#1 Effective!
#2 Inexpensive
#3 Readily available
#3 Versatile
#4 Easy to use and no tools required. Just insert sensor/probe and pull it out. No thermal grease.
#5 Easily customized to fit my needs
#6 No compression fittings. Thermowell can be left in or removed & plugged.
Most that found online were quite expensive, bulky, made out of really thick material. I own a couple, but the inner diameter is too large for 4mm probes. Their inner diameters also varied which I thought was strange. I was seriously considering the Still Dragon thermowells, but I wanted something that could be easily replaced or modified. I also needed different lengths so I just had to make them myself.
One trip to the local Ace Hardware store I picked up a 1/2" npt brass plug ($3.29) and a 3/16" OD x 12" long brass tube ($1.29). Total cost for materials = $4.58. If you get a few plugs you could easily make a few thermowells. Any size plug would work.
![Image](http://i639.photobucket.com/albums/uu115/BeerBeerBeer/Thermowell/DIYThermowell01_zpsebcc7dd5.jpg)
I drilled a hole through a hole dead center of the plug using a 3/16" drill bit. I cut a piece of the brass tube to the desired length.
![Image](http://i639.photobucket.com/albums/uu115/BeerBeerBeer/Thermowell/DIYThermowell02_zps3bb0937b.jpg)
I sanded the end of the tube, sanded inside the plug, fluxed both surfaces and inserted the tube into the plug. I bent a length of solder to form a small ring and slid it over the tube. I heated up the brass plug with a propane torch until the ring of solder melted.
![Image](http://i639.photobucket.com/albums/uu115/BeerBeerBeer/Thermowell/DIYThermowell09_zps4f1287d5.jpg)
![Image](http://i639.photobucket.com/albums/uu115/BeerBeerBeer/Thermowell/DIYThermowell03_zps330b2cfe.jpg)
I then dipped the end of the brass tube into some paste flux, snipped approx a 1/4" long piece of solder, shoved it into the end of the tube, held the end of the tube against some steel and torched the end of the tube until the solder melted. I spit on it to cool it then cleaned up any rough edges.
![Image](http://i639.photobucket.com/albums/uu115/BeerBeerBeer/Thermowell/DIYThermowell05_zps682b00cc.jpg)
I flipped it around and used a countersink bit to bevel the hole. You can use a larger diameter drill bit.
![Image](http://i639.photobucket.com/albums/uu115/BeerBeerBeer/Thermowell/DIYThermowell04_zps769af6fc.jpg)
DONE! ! !
Here's a pic showing how tight a 4mm RTD probe (or 4mm thermocouple) fits inside this tube. No thermal grease required. It fits like a glove!
![Image](http://i639.photobucket.com/albums/uu115/BeerBeerBeer/Thermowell/DIYThermowell06_zpsbd8d0ea9.jpg)
I made a 2nd thermowell for a LONG K-type thermocouple I had lying around.
![Image](http://i639.photobucket.com/albums/uu115/BeerBeerBeer/Thermowell/DIYThermowell07_zps4c2e9d9a.jpg)
![Image](http://i639.photobucket.com/albums/uu115/BeerBeerBeer/Thermowell/DIYThermowell08_zpsfd037652.jpg)
I would have preferred 3/16" OD copper tubing, but NONE of my local stores had any in stock
![Sad :(](./images/smilies/icon_sad.gif)