07-24-2012 06:21 AM
hi
i want to give 0 to 10v to the oscillator circuit so for that i would like to know that maximum output voltage of labview because i want to oprate my oscillator using labview program
07-24-2012 06:24 AM
LabVIEW is a programming language and will never be able to generate voltage. It can only tell hardware to do so.
What hardware are you using for voltage generation (i am NOT referring to your PC's power supply!)?
Norbert
07-24-2012 06:59 AM
hi
so it's not possible to genrate dc volage by computer to write a labview program in it
07-24-2012 07:13 AM
Where would you expect the DC voltage to come out of your PC?
If you don't have a specific hardware for this, would that be the fan? Probable not... the DVD drive? Most probable not as well....
You NEED specific hardware for this. Something like NI DAQ devices.
And sure you can use LV to use such devices for generation of DC voltage.
Norbert
07-24-2012 11:38 PM
hello
thanks for reply
yes i want to genrate dc voltage from my computer to drive oscillator circuit which will be oprated by Labview
07-25-2012 02:21 AM
hussey,
this discussion has no worth.
We KNOW that you want to generate voltage using the programming language LV.
Since no programming language in the world is able to generate voltage without dedicated hardware, repeating "I want to use LV to generate voltage" several times will not bring you anywhere.
What kind of hardware do you have for voltage generation mounted in you PC?
What else do you want to generate except DC voltage (controlling an oscillator could include also AC voltage stimulation...)?
Norbert
07-25-2012 03:34 AM
USB ports have a 5V out, but it has nothing to do with LV.
07-25-2012 04:26 AM
thanks yameda for your fevorable reply
ok so i am accepting whatever you say but one more question is there, why we can not use that 5v from the usb port?
there is not any method
thanks
07-25-2012 04:41 AM - edited 07-25-2012 04:44 AM
USB port outs 5V DC statically. It's like power outlets which (in Europe) out 230V AC all the time (except the fuse is blown or you have a black out).
So, you don't need any programming language to conrol that 5V output of the USB port.
Norbert
EDIT: What voltage do you need? What power does the circuit consume? Do you require some kind of programmatic modification of the voltage?
If you don't answer those questions (in addition to my previous ones) we simply CANNOT help you....
07-25-2012 12:35 PM
Here you say you have to interface to the oscillator with a DAQ card. So why the ridiculous questions about the pc being the source?