
- Installation and ideas about how 'permanent' you want it to be (I made mine so I can uninstall, leaving no traces, in about 10 minutes.)
I'm waiting on data collection... Currently I'm using a surface mount thermocouple that I have pinched between the boiler and the large hose clamp that locates the boiler in my lsm. I had initially thought that this was a ridiculously lame idea but I had the tc in my hand, 20 minutes to myself and gave it a try. It is working far better than I could have hoped. In truth, its worked so well that I haven't pursued a direct probe and the elaborate methods I had worked out to get it into the boiler.
The article will reflect the choices I made but will cover the reasoning I used and (as usual) mistakes I made along the way. - I setup the pid to run in parallel with the pressurestat figuring that the surface mount tc would be slow enough reacting that it wouldn't turn on the element if a lot of steam were pulled from the boiler and it had not autofilled yet. In actuality the tc is fast enough reacting that it *does* read the temp change and act on it. Currently the pressurestat is still in place - and functional - but adjusted down to approximately 0.9 bars of pressure. Its a redundancy factor... If the pid dies, I can crank up the tension on the pressurestat and still drink my morning coffee. (priorities!

)
Total cost really was about $45 and the pid I went with is a used Barber-Coleman unit. It was a fun way to spend an evening. If you've got to replace a commercial pressurestat it was about half the cost of that. Some theorize that by keeping the unit at a constant temp instead of the roughly 2 degree deadband that the stock pressurestat cycles at (all day long...) it will actually be easier on the machine. I don't know if I agree with that or not. Going from stone cold to 240 degrees and back again each day seems like it could thermally stress the components but I'm not sure about a 2 degree swing...
Comments to adding one or not adding one-
- I have found that I can produce totally acceptable espresso using either the pressurestat or the pid.
- I still do the cooling flush and its become second nature.
- You can easily change temperatures on a whim.
- It's quieter. (No: click - pause - boiling water noise - click cycle going on all day long.)
- If your pressurestat is going out, it could well be cheaper than a new one though probably not as cheap as rebuilding your existing one (assuming its a rebuildable unit.)
- If your anti-depression valve (vacuum breaker, what ever you want to call it) for your boiler stuck closed with a pressurestat machine, pressure would build up prematurely and turn off the element early.
- If the same valve stuck on your pid'ed machine you might trip the safety release valve since it will happily heat until the desired temp is reached, boiler pressure be hanged. (I haven't had this happen yet but it is possible that it could happen.)
In the end, its about enjoying the coffee. It's hard to justify the pid end of things since a tremendous amount of making good coffee is based on the skill of the barista. I am not a tremendously skilled barista, by my standards anyway, but I adapt to my equipment fairly quickly. I can tell by the sound of the cooling flush when its about right and that's good enough for me. It may not be good enough for others and putting a pid on a machine that had a mechanical control will definitely give you tighter control of the temps. With everything setup via the pid and the pressurestat in control, I would see a constant 2 degree fluctuation. If I pulled some water it would jump to a 3 degree overshoot. When I turn down the pressurestat and put the pid in the loop that drops to a 0 degree fluctuation when static and a maximum of a 1 degree overshoot if I pull a lot of water.
Anyway those are some scattered thoughts on it. (The caffeine must be wearing off...)
Regards,
Jim