For the first few prototypes of using Sensor Pipe for DustTrak, the following directions apply. ## Set up the Dust Track - Go to the Analog settings and set the lower bound to 0 mg/m^3 and the upper bound to 0.1 mg/m^3 - When figuring out how to wire up the connector ... see the attached picture (from the Dust Trak manual, here). The arrows in the pdf are displaced rightward a little, but if shifted left would refer properly to the appropriate pins. Then, on the actual Dust Trak model we received, the entire output connector was rotated 180 degrees; but the pin assignment on the connector still remained true, relative to its own geometry (there's a simpler way of saying this, I'm sure): i.e.: the connections which were on the left end up on the right. I think you'll get it immediately. The cable is a '4-pin, mini-DIN connector'. Might be avail at Radio Shack, or equivalent? ## Set up Fido with DustTrak - Plug Fido blue wire into top right pin on DustTrak - Plug Fido yellow wire into bottom right pin on DustTrak - Plug Fido Micro USB power into USB power supply on DustTrak - Configure the WiFi (or just connect Fido and Router via Ethernet) - Use Ethernet chord to connect Fido Pi Ethernet port and your Wifi Router - Plug in Fido Pi's USB power supply - Wait 5 minutes - Go to local Fido App (see URL below) - Click on the gear icon in the top right - Enter data in the WiFi SSID and Wifi Password fields - Select WiFi Security type - Click the save button at the bottom - Wait 1 minute - Unplug Fido's power and ethernet chord - Plug Fido back into power supply without having the Ethernet connected - Wait 5 minutes - Verify data is flowing in on the local Fido App - Verify new data is going to local Hive server - Verify new data is going to online Hive server ## Set up Fido with DustTrak - Plug Fido blue wire into top right pin on DustTrak - Plug Fido yellow wire into bottom right pin on DustTrak - Plug Fido Micro USB power into USB power supply on DustTrak - Configure the WiFi (or just connect Fido and Router via Ethernet) - Use Ethernet chord to connect Fido Pi Ethernet port and your Wifi Router - Plug in Fido Pi's USB power supply - Wait 5 minutes - Go to local Fido App (see URL below) - Click on the gear icon in the top right - Enter data in the WiFi SSID and Wifi Password fields - Select WiFi Security type - Click the save button at the bottom - Wait 1 minute - Unplug Fido's power and ethernet chord - Plug Fido back into power supply without having the Ethernet connected - Wait 5 minutes - Verify data is flowing in on the local Fido App - Verify new data is going to local Hive server - Verify new data is going to online Hive server ## grove4 - [Online Hive server: view the data online](http://hammock.media.mit.edu:5999/apps/_design/beekeeper/index.html#sensor/84cb5aa0a7c766ad1cae0c0fe500270a) - Data graphed as parts per thousand - [Local Hive Server: view the data while connected to the LAN (Linux and Mac only)](http://grove4.local:5984/apps/_design/beekeeper/index.html#sensor/84cb5aa0a7c766ad1cae0c0fe500270a) - Data graphed as parts per thousand - [Local Hive App: Configure the WiFi and see live values (Linux and Mac only)](http://grove4.local) ## grove3 - [Online Hive server: view the data online](http://hammock.media.mit.edu:5999/apps/_design/beekeeper/index.html#sensor/2565a02f2656502b16f1eb83c30022ba) - Data graphed as parts per thousand - [Local Hive Server: view the data while connected to the LAN (Linux and Mac only)](http://grove3.local:5984/apps/_design/beekeeper/index.html#sensor/2565a02f2656502b16f1eb83c30022ba) - Data graphed as parts per thousand - [Local Hive App: Configure the WiFi and see live values (Linux and Mac only)](http://grove3.local) - Data shows up in Celsius but is not Celsius, more software work to be done