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| United States Patent | 4259633 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4259633.html |
| Inventor(s) | Rosenau; Clifford M. (Willow Street, PA) |
| Abstract | An improvement in devices for determining the moisture content of lumber by
measuring the electrical resistance of the wood. A biasing system is
provided so that the voltage supplied to the electrical contacts disposed
in the wood may be adjusted. This arrangement allows for corrections to be
made in the electrical operation of the device, which corrections
compensate for anomalous properties of the wood. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4259633 |
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Method and apparatus for measuring the moisture content of wood |
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| Publication Date |
March 31, 1981 |
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| Filing Date |
July 25, 1978 |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to the determination of the moisture content
of wood and, more particularly, to such determination by measuring
electrical resistance through the wood.
During lumber processing operations, it is often necessary to determine the
moisture content of the wood undergoing processing. To accomplish this
function meter-type devices have been developed which determine the
moisture content of wood based on the principle that the electrical
resistance of wood varies with the moisture content. In these conventional
devices, a DC voltage source is provided which develops a voltage
potential across a pair of electrodes which are contacted with the wood at
an appropriate distance from one another. The electrical properties
exhibited by the circuit are dependent on the resistance of the wood.
Measurements of one or more of the electrical properties of the circuit
are used to determine the resistance of the wood, and this resistance is
then correlated with a wood moisture content. These devices provide a
rapid and convenient method of ascertaining wood moisture content.
However, these devices are generally acknowledged to be somewhat
inaccurate and especially unreliable at moisture levels above 30%.
Accordingly, it is a principal object of the present invention to provide a
device for measuring wood moisture content which operates with improved
accuracy and greater reliability at moisture levels above 30%.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a meter-type
device for measuring wood moisture content which is of simple and durable
construction; is easy, rapid, and convenient to use; and is otherwise well
adapted to the purposes for which the same is intended.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An improved meter-type device for determining the moisture content of
lumber by measuring the electrical resistance through the wood. A voltage
source is connected to a set of electrodes adapted to be contacted with
the wood whose moisture content is to be measured. A meter for measuring
one or more of the electrical properties of the circuit is connected to
the circuit. A variable resistance is coupled with the voltage source and
one of the electrodes. In operation, electrical contact is made from the
voltage source through the electrodes across the wood. The voltage
potential supplied by the voltage source is maintained generally above a
certain critical level and is corrected to compensate for anomalous
properties of the individual type of wood being tested. One of the
electrical properties of the circuit is measured and displayed on the
meter. The electrical property measured is correlated with wood moisture
content.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
The FIGURE shows a circuit diagram of the present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring now to the FIGURE, there is shown a circuit 10 embodying the
present invention. Voltage source 11 is a battery providing approximately
45 volts DC of electromotive force. Terminal 12 of source 11 is connected
to calibrating potentiometer 13 which provides about 500 ohms resistance
at full range. Potentiometer 13 is connected via electrical line 50 to
meter 15, reference resistor 16, and calibration resistor 17. Resistors 16
and 17 are approximately 4,000 and 2.0 ohms, respectively. Meter 15 is
preferably a conventional 0-5 mv range voltmeter having approximately 10
megaohms of input resistance. Alternatively, meter 15 may be constructed
of base components to form the voltmeter desired. An amplifier 18 would be
connected in series with a resistor 19 and a galvanometer 20. Amplifier 18
would preferably be a low-drift, linear instrumentation amplifier having
approximately 800 volts/volt gain; resistor 19 would be approximately a
97,000 ohm resistor; and galvanometer 20 would be a conventional 0-50
microampere galvanometer having approximately 3,000 ohms of input
resistance. Meter 15 is also connected through switch 21 via line 51 to
range selector switch 22. Selector switch 22 couples the meter 15 through
one or more scale resistors 23-27 to electrode 28 via line 52. Scale
resistors 23-27 are peferably 2; 16; 230; 10,000; and 15,000 ohms,
respectively. Scalea resistors 23-27 are connected in series to provide a
voltage divider network 29 which may be tapped into various points by
selector switch 22. Network 29 is connected to calibration resistor 17 via
line 53 at its end opposite its connection to electrode 28 via line 52.
