08-30-2018 05:34 PM
I am using NI 9205 to capture 0-10 V signal. For the Connecting Grounded Differential Signals, the diagram shows that the negative terminal (-) needs to connect to COM. Do I have to connect the negative terminal (-) to COM? If I do not connect it to COM, what will happen?
08-31-2018
03:22 PM
- last edited on
05-08-2025
10:38 AM
by
Content Cleaner
The real requirement is to keep the common mode voltage under 10.4V.
I'll just quote the user manual as I think it answers your question
To connect floating differential signals to the NI 9205, you must connect the negative signal to COM through a 1 MΩ resistor to keep the voltage within the maximum working voltage. If the voltage source is outside the maximum working voltage, the NI 9205 does not read data accurately.
https://www.ni.com/docs/en-US/bundle/ni-9205-getting-started/page/overview.html
08-31-2018 03:25 PM
Can I connect the COM to ground but not to the negative side -?
08-31-2018 03:30 PM
You want to connect COM on the 9205 to GND on your sensor? Yes, that will very likely work assuming your sensor has a <= 1MOHM impedance between GND and -.
08-31-2018 03:34 PM
I have a 24 DC power supply. Can I connect the COM on NI 9205 to the ground terminal of the 24 DC power supply?
08-31-2018 03:44 PM
Are you talking about earth ground or the negative output from the supply? It's more common to connect the 9205 COM to the negative output than the earth/chassis ground. But you haven't really supplied a wiring diagram so I can't really say if what you're doing is optimal.
08-31-2018 04:25 PM
I put the diagram in the attachment, which is from the NI 9205 manual. You can see that the COM is connected to the negative (-) and the earth ground. Can I only connect the COM to earth ground but not the negative (-)?
08-31-2018
06:47 PM
- last edited on
05-08-2025
10:38 AM
by
Content Cleaner
I was looking for a diagram that included your power supply and sensor. I'm assuming you're not directly measuring the voltage on your power supply
The negative in that diagram is not the negative of your power supply, it's the negative of your sensor. Normally, if a sensor is outputting a differential signal, it has two outputs, a + and a - and the power supply - would be separate and go to your COM.
Check this out and see if it makes sense:
09-04-2018 10:04 AM
In the diagram, the sensor (V1 in the diagram) is connected to AI0 and AI8, also the AI8 is connected to the COM and earth ground. can I only connect the sensor (V1 in the diagram) to AI0 and AI8, but not connected to COM and earth ground?
09-04-2018 11:57 AM
Are we looking at the same diagram? AI8 is not connected directly to COM. There's a Vcm in between right? I can't tell you if you can connect COM to earth ground because I'd have to fully understand your system. It might be fine, or it could damage the 9205, or it could just make your measurement inaccurate. The symbol in the 9205 diagram is a chassis ground, not an earth ground. I can tell you that it's somewhat uncommon to connect com directly to earth ground so I wouldn't do that unless you had a good reason for it.