01-28-2008 06:05 PM
01-29-2008 11:21 AM
Hi Peter,
I am assuming this is the same application you mentioned in your previous post about the 5114. The 5105's largest input range is 30Vpp which means the maximum positive voltage it can measure is +15V. The 5105 does not have a vertical offset feature like many of our boards so it will not be able to measure the 25V signal you have.
Many of our other boards do have the ability to measure 25V DC but you must use the vertical offset feature of the board to shift the board's measurement range to cover the area you are interested in.
For example the 5114 has a 40Vpp input range with +/- 15V of vertical offset. If you program the board's vertical offset to 0V and the input range to 40Vp then you could measure any signal from -20V DC to +20V DC. If you leave the range at 40Vpp but program the vertical offset to +15V then you would be able to measure from -5V DC to +35V DC. This would allow you to measure your 25V signal as long as the signal doesn't go below -5V.
Another approach you can use to increase the input voltage range is to use a 10x probe. The probe connects to your signal and outputs a signal equal to 1/10 of the input signal. This effectively increases the 40Vpp range to 400Vpp (+/- 200V DC max). If you were going to use a 10x probe in your application with the 5114 you would probably want to use the 10Vpp range which would give you a 100Vpp actual input range (+/- 50V DC). The NI-SCOPE driver software has a value you can set to tell it what probe attenuation you are using so it will automatically scale your data so the voltage you read in the software is the voltage at the input of the probe.
If you are willing to use probes then most of our digitizers will work for your application, you will just need to pick the one that has the resolution and bandwidth you need. The 5105 is not the best choice for applications using probes because the connector on the front of the board is an SMB and most probes are designed to connect to BNC connectors.
-Matt
01-29-2008 01:10 PM
Matt,
Could I use a simple voltage divider before I connect to the 5105?
01-29-2008 01:57 PM
01-29-2008 05:33 PM
Thanks Matt.
I can't get away from the 5105 becuase of its high density channel count and my limitations with the test station. To make a long story short I have to monitor 32 output channels simultaneously with four available PXI slots. This is why I have chosen the 5105.
Is there IC device I could use instead of the basic voltage divider solution?
Peter
01-29-2008 06:09 PM