06-04-2025 02:04 AM
I have a setup and I am getting channel Ghosting. Input on channel 1 24V, Channels 2,3,4,5 all showing 12-13Volts. Is there a way to fix this in Flexlogger I have seen a fix for LabView.
Solved! Go to Solution.
06-04-2025 06:35 AM
What hardware are you using? How is it wired? How do you have the channels configured?
06-04-2025 07:19 AM
Hi the setup is as follows.
Using a cDAQ-9174(4-slot USB)
I have the following cards in.
NI 9217 2 channel of RTD. No issue with this.
NI 9209(DSUB) wired in to measure current over a 1 Ohm resistor. No issue with this.
NI 9221 (DSUB) Have 5 channels all measuring 24V. Channel 0 to 4 allocated. If there is 24V on Channel 0 all the others are reading 12/13 Volts.
I have however put a resistor across the inputs and this has removed the ghosting. That would indicate that the NI module is not a fan of floating channels when the measuring value is high, which was said in another thread. The setup will not normally have nothing in them when the test is running.
I have read up that this can be sorted in LabVIEW by adjusting the scanning timing, I was wondering if that was the same for the FlexLogger.
I am very new to NI and I have tried LabVIEW but its over complicated for doing simple Logging data jobs. I liked FlexLogger for its easy to use and off you go working.
06-04-2025 07:34 AM
I am less hopeful that there is a simple software way to eliminate ghosting in FlexLogger. Instead, I would call it a best practice on hardware wiring to short unused inputs to GND with a moderate-sized resistor.
NI needs to add a FlexLogger feature that allows users to remove ghosting by adopting the repeated channel method or adjusting the ADC conversion time and settling delay.
https://knowledge.ni.com/KnowledgeArticleDetails?id=kA00Z000000P84RSAS&l=en-US
06-04-2025 08:08 AM
Hi Cheers for the info. Its working now so will see how I get one with the test.
06-04-2025 08:31 AM
@Hansolo080973 wrote:
I have however put a resistor across the inputs and this has removed the ghosting. That would indicate that the NI module is not a fan of floating channels when the measuring value is high, which was said in another thread. The setup will not normally have nothing in them when the test is running.
Nope. ADCs do not like floating inputs. You need your voltages to have some reference to ground. I highly recommend giving this article a good read: Field Wiring and Noise Considerations for Analog Signals