12-10-2008 05:37 PM
12-10-2008 06:59 PM
12-10-2008 07:01 PM
12-11-2008 11:51 AM
Hello ajh305,
Thanks for your post! It seems to me that the noise is being induced before the DAQ system because the "white noise" and your signal are about the same. Since there is so much more white noise I would think that this is why you can barely hear a sound made by you. I.E. your voice. Since this is the case I feel like the noise is being amplified by your 100 gain amplifier circuit. One thing I would try first is to add DC filtering Capacitors between your DC power rail and ground. You are at 4.5 volts so maybe a cap value of 1 uF. I am no expert on this but I do know that if you DC power signal is not clean it can add considerable noise. I would give this a try and if you have any electronics books around it should have a section on this.
You could also do an FFT in LabVIEW to see what frequencies are present. If there are any perhaps a low pass filter that only lets frequencies below 20K though.
Let me know if this helps!
Cheers!
Corby_B
http://www.ni.com/support
12-11-2008 05:42 PM
12-12-2008
01:50 PM
- last edited on
10-10-2025
12:28 PM
by
Content Cleaner
Hi ajh305,
This is easy to do with the Sound and Vibration toolkit. If you do not have this as indicated by your previous posts. You will probably have to do something like find the RMS or your signal compare it to the desired value and multiply by a scalar to get this new level.
12-12-2008 02:36 PM