abbrechen
Suchergebnisse werden angezeigt für 
Anzeigen  nur  | Stattdessen suchen nach 
Meintest du: 

Why has "heating.sensors.volumetricFlow.allengra" a unit of "liters"?

Why has "heating.sensors.volumetricFlow.allengra" a unit of "liters"?

I'd expect a 'volume/time'.

Or if 'liters' is correct. What does the number mean?

E3_Vitovalor_PT2_0419
5 ANTWORTEN 5

A liter is a metric unit of capacity, formerly defined as the volume of one kilogram of pure water under standard conditions; now equal to 1, 000 cubic centimeters (or approximately 1.75 pints)

 

definition form wolfram alpha

Thanks for a very good definition of liter.

But the question was more about how a flow can be expressed in liters only.

 

With a difference of temperatures and a flow (and the specific thermal capacity of the transported material) i could estimate the transported energy. But to do that one needs to now in what time this liters are flowing thru the system. Is it 200 liters per second or per year. The time component of a flow is as important as the volume.

 

Volumetric Flow Rate (Wikipedia en) 

Volumenstrom (Wikipedia de)

 

So either liters is not a correct unit for 'heating.sensors.volumetricFlow.allengra'

or i completely misunderstand what 'heating.sensors.volumetricFlow.allengra' could mean.

E3_Vitovalor_PT2_0419

Ok, so I didn#t get you question right. Can't check currently, but so fare I remember the unit was liter/h. 

Hi @AnHardt,

Thanks for the question. In the heating domain, generally the unit "per hour" is used for these values. As this is mostly clear for installers and partner, the time is often left out.

So, the correct unit in this case is "liter/hour".

Regards,

Michael

Thanks.

But take it as an error report.

 

E3_Vitovalor_PT2_0419
Top-Lösungsautoren