OperaH;
I have used PTCs many times... They're in at least four products I've designed. Generally they are a major pain in the butt to use. They are so sensitive to ambient that half the time your product will fry b4 they trip and at low temps the PTC will trip prematurely!!
I hunted down the specific pdf you mentioned which catagoriclly stated that "the power must be removed" to reset them.
I have included the relavent passages below;
"When the fault is cleared {(and power is removed)}, the system begins normal operation with no service or part replacement necessary."
"{Once the power is removed} and the fault is cleared, the
temperature of the PolySwitch device drops below its trip
temperature, allowing it to reset to its low resistance state which enables the circuit to operate normally."
But all this a-side, these suckers aren't temperature specified! They are CURRENT specified at some ambient. This means you'd have to jam specific amounts of current thru the PTC to get it to trip *near* some specific ambient.
Furthermore PTCs drift *A LOT* 5% in 1000Hrs. So your temp setting would change over time. Rather quickly!
If you don't really care about the temperature as in water pipe anti-freezing heat tracing, where the pipe must remain above 32F, then poly type temp control will work fine as no one cares about drifting from 40F down to 38F.
This all a mute point anyway as this poster was an obvious *PAR* {Post And Run}