I would like to discuss this weather definition and how haystack uses the air tag to differentiate between air temperatures. It seems that that dry bulb temperature points get the air tag, but wetBulb, apparent, and dew temp points do not.
In the definition of the air tag, it states that it denotes a point that is "associated with the measurement or control of air." I think that wet bulb and apparent and dew temp points definitely fall into this category by defining the characteristics of the air, in the same way that we use the air tag along with humidity or pressure or flow on AHU points. However, if air was added to these other temperatures, then we are faced with dry bulb temp tagging being non-unique. A query for "air and temp" would then return all temps, be them wet bulb, dry bulb, or dew.
I propose that a dryBulb tag is added to dry bulb air temperatures in order to be specific, and that the air tag is used on any points that measure the air in the weather section, including wetBulb, dew, humidity, enthalpy, pressure, and wind.
I understand the convenience of not having to specify dry bulb when querying. However, while slightly less convenient, including a dryBulb tag improves the consistency of the haystack tagging scheme, and is much more intuitive for the usage of the air tag.
Adam RohloffWed 26 Jul 2017
I second that. We use drybulb internally for that very reason
brian BakerThu 27 Jul 2017
I agree. Good suggestion.
Stephen FrankMon 31 Jul 2017
For us as well, there have been several cases where air vs. dew and wetBulb was a point of confusion for us, but we've been able to work around it in most cases. I would support use of air to tag any air temperature (dry bulb assumed if no qualifier given), with dryBulb, wetBulb, and dew as optional qualifiers.
Matthew GianniniTue 1 Aug 2017
If it's ok, I'd like to limit the scope of this proposal to weather points for the time being. It will help to keep the discussion focused.
As I understand it, the proposal is this:
Add new tag dryBulb: used to identify weather point for "standard" outside air temperature (previously tagged as just weatherPoint air temp)
Outside air temperature points would now be tagged weatherPoint dryBulb air temp
Add the air tag to existing weatherPoints:
weatherPoint wetBulb air temp
weatherPoint air apparent temp
weatherPoint air dew temp
weatherPoint air humidity (*)
weatherPoint air barometric pressure (**)
weatherPoint air wind direction (***)
weatherPoint air wind speed (***)
I have purposely excluded enthalpy because it is not a weatherPoint.
I am open to this proposal but would like to get further input on the following ideas:
I'm not sure it makes sense to add air to any of the points I starred in that list. Here is my reasoning
If we go this route, I think I would prefer to limit using the air tag on weatherPoints to those that specifically measure temperature
The context of this discussion is specifically weather points, and I'm not sure adding air to the starred tags really clarifies anything.
I'm not sure it makes sense at all for humidity which is a ratio; a measure of air-water mixture
For the other starred tags, if we really want to use air, I would like feedback on changing the points to this instead. But I think I'd much rather leave them as-is as they are using standard "weather terminology"
weatherPoint air pressure (remove barometric)
weatherPoint air speed (remove wind)
weatherPoint air direction (remove wind)
One of the problems with adding air to all the weather points, is that it actually makes it harder to determine the dryBulb temp. Suppose someone tags all those points with air and temp, but does not use dryBulb on the OAT (because it is assumed). When I do a haystack filter for weatherPoint and air and temp I will now get back up seven (7) points; or I have to explicitly filter out the ones I don't want:
weatherPoint and air and temp and not (wetBulb or apparent or dew or wind or pressure or humidity)
That's a pretty brittle approach if we ever add another weather point that also uses air and temp.
Finally, (sorry for the long post), I would like feedback on the idea of completely removing the use of the air on weatherPoints. I know this is kind of the opposite of Jay's proposal, but wanted to explore this too. I feel that air doesn't really add any value in the context of weather points. So the various temperatures would become:
weatherPoint dryBulb temp
weatherPoint wetBulb temp
weatherPoint apparent temp
weatherPoint dew temp
This doesn't solve the problem of assuming dryBulb if the other tags are missing. But it does make the weather point tag model potentially more concise while not sacrificing the meaning of the points.
As an aside, I'm not sure I'm a fan of "assumed" or "default" tags for points. It adds complexity to applications that want to query against these points. You basically have to always assume the worst case and do a bunch of explicit filtering, which, in my opinion, kind of defeats the purpose of having a semantic model. It's supposed to be easy to find the points you want. Right?
So I'd rather say that if we add dryBulb we make it required. If applications want to support old tagging model, that is a burden applications can choose to take on. But it shouldn't be official tagging model for the points as far as Haystack is concerned.
Look forward to additional feedback.
Jay HerronTue 1 Aug 2017
Great points Matthew. Thanks for the discussion everyone.
Matthew, your understanding of the proposal is correct. Fundamentally, my proposal aims to implement the air tag according to its definition across all systems. That is, apply the air tag to all points that measure a characteristic of the air. This causes problems with the weatherPoint temperature points because no dry bulb tag is currently defined, so the proposed dryBulb tag was seeking to fill this hole.
