11-14-2006 01:35 PM
11-15-2006
03:45 PM
- last edited on
07-21-2025
02:51 PM
by
Content Cleaner
I'm not sure if this helps but I read: https://www.ni.com/en/shop/data-acquisition/measurement-fundamentals/field-wiring-and-noise-consider... today about wiring set ups and grounding and found it fairly interesting.
11-15-2006
09:08 PM
- last edited on
07-21-2025
02:52 PM
by
Content Cleaner
Hi Aaron,
Daniel has provided a link to an excellent document. The diagrams will help to illustrate how connecting the negative terminals may affect your system.
One important factor to consider is whether your signals are floating or ground referenced. If the signals are floating, tying them together will bring them to the same potential at the negative pin. If the signals are ground referenced you must ensure that the negative pins are at the same potential to avoid ground loops. Read Avoiding Ground Loops for more information.
Regards,
Jennifer O.
Applications Engineer
National Instruments
11-16-2006 12:36 PM
Thanks for the replies. The analog signals I am acquiring from the probes are ground referenced signals and all probes are supplied by the same voltage source. If the negative signal from the probe is referenced to ground, and the ground is shared amongst all channels... how is it different to have all the negative channels from the probes shared (connected together) than to have grounds for all the sources shared?
11-17-2006 05:02 PM
If you abstract the scenario and consider each connection point a number (i.e. a voltage). When your signals are ground referenced, the connection points are fixed numbers. If your signal is floating it is like a "wildcard" the connection point will adopt the number (or voltage) of whatever it is connected to.
Scenario 1: Your sensors are floating until they get connected to a power source. Connecting two floating sensors to the same power source will simply make both sensors adopt the reference of the power supply. There is no possibility of two different voltages getting connected to the same point.
Scenario 2: Both of your sensors are already connected to a grounded source. Therefore unless the sensor outputs are floating, both sensors have a set reference. So long as the sensor output references sit at the same potential (which would generally occur if you are providing the same source) there will be no problem. However if for some reason the references are at different potentials, then connecting them together creates a ground loop.
Hope this helps,
Jennifer O.