How do they measure temperature?
All IRt/cs have a proprietary infrared detection system which receives the heat energy radiated from objects the sensor is aimed at, and converts the heat passively to an electrical potential. A millivolt signal is produced, which is scaled to the desired thermocouple characteristics. Since all IRt/cs are self-powered devices, and rely only on the incoming infrared radiation to produce the signal through thermoelectric effects, the signal will follow the rules of radiation thermal physics, and be subject to the non-linearities inherent in the process. However, over a range of temperatures, the IRt/c output is sufficiently linear to produce a signal which can be interchanged directly for a conventional t/c signal. For example, specifying a 2% match to t/c linearity results in a temperature range in which the IRt/c will produce a signal within 2% of the conventional t/c operating over that range. Specifying 5% will produce a somewhat wider range, etc. Each IRt/c model is specifically des