To respond to your list:
I disagree. There are many more things that can be measured in the air than temperature. For example, humidity, CO2 concentration, pressure, etc. This is indicated in the tagging of ahu points.
I don't think it necessarily clarifies anything, but it improves the consistency of the tagging model. If I query for air points, I would expect to see all points that relate to air measurements, regardless of whether they are on an ahu a vav or a weatherPoint.
I definitely think including air with humidity because relative humidity is as much an air characteristic as dry bulb temperature or dew temperature. You cannot measure the relative humidity in something that is not a gas. Furthermore, we include air on humidity points on AHUs.
I don't feel too strongly about these. They still are measurements of the air, but do seem a bit redundant. However, I prefer redundancy if it means we can use air consistently.
Internally, we also include outside on all these points, for consistency with the outside definition here. If we are already changing things, maybe it makes sense to include adding outside to all these points within this proposal.
I absolutely understand the convenience of simply querying for "air and temp" rather than "air and dryBulb and temp". However, I don't believe that this conciseness should be preferenced above the consistency and intuitive nature of the tagging model.
Again, thanks for the discussion everyone. I look forward to hearing your interpretations.
Keith BishoρWed 2 Aug 2017
I agree that drybulb should be added as a tag if we use wetbulb or dew with temp. I also agree with Jay that these points should really have an outside tag. Here is my train of thought:
As I understand it the basic Haystack tag set for a sensor tells you: the "location", the "medium" and "what" was measured. So...
[where][fluid type][measurement]
discharge air temp
return water temp
zone air co2
There can be additional tags for these ( chilled, sensor, point, etc), but this is the basic formation.
What we are talking about measuing are values that is being read from the outside air. Shouldn't they be:
outside air temp
outside air humidity
outside air pressure
outside air direction
outside air speed
Theoretically, other tags should be added to help improve the definition of a specific point ( drybulb, wetbulb, dew, barometric, wind)... Unless we stop trying to use wetbulb or dew with temp
I think part of our problem is that drybulb is a simple temperature measurement where dew and wetbulb take into account humidity and are not the same type of measurement (yes, wetbulb can be measured by the same instrument if it is slightly altered and yes, they are recorded on the same scale and yes, they are related to each other (with humidity), but they are not the same). So, shouldn't the tag sets really be:
outside air temp
outside air wetbulb
outside air dew
outside air humidity
outside air pressure
outside air direction
outside air speed
If someone asks you for the air temp, you aren't going to tell them the dew point. By itself, temperature has a meaning... adding wet bulb or dew point to it changes that meaning, slightly.
Regardless of the direction we go, there are going to be problems.
(If we are going to use apparent with a temperature value, its definition needs to be changed, but that should probably be a separate discussion)
Eric LoewThu 3 Aug 2017
I agree with the tag set as suggested by Keith. While wetbulb is measured in the same units as drybulb, that is about the only thing they have in common.. as Keith pointed out. So, tagging wetbulb also as a temp is not really accurate or meaningful, IMHO.
As Matt says, we want to avoid having to use a bunch of filtering with " and not.. and not.. " to get to the single point we want. This is probably something we should be discussing and evaluating over the entire model, and certainly with any new tagging models proposed.
Matthew GianniniFri 4 Aug 2017
This has been really good discussion; thanks to all who have chimed in so far.
I wanted to take a step back and ask, "What problem are we really trying to solve?"
Currently, all the weather points - when properly tagged - are uniquely identifiable (proper tagging includes not add superfluous tags like outside and air to all the points). The intention for these points is to specifically model the kinds of weather readings you get from a weather service or weather station. So I kind of feel like having the tag weatherPoint implies many of the suggestions that are being made. One could consider it a "meta" tag of sorts; it encapsulates many of the tags that people are proposing.
I think there is a balance that needs to be made between what is consistent, and what is pragmatic. The model has been around for years now, and I think it is working well. We need to consider the impact of any proposed changes. The ideas being proposed are actually breaking changes. See my earlier post about the impact to querying: any application that was querying for weatherPoint and air and temp and expecting to get back one point will now be broken. We should not underestimate the impact these changes would have: it's going to become harder to query for weather points correctly.
Adam RohloffFri 4 Aug 2017
We use a similar framework to Keith when logically constructing a point name and its respective dictionary: [where][fluid type][measurement]
I don' think there is right or wrong here, but the general perspective we take at our organization which has allowed us to develop a robust tagging library and manageable database follows these basic principles:
We try to keep the tags as literal to what we are actually describing as possible, even if this means needing to update our library from time to time. wetbulb, drybulb, dewpoint, are all measuring temperature, but in different ways, so they should all get a temp tag if that is what they are measuring. Additionally they would need the following descriptors (wetbulb, drybulb, dewpoint) respectively to differentiate. We have found that following this approach makes these decisions simpler and less subjective. Likewise, if it measururing "outside air", those tags should also be applied. Often we also measure supply or return air dewpoint/humidity/drybulb, etc. as well.
