04-25-2007 11:10 AM
04-25-2007 01:03 PM
Ryan:
What you are observing is normal behaviour. The very high input impedance of the analog inputs, along with the front end circuitry, allow them to build up voltages on the inputs when disconnected. They can build up enough charge to saturate to rails (neat +/-10V) I once built a 'person detector' by using an input with nothing connected to it other than a length of wire. When someone approached the wire, the way their body affected the induced 60Hz powerline field would trigger an alarm.
Try shorting the analog inputs to analog ground and you should recieve a zero reading. Or connect the channels to a battery for testing.
Happy sampling!
-AK2DM
10-14-2009 08:06 AM
Hi Everyone,
I have exactly the same problem. I tried connecting the ground directly, but it had no effect. Are there any other suggestions?
thank you, Frank
10-15-2009 09:57 AM
Hi Frank-
How are you grounding out your channels? Are you directly wiring your AI channels to COM? As well, how are things set up in software? Are you multiplexing, or reading one channel at a time? Are you able to get a good reading from a known voltage, or is it only open channels that are railing? Have you taken a look at the Field Wiring and Noise Considerations Guide, that explains how you should have your channels and signals grounded and configured to minimize noise and offset? I would highly recommend taking a look at that document, and then let me know what other questions you have. Have a good one!
10-19-2009 06:37 AM
Dear Anita,
Thank you for your reply. Indeed my wiring was not correct. I used differential input settings, assuming that I could use the Gain channel as a third wire.
I'm a software engineer, an electronics engineer has helped me out with the right wiring, and my setup works fine now!
Reason for me to believe it was a problem with the NI card, was that exactly the same setup worked perfecty with an older NI card (which apparently was configured differently by default)
Anyway, thanks for your help!
Frank