On Thu, 2010-01-21 at 13:17 -0600, Joe Greco wrote:
Seriously, "talk to your vendor." You can frequently get gear with remote reporting, some of it will do dry contact or even talk RS232. If you can not, a lot of it can be measured anyways.
If your gear doesn't "support" it, talk to generator service guys who are well-thought-of in your area. I'd place good odds that they'll be happy to outfit you with a computer-readable fuel level indicator, oil pressure, remote test, etc., etc., though they may be smiling their way to the bank and thanking you for all the custom work.
... JG
a lot of places just use a linux or BSD SFF/mini-ITX with a webcam grabbing a jpeg/png every few seconds or once a minute on a cron job, pointed at the controls/guages/meters. Just make sure the target area is well-lit so the cam can see needles/guages etc. Accessed by SSH (=scp/sftp/sshfs) and not running X or even a web/ftpserver, its pretty hard to pervert it for nefarious means. Much better than "IP webcams" which seem to be a magnet for google-hackers. It's cheap and known-tech to most of us, but may require a shiny black metal box (and a stainless bracket for the webcam) if the generator guys don't like the idea at first. Great for monitoring electrical breaker-boards, SAN hdd leds (using fast framerate grabs) or racks of switches for pretty blinking lights (or the lack of). Of course if you already have an old server box lying nearby, you're laughing. Make sure to buy a well-supported webcam for your kernel/distro to avoid madness. About 30-40$US will get a good one usually, GIYF for supported models. If you can get a RS232 fuel-gauge sender or enviro-sensors, you already have a SSH-to-RS232 gateway ;) Some SCADA gear is extremely expensive and a can of worms in its own right. Gord