While breaking changes are not ideal, I think being able to accurately describe our databases in a logically consistent manner, that can be universally applied across the databases is in the long term, more valuable. This does mean that libraries will need to continually evolve. If for example, thermodynamically it was disocvered by the community that there are actually multiple kinds of dewpoint temperature measurements (which there are not as far as I know), then we would need to add an additional tag to differentiate between the types and the code would have to be updated accordingly. Methods can be used to routinely scrub your database records and code so that you can programmatically cast necessary changes.
I'm not saying this THE right way, but it is functional and manageable for us, and more intuitive for users.
Stephen FrankSat 5 Aug 2017
I've been following this discussion closely, as we use dry bulb, wet bulb, and dew point measurements quite a bit, and not just for weather stations. I would like to see a solution that generalizes to any relevant air temperature measurements, or commands for that matter. I agree with Adam that there's probably not a "right" solution, but I also agree with Matthew that's probably best to avoid breaking changes without a good reason.
Still, I think we can agree that in the long run it doesn't make a whole lot of sense for air to mean/imply dryBulb when it comes to air temperatures, and replace air with wetBulb if you mean something other than the dry bulb temp. It works but it strikes me as something that has evolved from not making breaking changes in the past.
In my opinion, an ideal update would meet these two goals:
Correct inconsistencies in modeling, so that the logic is intuitive.
There are clearly multiple ways to make changes. E.G.
Is outside really needed for tagging weather points?
Is it really necessary to always include air, if an air temperature is implied?
Should temp be used in conjunction with the wetBulb and dew tags (i.e. wetBulb and dew as qualifiers) or should wetBulb and dew stand alone (i.e. as different types of measurements)?
If dryBulb is defined, then should an airtemp be required to have one of dryBulb, wetBulb, or dew, or is dry bulb temperature implied if wetBulb and dew aren't present?
Opinions in this thread clearly differ on these points. In light of the above two goals, what do people think about the above bullets?
Also, kind of as a process aside: if we want to give folks like to make app changes, maybe it would be good to start collecting a number of proposals like these that make significant changes and wrapping them into scheduled Haystack updates that folks know ahead of time are coming out. That would let app developers sync app releases that are compatible with tagging changes to when the changes go into effect, so to speak.
Jay HerronWed 9 Aug 2017
Great discussion guys.
With a focus on the two goals Steven outlined, my proposal contains the following parts. Each part seems to be fairly self-contained.
Add outside to all weather points: This is not a breaking change. While it may not be necessary, it does improve the consistency of the outsidetag.
Add air to all temp, humidity, pressure, and wind weather points and add dryBulb to outside air temp: This is a breaking change, but improves consistency of the air tag to match its definition and the usage of air in the AHU docs. Addding dryBulb simply makes the outside air temp point unique after the air tag is addded to the other temps.
Keep temp tags on wetBulb, dew, and apparent points: This is because wetBulb, dew, and apparent points meet the definition of the temp tag as it is currently defined.
The resultant weatherPoint points would look like:
weatherPoint outside air dryBulb temp
weatherPoint outside air wetBulb temp
weatherPoint outside air apparent temp
weatherPoint outside air dew temp
weatherPoint outside air humidity
weatherPoint outside air barometric pressure
weatherPoint outside air wind direction
weatherPoint outside air wind speed
I think we should defer discussion of whether wind or barometric should be kept alongside the air tag to a separate proposal.
Please let me know what you think!
Leroy SimmsThu 10 Aug 2017
I am a big fan of consistency within the standard and multi-use of simple tags rather than a lot of specialty tags; however I also think every tag should provide value.
In my opinion by requiring drybulb with temp makes the temp tag essentially useless. Each tag should be able to group a number of items together in a useful way, but in that scenario querying temp would provide a list that the only thing those points would have in common would be the unit, which could have been found with the unit tag.
If we consider temperature measurements of things other than air (water, surface, etc.) it is typically referring to a measurement which does not consider other factors such as moisture levels or evaporation rates, making it the same as the dry bulb temperature is for air. Any measurement which considers other factors is really something different. I feel temp should only be used on dry bulb and anything else should have a different tag, even if that tag needs to be more clearly defined such as wetbulbTemp or apparentTemp.
Jay HerronThu 10 Aug 2017
Hi Leroy, thanks for contributing.
I definitely see your point. Although, I think querying via units can be difficult if different units are used for the same "measurement" (like some sensors using Celsius and some Fahrenheit). That said, I see value in your argument that dryBulb and wetBulb temperatures are different enough that the traditional interpretation of temp is not correct.
If I'm understanding correctly, you are suggesting a change to the temp tag definition to specify that when alongside air it is a dry-bulb temp. Is this correct?
Leroy SimmsFri 11 Aug 2017
That is a perfect way of putting it Jay!
ScottJ BoehmFri 11 Aug 2017
That makes sense. Air temps should be considered as dryBulb unless tagged otherwise.
