12-18-2008 12:55 PM
12-18-2008 01:37 PM
Do you have just the microphone or do you have the microphone and the Polarization Voltage Generator? Which model(s)?
The specifications indicate a sensitivity of about 50 mV/Pa. If I did the conversions correctly an 80 dB SPL would correspond to 200 Pa or 1 V out of the microphone.
Have you looked at the output signal with an oscilloscope or voltmeter with suitable bandwidth?
Lynn
12-18-2008 02:11 PM
Lots of posts on ultrasonics lately..
Curious- will a *.wav format storage handle the high sampling rates needed to capture >20kHz acoustics? Regarding playback, will a soundcard even process/output the sound due to it being above the audio bandwidth? Dogs may not even hear it.
-AK2DM
12-18-2008 02:30 PM
12-18-2008 02:33 PM
Lynn,
We're reliant on the power supply of the SCB-68, so there's no way to hook up the mic's to an occiliscope, since the occiliscope wouldn't provide the 5V power, and the SCB-68 won't supply the 5V unless it's being sent it by the software/hardware. I'm sort of stuck in a Catch-22 here...
12-18-2008 02:34 PM
The first LabVIEW project I did (in LV 1.2) involved rat hearing. Speakers only, no microphones. Actually, we did have a microphone for calibration purposes, but it was not connected through LabVIEW. I will be interested in how your project goes.
Lynn
12-18-2008 02:39 PM
The +5 supply pin on the SCB68 should always be present whenever the PC is on. You can keep it connected (and also the GND) to get power and probe the output with the scope.
-AK2DM
12-18-2008 02:41 PM
Just put an extra wire in the screw terminals for the output. Run one wire to the microphone excitation device and the other to the scope. Also bring out a ground connection for the scope. Then you have the DAQ device and the scope connected at the same time. Not optimum for low noise but all you want is to check that the microphone and excitation is working.
Lynn
12-19-2008 02:14 PM
12-19-2008 02:30 PM
The 5 volt line on most of our devices can source up to 1 Amp; your microphone sinks 10mA, so this isn't the issue. As far as the Wav format, the typical settings will not gather the high frequency information you're looking for, but Wav is a dynamic format so you can increase the sampling rate to obtain these higher frequencies. I would guess that a 192KHz sampling rate would be a high enough frequency for your application, but I'm not familiar with the hearing range of rats. If it's more than 20-98000 Hz, you'll need a higher sampling rate. Keep in mind, though, that the maximum file size limit for Wav is 4GB due to the 32 bit storage container.