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Vintage CompuTemp 5 Electronic Indoor/Outdoor Thermometer
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Vintage CompuTemp 5 Electronic Indoor/Outdoor Thermometer - RF Cafe Cool Product

Vintage CompuTemp 5 Electronic Thermometer (c1987).

After decades of using various outdoor thermometers that used a bimetal coil, mercury, or alcohol, I finally decided after the latest one failed that it was time to get an electronic one. Not wanting a wireless type that would require batteries, I found a vintage Springfield Aspen model thermometer on eBay that had a remote alcohol bulb connected to the indoor display by a thin copper tube. When it arrived, I discovered that the bulb had burst long ago, and the escaped red dye in the alcohol was evident on the packaging. That was a real disappointment since it was not electrical, which would be the best option. Upon inspecting some of the other same model thermometers on eBay, it appears all of them have the same issue based on the way the outdoor glass tube looks (solid dark red line inside the tube). I didn't bother alerting any of the other vendors. Fortunately, the person I bought mine from issued a full refund, including shipping, with no hassle.

CompuTemp 5 Electronic Thermometer showing indoor and outdoor temperatures - RF Cafe

CompuTemp 5 Electronic Thermometer showing indoor and outdoor temperatures.

CompuTemp 5 Electronic Thermometer rear panel thermocouple input connectors - RF Cafe

CompuTemp 5 Electronic Thermometer rear panel thermocouple input connectors.

At that point I figured maybe an electronic thermometer using remote thermocouple sensors would be a good option, since being directly wired to the indoor display unit, no batteries would be required. My first choice for a vintage electronic thermometer was one of the Heathkit models, preferably unbuilt, but a pre-built version would be acceptable. After about a week of keeping a watch out for one, none became available, so I looked for something else. This CompuTemp 5 electronic thermometer was offered by a few different eBay sellers. The one I selected appeared to be never used and it had the original packaging and documentation. The protective plastic strip was still over the LED display. That's right, this circa 1987 has an old fashion LED, not an LCD. It comes with two thermocouples, one with a 6-foot lead wire and another with a 30-foot lead wire. The CompuTemp 5 has a clock function, a main and an auxiliary thermocouple input, and a minimum and maximum stored temperature value. The display can be set to step through the time, indoor temperature, and outdoor temperature, or any combination thereof.

I performed the simple temperature calibration, then passed the long-wire thermocouple sensor under the lower window pane and up near the top of the wall under a covered porch, so that the sun never comes anywhere near it. The electronics / indicator cabinet sits on a shelf over my computer (that's a vintage Cox control line Sopwith Camel Biplane sitting atop it).

Inside front view of the CompuTemp 5 electronic thermometer.

The two Motorola UNL2003A integrated circuits (ICs) contain seven (7) Darlington transistors for driving 7-segment LED digits. Given that there are four 7-segment digits, the controller must switch between two digits at a fast enough rate that the flicker cannot be detected.

left side view of the CompuTemp 5 electronic thermometer showing calibration potentiometers.

Inside rear view of the CompuTemp 5 electronic thermometer.

The Panasonic MN4066B IC is a quad analog switch that likely is used to multiplex the LED display.

Two National Semiconductor LM8608 2-wire temperature sensor interface ICs service the Main and Aux thermocouple inputs.

No information could be found on the Motorola SC87188B IC, and a schematic could not be located, either. It has to contain an analog-to-digital converter and possibly other functionality. It may be an ASIC (application-specific integrated circuit) designed specially for the CompuTemp 5 electronic thermometer.

 

CompuTemp 5
User's Manual

CompuTemp 5 User's Manual (cover) - RF Cafe

CompuTemp 5 User's Manual (pp 1 & 2) - RF Cafe

CompuTemp 5 User's Manual (pp 3 & 4) - RF Cafe

CompuTemp 5 User's Manual (rear cover) - RF Cafe

CompuTemp 5
Optional Accessories

CompuTemp 5 Optional Accessories (front cover) - RF Cafe

CompuTemp 5 Optional Accessories (pp 1 & 2) - RF Cafe

CompuTemp 5 Optional Accessories (p 3) - RF Cafe

CompuTemp 5 Optional Accessories (rear cover) - RF Cafe

 

 

Posted January 25, 2024

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Webmaster:

    Kirt Blattenberger,

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RF Cafe began life in 1996 as "RF Tools" in an AOL screen name web space totaling 2 MB. Its primary purpose was to provide me with ready access to commonly needed formulas and reference material while performing my work as an RF system and circuit design engineer. The World Wide Web (Internet) was largely an unknown entity at the time and bandwidth was a scarce commodity. Dial-up modems blazed along at 14.4 kbps while tying up your telephone line, and a nice lady's voice announced "You've Got Mail" when a new message arrived...

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