Eric LoewFri 11 Aug 2017
Just to be clear, @Leroy and @Jay are suggesting that the tag temp should not be used in conjunction with wetBulb or dew so we don't have to do something like the following:
read(air and temp and not wetBulb and not dew)
.. just to get the air's dry bulb temperature.
Right?
Jay HerronFri 11 Aug 2017
Hi Eric. Yes, both solutions would avoid having to query "and not x and not x" to get dry-bulb temperature.
To summarize the conversation so far, it sounds like there is good consensus on the following item:
Add outside and air to all temp, humidity, pressure, and wind weather points to match the definitions of outside and air.
However, there is disagreement on how to make dry bulb temperature unique, specifically to avoid the "and not x and not x" when querying. This problem arises because air used to be how we differentiated between dry-bulb and other temperatures. The two proposed solutions are:
Define a dryBulb tag to be applied to dry bulb air temperatures. All non-dryBulb air temperature points keep the temp tag, including wetBulb, dew, and apparent. The resultant weather points would look like:
weatherPoint outside air dryBulb temp
weatherPoint outside air wetBulb temp
weatherPoint outside air apparent temp
weatherPoint outside air dew temp
weatherPoint outside air humidity
weatherPoint outside air barometric pressure
weatherPoint outside air wind direction
weatherPoint outside air wind speed
Redefine temp to specify that it represents a dry bulb temperature in air. Remove temp from all non-dryBulb air temperature points, including wetBulb, dew, and apparent. A modification for the apparent tag will likely be required. The resultant weather points would look like:
weatherPoint outside air temp
weatherPoint outside air wetBulb
weatherPoint outside air apparent
weatherPoint outside air dew
weatherPoint outside air humidity
weatherPoint outside air barometric pressure
weatherPoint outside air wind direction
weatherPoint outside air wind speed
Both of these solutions are breaking changes, but both avoid the "and not x and not x" situation.
We've heard a lot of good arguments in both directions. At this point, I think it might be valuable to have people vote for which solution (1 or 2) they prefer. My vote is for solution 1.
Matthew GianniniMon 14 Aug 2017
I am going to convert this thread to a Working Group. I think we are very close to settling on a solution but it might be best at this point to have a group phone call to hash out any further details. If you are interested in this topic, please join the working group. I will give a few days for people to join the group and then I will set up a web meeting where we can hopefully bring this proposal to a resolution.
Thanks!
Eric LoewTue 29 Aug 2017
Hello All,
Thanks Jay for summarizing.
In following this tread there is one thing that we might all consider. It is this. IMHO, wetBulb and dewPoint are not temperatures. They are both measurements of water content in air (along with pressure...but ignoring that..) and just happen to contain the unit of temperature, but are certainly not the air temperature (as denoted by the tags air and temp if we were to follow PROPOSAL 1).
If we stop trying to apply the temp tag to wetBulb and dew this issue pretty much goes away and is more logically consistent than applying the temp tag to points that are really measuring water content. The apparent tag is also a measurement of something other than temperature. It is wind mixed with water content (and solar gain?). So leaving off the temp tag would also apply here.
If we were to follow PROPOSAL 1 are we also now required to tag all other air temperature points such as the following to maintain consistency across the model?
Discharge Air Temp => "discharge air temp dryBulb sensor"
Similarly with zones:
Zone Temp => "zone air temp dryBulb sensor"
Zone Temp Setpoint => zone air temp dryBulb sp"
Perhaps we need to redefine the temp tag to be more than just a "measurement of temperature". In the wetBulb case the temperature being measured is the wet sock of a thermometer spun in air not the air itself. In the apparent temp, it is a calculated value given temperature units but is a conglomeration of wind and humidity readings. Similarly for dew. All three are humidity measurements of a sort.
Matthew GianniniTue 5 Sep 2017
Working Group Meeting 08/30/2017
The working group had a meeting on 08/30/2017 with all members present. The following summarizes the changes proposed by the group. This proposal will remain in review for a period of time to allow community feedback.
Proposal
Here are the proposed set of changes to existing weather points:
weatherPoint air temp
No Change: implicitly means "dryBulb". We will not be adding dryBulb tag to the formal definition of this point.
weatherPoint air wetBulb
Add "air" tag
Remove "temp" tag
weatherPoint air feelsLike
Change the name of "apparent" to "feelsLike"
Add "air" tag
Remove "temp" tag
weatherPoint air dewPoint
Change the name from "dew" to "dewPoint"
Add "air" tag
Remove "temp" tag
weatherPoint air humidity
Add "air" tag
weatherPoint air barometric pressure
Add "air" tag
These changes meet a number of goals:
They are more consistent with the tags that are used on similar measurements in AHU equipment (primarily by adding the air tag)
They keep the points unambiguously defined (by removing temp tag where noted)
They clarify the meaning of the points (where a rename was made)
The temp tag's definition will be updated to indicate that when used in conjunction with the air tag then it refers to the drybulb temperature.
