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Yes indeed, BC, they are extremely useful for temperature measurement. What I should have said is that thermocouple output will not be of use for Alancalverd's eco-barn.
Thermocouple current is used in domestic gas boilers to hold the main valve open. The hot junction is heated by the pilot light flame so if the pilot light blows out the main jets will not be activated. Not a lot of volts but tens of amps.
Tens of amps from a pilot light thermocouple? I don't think so. More like millivolts o/c and milliamps s/c.
That gives ~2.7A.
Given the size of my old boiler I would have thought 10T was entirely achievable.
That gives ~2.7A. The expression "tens of amps" is what I queried. I am going to do a test on this, a thermocouple in a flame, short circuited and current measured with a dc clamp meter( hall sensor ). Also can we assume that the source of emf has no resistance, neglecting the leads involved?