|
Description:
|
|

Welcome Joe Bamberg, Lead Hardware Engineer at Sense
- Joe went to school at Miami, studying for pre-med.
- After a masters degree in EE, he ended up at Analog Devices (ADI) working on Energy metering ICs.
- Lyric labs
- Most meters are electromechanical, using moving parts to measure current via the Right Hand Rule. This then turns a wheel which measures “impulses per kwh”
- Past guest Larry Sears worked connected (gas!) meters.
- The first meters that weren’t manually read used IR.
- Different generations of smart meters moved from measuring active power (Watt hour meter) to reactive power (VAR / apparent power / power factor / Line sag)
- Most homes have a power factor of 1 because of the primarily resistive loads.
- The onboard “filter based metering” used Hilbert filtering (transforms)
- Measuring current
- Joe worked on parts like:
- After ADI he ended up at Qualcomm / Pixtronics working on MEMS display technology. It used an IGZO (indium gallium zinc oxide) process
- The Sense is primarily in the US and Canada right now, measuring split phase, 120V power.
- Founder Mike Phillips has lots of experience with speech recognition (and disaggregation), which translated to the signal processing on Sense.
- Chris asked about if Sense shuts down, Joe later updated that this was addressed on the Sense blog.
- Internally there is a front end, isolated flyback, iMX7 and WiFi. It runs a custom distro of Linux.
- It’s not just for monitoring power, it also monitors events. For instance, one of Joe’s co-workers got a message “Your sump pump is kicking on”
- The solar version ships another set of CTs
- Edge processing (computing)
- There are a bunch of regulations NEC, UL, FCC, CE, CISPR
- Bolt helped with the initial mechanical design.
- It’s small because of the variable size of installation cavities.
- Have more questions? Find Joe on Twitter as @thejoebamberg
|