A problem with having scientific equipment on location over a period of time is the chance of it being stolen. This equipment can be very expensive (not my DIY stuff, but real quality loggers), a logger can easily cost in the range of several thousand dollars. One way to avoid this would be to have the buoy hidden until it was time to retrieve the logger.
My first thought was to have some sort of sonar signal to trigger the buoy to surface. As this turned out to be a rater complicated system, I settled for the next best thing of having it time based.
At the heart of this system there is a small PCB with a DS1337S+ Real Time Clock. It has its own coin cell battery (on the bottom of the PCB) and a supporting MOSFET circuit to turn on/off the power.
There is no microcontroller, only the RTC. So the alarm is a one shot deal, but what we need for this purpose.
The second part is a CO2 bicycle pump. As the 16g CO2 cartridge only yields about 10 liter of volume we blow the whole cartridge every time.
The valve is opened by a geared down 6V motor at 60 RPM. As the valve only needs to be opened enough to let the CO2 flow the motor will only run for 1 second. There is no H-bridge to reverse the motor so it has to be turned back manually.
The power source for the motor is a 7.4V LiPo battery, and as it is only run for 1 second each time it can last a long time.
To set the alarm I’m working on a Windows application letting you select the date, time and ‘puls’ of the motor. This will work in conjunction with an Arduino to set the RTC over I2C.
(the time set in the video is hardcoded 3 minutes from now)
The second problem was how to mount the controls in a waterproof environment and what balloon/buoy to blow?
Then I came across something called a dry bag that is used by people involved in kayaking and canoeing. This fit my purpose very vel. Here I could blow the whole cartridge in the same environment that hosted the electronics. I would probably add an extra zip-lock bag around the electronics in the full scale test, but the principle is sound.
The system is a modern version of the ‘salt idea’ from Once Upon a Time in America
But this is probably a reference for the older members of LMR
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wT5rGP36kQk