The outside tag will be considered optional for all weatherPoint points. A point can be both outside and weatherPoint if that accurately describes the point, but the use of outside is not a formal part of the definition for a weather point.
There are no proposed changes to any other weather points. In particular, there was discussion related to the wind measurements (wind speed and and wind direction), but there will be no change to these points.
Leroy SimmsWed 6 Sep 2017
Should this also include revising the definition of the temp tag as Jay suggested? Which would state that when used with the air tag it refers to the drybulb temperature?
I know that is outside of the weatherPoint scope, but I believe was one of the main takeaways from this discussion.
Matthew GianniniWed 6 Sep 2017
@Leroy - yes I will update the proposal post to add that action as well. Thanks.
Jay HerronTue 24 Apr 2018
This looks great to me, and it would be awesome to get it out of the review phase and into the standard. Does anyone from the wider Haystack community have questions/concerns?
Jay Herron Tue 25 Jul 2017
I would like to discuss this weather definition and how haystack uses the
air
tag to differentiate between air temperatures. It seems that that dry bulb temperature points get theair
tag, but wetBulb, apparent, and dew temp points do not.In the definition of the
air
tag, it states that it denotes a point that is "associated with the measurement or control of air." I think that wet bulb and apparent and dew temp points definitely fall into this category by defining the characteristics of the air, in the same way that we use theair
tag along withhumidity
orpressure
orflow
on AHU points. However, ifair
was added to these other temperatures, then we are faced with dry bulb temp tagging being non-unique. A query for "air and temp" would then return all temps, be them wet bulb, dry bulb, or dew.I propose that a
dryBulb
tag is added to dry bulb air temperatures in order to be specific, and that theair
tag is used on any points that measure the air in the weather section, includingwetBulb
,dew
,humidity
,enthalpy
,pressure
, andwind
.I understand the convenience of not having to specify dry bulb when querying. However, while slightly less convenient, including a
dryBulb
tag improves the consistency of the haystack tagging scheme, and is much more intuitive for the usage of theair
tag.Adam Rohloff Wed 26 Jul 2017
I second that. We use drybulb internally for that very reason
brian Baker Thu 27 Jul 2017
I agree. Good suggestion.
Stephen Frank Mon 31 Jul 2017
For us as well, there have been several cases where
air
vs.dew
andwetBulb
was a point of confusion for us, but we've been able to work around it in most cases. I would support use ofair
to tag any air temperature (dry bulb assumed if no qualifier given), withdryBulb
,wetBulb
, anddew
as optional qualifiers.Matthew Giannini Tue 1 Aug 2017
If it's ok, I'd like to limit the scope of this proposal to weather points for the time being. It will help to keep the discussion focused.
As I understand it, the proposal is this:
dryBulb
: used to identify weather point for "standard" outside air temperature (previously tagged as justweatherPoint air temp
)weatherPoint dryBulb air temp
air
tag to existing weatherPoints:weatherPoint wetBulb air temp
weatherPoint air apparent temp
weatherPoint air dew temp
weatherPoint air humidity
(*)weatherPoint air barometric pressure
(**)weatherPoint air wind direction
(***)weatherPoint air wind speed
(***)I have purposely excluded
enthalpy
because it is not a weatherPoint.I am open to this proposal but would like to get further input on the following ideas:
I'm not sure it makes sense to add
air
to any of the points I starred in that list. Here is my reasoningair
tag on weatherPoints to those that specifically measure temperatureair
to the starred tags really clarifies anything.air
, I would like feedback on changing the points to this instead. But I think I'd much rather leave them as-is as they are using standard "weather terminology"weatherPoint air pressure
(remove barometric)weatherPoint air speed
(remove wind)weatherPoint air direction
(remove wind)One of the problems with adding
air
to all the weather points, is that it actually makes it harder to determine the dryBulb temp. Suppose someone tags all those points withair
andtemp
, but does not usedryBulb
on the OAT (because it is assumed). When I do a haystack filter forweatherPoint and air and temp
I will now get back up seven (7) points; or I have to explicitly filter out the ones I don't want:That's a pretty brittle approach if we ever add another weather point that also uses air and temp.
Finally, (sorry for the long post), I would like feedback on the idea of completely removing the use of the
air
onweatherPoint
s. I know this is kind of the opposite of Jay's proposal, but wanted to explore this too. I feel thatair
doesn't really add any value in the context of weather points. So the various temperatures would become:weatherPoint dryBulb temp
weatherPoint wetBulb temp
weatherPoint apparent temp
weatherPoint dew temp
This doesn't solve the problem of assuming
dryBulb
if the other tags are missing. But it does make the weather point tag model potentially more concise while not sacrificing the meaning of the points.As an aside, I'm not sure I'm a fan of "assumed" or "default" tags for points. It adds complexity to applications that want to query against these points. You basically have to always assume the worst case and do a bunch of explicit filtering, which, in my opinion, kind of defeats the purpose of having a semantic model. It's supposed to be easy to find the points you want. Right?
