HVAC Temperature Sensors

Customer Support Image
Need Support?

Call Jack and His Team

Wireless Temperature Sensors

Our wireless temperature sensors give you complete freedom to monitor conditions without complicated wiring. They save installation costs, provide real-time data, and are perfect for remote or hard-to-reach locations—making your operations more efficient and reliable.

Water Temperature Sensors

Protect your systems with precision. Water temperature sensors help you avoid costly breakdowns by keeping tanks, pools, and pipelines at safe levels. Accurate monitoring ensures energy savings and extends the lifespan of your equipment.

Temperature and Humidity Sensors

Control two critical factors with one solution. Our temperature and humidity sensors safeguard inventory, optimize indoor environments, and reduce energy waste—helping you cut costs while maintaining superior air quality and comfort.

Industrial Temperature Sensors

When performance matters most, count on industrial temperature sensors. Built for tough conditions, they ensure accuracy under high heat, vibration, or pressure. With dependable monitoring, you minimize downtime and boost productivity across your operations.

Surface Temperature Sensors

Stay ahead of problems before they become expensive. Surface temperature sensors provide instant readings on pipes, machines, or electrical equipment, helping you detect overheating early, reduce repair costs, and extend service life.

Get the Right Sensor Today

Whether you need wireless, industrial, or water temperature sensors, we have the right solution in stock. Browse our full selection and contact us today to find the perfect sensor for your application.

Frequently Asked Questions

The four most common types are thermistors, RTD temperature sensors, thermocouples, and semiconductor (IC) sensors. Each type differs in accuracy, temperature range, response time, and long-term stability.

No. A humidity sensor measures moisture in the air, while a thermistor measures temperature. Some temperature and humidity sensors combine both elements in one housing, but they function as separate sensing components.

RTD sensors are preferred when high accuracy, repeatability, and long-term stability are required, especially in industrial and HVAC control systems. Thermistors are better for fast response in narrower temperature ranges.

Yes. Modern wireless temperature sensors provide stable readings and reduce wiring complexity, making them ideal for retrofits, monitoring hard-to-reach locations, and large HVAC installations.

Water temperature sensors are commonly used in HVAC systems for boilers, chillers, hydronic heating, and cooling loops. Proper sealing and material compatibility are critical for long-term performance.

Key factors include operating temperature range, accuracy requirements, response time, environmental exposure, and mounting method. Matching the sensor to system demands prevents drift and premature failure.

Surface temperature sensors can be highly accurate when properly installed, but results depend on surface contact quality, insulation, and thermal conductivity. Immersion sensors are generally preferred for fluid measurements.