Studying for the PE exam, everything seems to be a breeze, but I cannot for the life of me read a TC chart. Specifically, I have a sample problem in a study guide where the measured voltage is 21.57 mV with a 20C junction and a Type J thermocouple.
How to solve the problem is straight forward. I know I have to account for the junction temperature by adding the voltage at 20C to my measured voltage, then looking up the result in the chart. I, however, cannot read a chart. Just can't do it. I seem to also have found multiple charts and online calculators that contradict eachother, so if somebody could please help me work this out it would be greatly appreciated.
As far as I can tell, my sources of confusion come from these questions:
Some charts number from -10 to 0 in columns, others number from 0 to +10 in columns. These appear the same, but the value that I add to or subtract from is always a mystery, specifically because all charts seem to have a far left value and far right value that are the same, and for me it would be intuitive if the right value was always +10.
Related to #1, is there a case to use one or the other above?
Is looking up a cold junction offset value in any way different than looking up a regular value? In my example problem, I went to my chart to find the mV for 20C, should I be looking at a different chart for cold junctions?
From my sample problem textbook, they found 20C -> 1.537 mV:
From an online chart, I also found 20C -> 1.537 mV:
From another chart online, I found 20C -> 1.019 mV:
An online calculator I found says 20C -> 1.019 mV:
Fluke's online calculator agrees 20C -> 1.019mV:
The reference book I have available to me was in Fahrenheit, but 68F -> 1.306mV:
All of the values seem to differ by 10C (1.019 mV vs 1.537 mV), except the Fahrenheit value seems to be about halfway, so I'm sure it's no coincidence that my interpretations of the charts are wrong, but using the calculators I just punched it in. Where am I going wrong here?