So I'd rather say that if we add
dryBulb
we make it required. If applications want to support old tagging model, that is a burden applications can choose to take on. But it shouldn't be official tagging model for the points as far as Haystack is concerned.Look forward to additional feedback.
Jay Herron Tue 1 Aug 2017
Great points Matthew. Thanks for the discussion everyone.
Matthew, your understanding of the proposal is correct. Fundamentally, my proposal aims to implement the
air
tag according to its definition across all systems. That is, apply theair
tag to all points that measure a characteristic of the air. This causes problems with theweatherPoint
temperature points because no dry bulb tag is currently defined, so the proposeddryBulb
tag was seeking to fill this hole.To respond to your list:
ahu
points.air
points, I would expect to see all points that relate to air measurements, regardless of whether they are on anahu
avav
or aweatherPoint
.air
withhumidity
because relative humidity is as much an air characteristic as dry bulb temperature or dew temperature. You cannot measure the relative humidity in something that is not a gas. Furthermore, we includeair
onhumidity
points on AHUs.air
consistently.Internally, we also include
outside
on all these points, for consistency with theoutside
definition here. If we are already changing things, maybe it makes sense to include addingoutside
to all these points within this proposal.I absolutely understand the convenience of simply querying for "air and temp" rather than "air and dryBulb and temp". However, I don't believe that this conciseness should be preferenced above the consistency and intuitive nature of the tagging model.
Again, thanks for the discussion everyone. I look forward to hearing your interpretations.
Keith Bishoρ Wed 2 Aug 2017
I agree that
drybulb
should be added as a tag if we usewetbulb
ordew
withtemp
. I also agree with Jay that these points should really have anoutside
tag. Here is my train of thought:As I understand it the basic Haystack tag set for a sensor tells you: the "location", the "medium" and "what" was measured. So...
discharge air temp
return water temp
zone air co2
There can be additional tags for these (
chilled
,sensor
,point
, etc), but this is the basic formation.What we are talking about measuing are values that is being read from the outside air. Shouldn't they be:
outside air temp
outside air humidity
outside air pressure
outside air direction
outside air speed
Theoretically, other tags should be added to help improve the definition of a specific point (
drybulb
,wetbulb
,dew
,barometric
,wind
)... Unless we stop trying to usewetbulb
ordew
withtemp
I think part of our problem is that
drybulb
is a simple temperature measurement wheredew
andwetbulb
take into account humidity and are not the same type of measurement (yes, wetbulb can be measured by the same instrument if it is slightly altered and yes, they are recorded on the same scale and yes, they are related to each other (with humidity), but they are not the same). So, shouldn't the tag sets really be:outside air temp
outside air wetbulb
outside air dew
outside air humidity
outside air pressure
outside air direction
outside air speed
If someone asks you for the air temp, you aren't going to tell them the dew point. By itself, temperature has a meaning... adding wet bulb or dew point to it changes that meaning, slightly.
Regardless of the direction we go, there are going to be problems.
(If we are going to use
apparent
with a temperature value, its definition needs to be changed, but that should probably be a separate discussion)Eric Loew Thu 3 Aug 2017
I agree with the tag set as suggested by Keith. While wetbulb is measured in the same units as drybulb, that is about the only thing they have in common.. as Keith pointed out. So, tagging wetbulb also as a temp is not really accurate or meaningful, IMHO.
As Matt says, we want to avoid having to use a bunch of filtering with " and not.. and not.. " to get to the single point we want. This is probably something we should be discussing and evaluating over the entire model, and certainly with any new tagging models proposed.
Matthew Giannini Fri 4 Aug 2017
This has been really good discussion; thanks to all who have chimed in so far.
I wanted to take a step back and ask, "What problem are we really trying to solve?"
Currently, all the weather points - when properly tagged - are uniquely identifiable (proper tagging includes not add superfluous tags like
outside
andair
to all the points). The intention for these points is to specifically model the kinds of weather readings you get from a weather service or weather station. So I kind of feel like having the tagweatherPoint
implies many of the suggestions that are being made. One could consider it a "meta" tag of sorts; it encapsulates many of the tags that people are proposing.I think there is a balance that needs to be made between what is consistent, and what is pragmatic. The model has been around for years now, and I think it is working well. We need to consider the impact of any proposed changes. The ideas being proposed are actually breaking changes. See my earlier post about the impact to querying: any application that was querying for
weatherPoint and air and temp
and expecting to get back one point will now be broken. We should not underestimate the impact these changes would have: it's going to become harder to query for weather points correctly.Adam Rohloff Fri 4 Aug 2017
We use a similar framework to Keith when logically constructing a point name and its respective dictionary: [where][fluid type][measurement]
I don' think there is right or wrong here, but the general perspective we take at our organization which has allowed us to develop a robust tagging library and manageable database follows these basic principles:
We try to keep the tags as literal to what we are actually describing as possible, even if this means needing to update our library from time to time. wetbulb, drybulb, dewpoint, are all measuring temperature, but in different ways, so they should all get a
temp
tag if that is what they are measuring. Additionally they would need the following descriptors (wetbulb, drybulb, dewpoint) respectively to differentiate. We have found that following this approach makes these decisions simpler and less subjective. Likewise, if it measururing "outside air", those tags should also be applied. Often we also measure supply or return air dewpoint/humidity/drybulb, etc. as well.While breaking changes are not ideal, I think being able to accurately describe our databases in a logically consistent manner, that can be universally applied across the databases is in the long term, more valuable. This does mean that libraries will need to continually evolve. If for example, thermodynamically it was disocvered by the community that there are actually multiple kinds of dewpoint temperature measurements (which there are not as far as I know), then we would need to add an additional tag to differentiate between the types and the code would have to be updated accordingly. Methods can be used to routinely scrub your database records and code so that you can programmatically cast necessary changes.
