03-04-2007 10:13 PM
03-05-2007 01:06 AM
03-05-2007 10:35 AM
03-05-2007
03:43 PM
- last edited on
07-23-2025
11:15 AM
by
Content Cleaner
aye29,
Thank you for contacting National Instruments. You are correct that to measure the amount of current flowing through your transducer you will need to include a resistor inside the SCB-68. You will then measure the voltage across the resistor and use this value to calculate the current. The screw terminals in the SCB-68 corrispond to terminals on your 6220. The pinout for the 6220 can be found at:
http://digital.ni.com/public.nsf/websearch/EFB197AD62EC3D06862570D2007ABCFA?OpenDocument
As mentioned in this document you can also access the device pinouts from Measurement and Automation Explorer by right clicking on the device inside the Devices and Interfaces folder in the configuration pane and selecting Device Pinouts.
While I do not know what transducer you are using, from your description I believe you would wire the transducer as shown below:
Note that when wired this way you will need to measure on channel 0 using differential terminal configuration (which is the default). I would also highly recommend taking a look at the M-Series user manual available at:
https://www.ni.com/docs/en-US/bundle/pci-pcie-pxi-pxie-usb-62xx-features/resource/m-series-user-manu...
Good luck with your application. Let me know if you have any further questions.
Regards,
Neil S.
Applications Engineer
National Instruments
Message Edited by Neil S. on 03-05-2007 03:44 PM
03-05-2007 11:06 PM - edited 03-05-2007 11:06 PM
Message Edited by aye29 on 03-05-2007 11:06 PM
03-06-2007
03:00 PM
- last edited on
07-23-2025
11:17 AM
by
Content Cleaner
Albert,
When the resistor is connected between pins 68 and 34 I would recommend using a different channel to measure volage output of the flow meter. You could wire the flowmeter in channel 1 for example (pins 33 and 66). There may only be a single wire but the flow meter's voltage should be in reference to some ground plane. You will connect this ground plane into pin 66. Depending on the specifications of the flow meter it may require a different wiring configuration. I would recommend taking a look at:
Developer Zone Tutorial: Field Wiring and Noise Considerations for Analog Signals
If you wired the resistor as shown above in the diagram you will measure the voltage by measuring on channel 0. However, you must use differential terminal configuration with this wiring scheme.
Let me know if you have any addition questions.
Regards,
Neil S.
Applications Engineer
National Instruments
03-08-2007 01:55 PM
03-09-2007 10:47 AM
03-19-2007 01:33 AM
03-19-2007 04:23 PM