Electrode 30 is connected to potentiometer 32 through switch 21 via line
54. Potentiometer 32 is approximately a 300 ohm resistor adapted so that
it may be contacted at an electrically intermediate point. Potentiometer
32 is connected at one end to reference resistor 16 via line 55 and at the
opposite end to terminal 33 of battery 11 through switch 34. Line 54
contacts potentiometer 32 at an intermediate point variable so that the
resistance between line 55 and line 54 may be adjusted. Switch 21 is a two
position gang operating switch for use in calibrating the meter 15. Switch
34 is a two position switch which functions as the On-Off switch for the
circuit 10.
In operation, the meter 15 may be calibrated by turning switch 21 to the
calibration position once switch 34 is in the On position. When switch 21
is in the calibration position, meter 15 is disconnected from line 51 and
connected to line 53 and electrode 30 is disconnected, while line 55 is
connected to line 52. Consequently, only source 11, network 29, resistors
16 and 17, potentiometers 13 and 32, and meter 15 are actively included in
the circuitry. Since network 29, resistor 16 and 17, and potentiometer 32,
as connected, have predetermined values potentiometer 13 may be used to
zero the meter 15 and adjust the voltage drop across reference resistor 16
to a standard value, preferably 40 volts. After calibration, the
electrodes 28 and 30 should be contacted with the sample of wood to be
tested. Electrodes 28 and 30 should preferably be stainless steel pins;
which pins may be driven into the wood at an appropriate distance from one
another, such as two inches, on a line parallel with the grain of the
wood; and which pins may be driven into the wood to an appropriate depth,
such as one ane a quarter inches. The switch 21 should be turned to the
operations position. Potentiometer 32 should be adjusted in accordance
with the species of wood being tested. Range selector switch 22 should
then be moved to a position which gives an on-scale meter reading. The
face of meter 15 may preferably be calibrated directly in wood moisture
content for the ranges corresponding to the various positions of switch
22. In the case of the present device as described, the moisture content
ranges for the various switch positions would be, approximately, position
#1-7 to 10%, #2-10 to 15%, #3-15 to 25%, #4-25 to 90%. In electrical
operation, resistor 16 and potentiometer 32 establish a voltage across
electrodes 28 and 30 and network 29. The wood sample and the network 29
act as voltage divider, the voltage drop across the network 29 and its
components varying according to the resistance offered by the wood sample.
Meter 15 measures the voltage drop across various sets of scale resistors
in network 29 providing thereby an indication of the resistance offered by
wood sample and the moisture content of the wood. Potentiometer 32
provides a variable point of electrical connection for electrode 30
relative to the voltage drop provided by battery 11 through resistor 16
and potentiometer 32. Potentiometer 32 acts as a voltage divider providing
an adjustable voltage drop across the wood sample and network 29. This is
important because it has been discovered that various species of wood
react differently to electrical currents exhibiting certain anomalous
properties. When a test voltage is applied across a sample of wood, the
wood commonly exerts a "reverse" electromotive force. This reverse voltage
effect increases with increasing applied voltage up to some maximum value,
different for different wood species. This maximum value, for example two
volts in the case of red oak, appears to be attained when the applied
voltage reaches about twice the reverse voltage effect. Once the applied
voltage reaches this critical level, usually about 4-5 volts, the reverse
voltage effect remains essentially constant with increasing voltage. In
the range of voltages developed in battery powered devices, serious errors
are introduced by not accounting for reverse voltage effects. The present
invention takes accout of the above described reverse voltage effects by
generally applying voltages to the wood samples being tested above or at
the critical level for developing maximum reverse voltage effects, and by
adjusting the voltage applied to the wood sample to correct for reverse
voltage effects inherent in different wood species. The foregoing
provisions of the present invention permit meaningful and accurate
moisture measurements even at high moisture levels.
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