I'm not saying this THE
right
way, but it is functional and manageable for us, and more intuitive for users.Stephen Frank Sat 5 Aug 2017
I've been following this discussion closely, as we use dry bulb, wet bulb, and dew point measurements quite a bit, and not just for weather stations. I would like to see a solution that generalizes to any relevant air temperature measurements, or commands for that matter. I agree with Adam that there's probably not a "right" solution, but I also agree with Matthew that's probably best to avoid breaking changes without a good reason.
Still, I think we can agree that in the long run it doesn't make a whole lot of sense for
air
to mean/implydryBulb
when it comes to air temperatures, and replaceair
withwetBulb
if you mean something other than the dry bulb temp. It works but it strikes me as something that has evolved from not making breaking changes in the past.In my opinion, an ideal update would meet these two goals:
There are clearly multiple ways to make changes. E.G.
outside
really needed for tagging weather points?air
, if an air temperature is implied?temp
be used in conjunction with thewetBulb
anddew
tags (i.e.wetBulb
anddew
as qualifiers) or shouldwetBulb
anddew
stand alone (i.e. as different types of measurements)?dryBulb
is defined, then should anair
temp
be required to have one ofdryBulb
,wetBulb
, ordew
, or is dry bulb temperature implied ifwetBulb
anddew
aren't present?Opinions in this thread clearly differ on these points. In light of the above two goals, what do people think about the above bullets?
Also, kind of as a process aside: if we want to give folks like to make app changes, maybe it would be good to start collecting a number of proposals like these that make significant changes and wrapping them into scheduled Haystack updates that folks know ahead of time are coming out. That would let app developers sync app releases that are compatible with tagging changes to when the changes go into effect, so to speak.
Jay Herron Wed 9 Aug 2017
Great discussion guys.
With a focus on the two goals Steven outlined, my proposal contains the following parts. Each part seems to be fairly self-contained.
outside
to all weather points: This is not a breaking change. While it may not be necessary, it does improve the consistency of theoutside
tag.air
to alltemp
,humidity
,pressure
, andwind
weather points and adddryBulb
tooutside air temp
: This is a breaking change, but improves consistency of theair
tag to match its definition and the usage ofair
in the AHU docs. AdddingdryBulb
simply makes theoutside air temp
point unique after theair
tag is addded to the other temps.temp
tags onwetBulb
,dew
, andapparent
points: This is becausewetBulb
,dew
, andapparent
points meet the definition of the temp tag as it is currently defined.The resultant
weatherPoint
points would look like:weatherPoint outside air dryBulb temp
weatherPoint outside air wetBulb temp
weatherPoint outside air apparent temp
weatherPoint outside air dew temp
weatherPoint outside air humidity
weatherPoint outside air barometric pressure
weatherPoint outside air wind direction
weatherPoint outside air wind speed
I think we should defer discussion of whether
wind
orbarometric
should be kept alongside theair
tag to a separate proposal.Please let me know what you think!
Leroy Simms Thu 10 Aug 2017
I am a big fan of consistency within the standard and multi-use of simple tags rather than a lot of specialty tags; however I also think every tag should provide value.
In my opinion by requiring
drybulb
withtemp
makes thetemp
tag essentially useless. Each tag should be able to group a number of items together in a useful way, but in that scenario queryingtemp
would provide a list that the only thing those points would have in common would be the unit, which could have been found with theunit
tag.If we consider temperature measurements of things other than air (water, surface, etc.) it is typically referring to a measurement which does not consider other factors such as moisture levels or evaporation rates, making it the same as the dry bulb temperature is for air. Any measurement which considers other factors is really something different. I feel
temp
should only be used on dry bulb and anything else should have a different tag, even if that tag needs to be more clearly defined such aswetbulbTemp
orapparentTemp
.Jay Herron Thu 10 Aug 2017
Hi Leroy, thanks for contributing.
I definitely see your point. Although, I think querying via units can be difficult if different units are used for the same "measurement" (like some sensors using Celsius and some Fahrenheit). That said, I see value in your argument that
dryBulb
andwetBulb
temperatures are different enough that the traditional interpretation oftemp
is not correct.If I'm understanding correctly, you are suggesting a change to the
temp
tag definition to specify that when alongsideair
it is a dry-bulb temp. Is this correct?Leroy Simms Fri 11 Aug 2017
That is a perfect way of putting it Jay!
