Differential Temperature Sensor
It is not to hard to do if all you want to know which side is hotter. I do not know your level of expertise so I am assuming you have some electronic knowledge in analog circuits. None of the values are critical so try what you have.
You need two thermistors (same value) probably less then a dollar each. Two resistors same value about the same resistance as the thermistors, a resistor about 125X the value of the other resistors, Resistors less then $0.10 each, an op-amp (LM-358 dual op-amp) probably less then $1.00, decoupling capacitors (0.01 uf, 22 uf) and a power source.
Operating DC voltage of the electronics is not critical as the unit operates in differential mode, pick what is convenient for you. NOTE it must be low voltage DC less then 30 VDC is fine.
Put appropriate length of leads on each of the thermistors. Connect one wire from each to the power -, connect the other wire from each to the resistors. Connect the other end of each resistor to power +. Connect the junction of each thermistor and resistor to one of the inputs of the op-amp. Connect the last resistor from the output of the op-amp to the + input. Connect the + input of the second op-amp to the output of the first. Connect the – input of the second op-amp to it’s output. The output of the op-amp will go either to the + voltage or – voltage depending on which thermistor is warmer. The feed back and the difference between on and off is controlled by the third resistor. If it is too wide of a gap increase the resistance. If the delta is to narrow then just decrease the resistance. The output is low current and supplies only a few Ma. Connecting from output of the op-amp to your X-10 is in your hands as you requested.
If there is a demand for the schematic I can generate one if I catch the posting.
I saw that a 741 was mentioned, it would work OK but needs more voltage and preferred a + and – supply. The LM358 is about 30 years old and very stable and a common part. The second op-amp helps isolate the sensing from the load.
Gil Shultz