LabVIEW

cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Accelerometer gives wrong signals

That datasheet makes it look like 0.532mV = 1g, or 1V = 1880g. Above you said 1V = 1000g, am I reading it wrong?

0 Kudos
Message 11 of 27
(1,926 Views)

The supplier said 1 V = 1000 g, yes...but we record g and then scale it to Volts, and then re-scale it back to g again?

 

 

Untitled.png

0 Kudos
Message 12 of 27
(1,914 Views)

can you share the make and model of the accelerometer, we can look up the scaling factor

Preston Johnson
Solutions Manager, Industrial IoT: Condition Monitoring and Predictive Analytics
cbt
512 431 2371
preston.johnson@cbtechinc
0 Kudos
Message 13 of 27
(1,904 Views)

@StathPol wrote:

...but we record g and then scale it to Volts, and then re-scale it back to g again?


That seems circular, starting with g and ending with g after a detour. That makes no sense.

0 Kudos
Message 14 of 27
(1,898 Views)

Thanks to all for your kind replies.

 

Preston Johnson -- Please find attached the certificate, setup of the accelerometer including the power supply, NI 6361 (voltage measurements) and the PXI-1073.

 

Regards

Stath

 

Download All
0 Kudos
Message 15 of 27
(1,890 Views)

In total, there are 4 accelerometers. Thats why the sensitivity in this particular certificate is 0.508 mV/g

0 Kudos
Message 16 of 27
(1,883 Views)

The data sheets indicate 0.5mv/g so 1V = 2000g.  I see the range of the accelerometer is 12,000g, or +/- 6V or so. 

 

You are sampling as RSE, why not differential?  I see from the photo it looks like you are sampling 4 channels. 

 

In the block diagram, you separate the channels into separate arrays, then immediately put them back into a multichannel waveform array again.  If you want just the one channel, why not simply index the array to the channel you are interested in. 

 

Is it possible to share a screen shot of the captured waveform?

 

Preston Johnson
Solutions Manager, Industrial IoT: Condition Monitoring and Predictive Analytics
cbt
512 431 2371
preston.johnson@cbtechinc
0 Kudos
Message 17 of 27
(1,874 Views)

The range settings (g) on the power supply have or +/- 5V or +/- 10 V. Shall we then select 5Volts and specify in the MAX scale, the reverse setttings that 

 

- 10000 g= -5 Volts

0 g= 0 Volts

+10000 g = 5 Volts?

 

Scale in MAX.png

0 Kudos
Message 18 of 27
(1,868 Views)

I would leave the signal conditioner at +/- 10V to avoid clipping the signal. 

Preston Johnson
Solutions Manager, Industrial IoT: Condition Monitoring and Predictive Analytics
cbt
512 431 2371
preston.johnson@cbtechinc
0 Kudos
Message 19 of 27
(1,862 Views)

My hints:

-Set the conditioner to gain 1

-Use +-10V input range

-Scale the result in your LabVIEW program.  If you have access to the sound and vibration suite use it for aquisition and scaling.

 

You don't loose that much resolution ...  your measurement uncertainty is 2.15% for sine calibration accoring to the cal-sheet and since you measure transient small peaks with power in frequencies >10kHz  you migth end with 5% anyway....  If you match gain and range it's just a factor ~4  but you wouldn't capture out of sensor range peaks that easely occure with such tests.

 

Finally: If you do further calculations you migth end up in using metric units (m/s²) anyway 😉

 

 

 

Greetings from Germany
Henrik

LV since v3.1

“ground” is a convenient fantasy

'˙˙˙˙uıɐƃɐ lɐıp puɐ °06 ǝuoɥd ɹnoʎ uɹnʇ ǝsɐǝld 'ʎɹɐuıƃɐɯı sı pǝlɐıp ǝʌɐɥ noʎ ɹǝqɯnu ǝɥʇ'


0 Kudos
Message 20 of 27
(1,816 Views)