ScottJ Boehm Fri 11 Aug 2017
That makes sense. Air temps should be considered as dryBulb unless tagged otherwise.
Eric Loew Fri 11 Aug 2017
Just to be clear, @Leroy and @Jay are suggesting that the tag
temp
should not be used in conjunction withwetBulb
ordew
so we don't have to do something like the following:read(air and temp and not wetBulb and not dew)
.. just to get the air's dry bulb temperature.
Right?
Jay Herron Fri 11 Aug 2017
Hi Eric. Yes, both solutions would avoid having to query "and not x and not x" to get dry-bulb temperature.
To summarize the conversation so far, it sounds like there is good consensus on the following item:
outside
andair
to alltemp
,humidity
,pressure
, andwind
weather points to match the definitions ofoutside
andair
.However, there is disagreement on how to make dry bulb temperature unique, specifically to avoid the "and not x and not x" when querying. This problem arises because
air
used to be how we differentiated between dry-bulb and other temperatures. The two proposed solutions are:dryBulb
tag to be applied to dry bulb air temperatures. All non-dryBulb air temperature points keep thetemp
tag, includingwetBulb
,dew
, andapparent
. The resultant weather points would look like:temp
to specify that it represents a dry bulb temperature in air. Removetemp
from all non-dryBulb air temperature points, includingwetBulb
,dew
, andapparent
. A modification for theapparent
tag will likely be required. The resultant weather points would look like:Both of these solutions are breaking changes, but both avoid the "and not x and not x" situation.
We've heard a lot of good arguments in both directions. At this point, I think it might be valuable to have people vote for which solution (1 or 2) they prefer. My vote is for solution 1.
Matthew Giannini Mon 14 Aug 2017
I am going to convert this thread to a Working Group. I think we are very close to settling on a solution but it might be best at this point to have a group phone call to hash out any further details. If you are interested in this topic, please join the working group. I will give a few days for people to join the group and then I will set up a web meeting where we can hopefully bring this proposal to a resolution.
Thanks!
Eric Loew Tue 29 Aug 2017
Hello All,
Thanks Jay for summarizing.
In following this tread there is one thing that we might all consider. It is this. IMHO, wetBulb and dewPoint are not temperatures. They are both measurements of water content in air (along with pressure...but ignoring that..) and just happen to contain the unit of temperature, but are certainly not the air temperature (as denoted by the tags
air
andtemp
if we were to follow PROPOSAL 1).If we stop trying to apply the
temp
tag towetBulb
anddew
this issue pretty much goes away and is more logically consistent than applying the temp tag to points that are really measuring water content. Theapparent
tag is also a measurement of something other than temperature. It is wind mixed with water content (and solar gain?). So leaving off thetemp
tag would also apply here.If we were to follow PROPOSAL 1 are we also now required to tag all other air temperature points such as the following to maintain consistency across the model?
Similarly with zones:
Perhaps we need to redefine the
temp
tag to be more than just a "measurement of temperature". In thewetBulb
case the temperature being measured is the wet sock of a thermometer spun in air not the air itself. In theapparent
temp, it is a calculated value given temperature units but is a conglomeration of wind and humidity readings. Similarly fordew
. All three are humidity measurements of a sort.Matthew Giannini Tue 5 Sep 2017
Working Group Meeting 08/30/2017
The working group had a meeting on 08/30/2017 with all members present. The following summarizes the changes proposed by the group. This proposal will remain in review for a period of time to allow community feedback.
Proposal
Here are the proposed set of changes to existing weather points:
weatherPoint air temp
weatherPoint air wetBulb
weatherPoint air feelsLike
weatherPoint air dewPoint
weatherPoint air humidity
weatherPoint air barometric pressure
These changes meet a number of goals:
The
temp
tag's definition will be updated to indicate that when used in conjunction with theair
tag then it refers to the drybulb temperature.The
outside
tag will be considered optional for allweatherPoint
points. A point can be bothoutside and weatherPoint
if that accurately describes the point, but the use ofoutside
is not a formal part of the definition for a weather point.There are no proposed changes to any other weather points. In particular, there was discussion related to the wind measurements (wind speed and and wind direction), but there will be no change to these points.
Leroy Simms Wed 6 Sep 2017
Should this also include revising the definition of the
temp
tag as Jay suggested? Which would state that when used with theair
tag it refers to the drybulb temperature?I know that is outside of the
weatherPoint
scope, but I believe was one of the main takeaways from this discussion.Matthew Giannini Wed 6 Sep 2017
@Leroy - yes I will update the proposal post to add that action as well. Thanks.
Jay Herron Tue 24 Apr 2018
This looks great to me, and it would be awesome to get it out of the review phase and into the standard. Does anyone from the wider Haystack community have questions/concerns?