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Telemetering

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telemetering

[‚tel·ə′mēd·ə·riŋ]
(engineering)
Transmitting the readings of instruments to a remote location by means of wires, radio waves, or other means. Also known as remote metering; telemetry.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Telemetering

 

(or telemetry), measurement at a distance through telemechanic means. The term “telemetering” is also applied to the branch of telemechanics that deals with the transmission of measurement information over distance and with the presentation of the information in a form suitable for direct human perception or for input into a control device or automatic recorder. The term “telemechanics,” as used in the present article, is similar in meaning to the English term “remote control” in its broadest sense (see).

In telemetering, measurement information is transmitted from transducers, or sensors, to a control or monitoring center continuously, cyclically, or, sometimes, on request (when the operator sends a special interrogation signal containing the address or coded designation of the measured parameter). A continuously measured quantity is often quantized at the monitored point (seeQUANTIZATION, SIGNAL). At the control center, the value of the quantity may be displayed in analogue form (as readings of movable-pointer indicators) or in digital form. Measurement information may be transmitted by means of telemetering systems, combined telemetering and remote-signaling systems, or more complex telemechanic systems.

The term “radio telemetry” is applied to telemetering involving the use of radio channels (seeRADIO REMOTE CONTROL).

REFERENCES

See references under .

G. A. SHASTOVA

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Pneumatic Telemetering. In a pneumatic telemetering circuit, the transmitter and receiver are connected by small diameter tubing containing clean, dry air under pressure.
Electronic Telemetering. This involves use of electronic circuits to amplify signals, to generate signals as audio tones, or to transmit microwave signals and multiplex them.
Possibly its most general application in water works telemetering systems is in generating, transmitting, and receiving signals as tones in audio frequency ranges.
The tones may be transmitted in on-and-off cycles, with a varying pulse duration as in electric telemetering.
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