02-13-2016 07:30 PM
Hello,
I'm working on a student project and we need to measure the load output of a flexiforce sensor. I have a decent amount of experience with labview, wheatstone bridges, and strain gauges, but none with op amps and force sensors. LabView just recommends using theur DAQAssist module but I have a feeling it won't just go as smoothly.
Do we need to have a similar wheatstone bridge and bridge balancing system that you need for strain gauges? Or can I simply use the single channel DAQ assist that LabView recommends? I've also heard various things about modeling opamps in LabView, is this reliable and accurate?
Here is the basic circuit the force sensor company recommends.
Even any help pointing me in the right direction is greatly appreciated.
Thanks
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02-13-2016 08:54 PM
02-14-2016 12:20 AM
Not true at all. LabVIEW can work with any kind of strain gage setup whether it is a single gage for a 1/4 bridge, two gages in a half bridge configuration, or 4 in a full bridge arrangement.
What is important is the DAQ equipment you are going to use to read the transducer, or whether you need any signal conditioning circuit prior to whatever signal conditioning is already in the DAQ device,
Hatef, please be careful about spreading misinformation.
02-14-2016 12:34 AM - edited 02-14-2016 12:49 AM
@RavensFan wrote:Not true at all. LabVIEW can work with any kind of strain gage setup whether it is a single gage for a 1/4 bridge, two gages in a half bridge configuration, or 4 in a full bridge arrangement.
What is important is the DAQ equipment you are going to use to read the transducer, or whether you need any signal conditioning circuit prior to whatever signal conditioning is already in the DAQ device,
Hatef, please be careful about spreading misinformation
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HI RavensFan,
I do not think we are allowed to just use Convert Strain Gauge Reading VI for Rosette Strain Gauge and we have to convert data of strain based of three angle of rosette sensors . if I want to make short what i means maybe this link could help Rosette Strain Gauge
also as I remember (but i am not sure) we have to use 24bit DAQ for Rosette
could you give us more information if I am wrong I will be thanks about it
02-14-2016 12:51 AM
Thanks for the help Ravensfans and Hatef
The DAQ I'm using is an NI USB-6229 BNC, which as I understand is a purely analog DAQ (?) so I would need a signal conditioning circuit (which would be the op amp?). Again not an expert here.
02-14-2016 01:20 AM
02-14-2016 10:17 AM
02-14-2016 11:37 AM
Dennis_Knutson thank you,
so this circuit they recommend is the signal conditioning. So this combined with a fairly simple VI and the DAQ will allow me to do what I need?
02-14-2016 12:56 PM
@Hatef wrote:
@RavensFan wrote:Not true at all. LabVIEW can work with any kind of strain gage setup whether it is a single gage for a 1/4 bridge, two gages in a half bridge configuration, or 4 in a full bridge arrangement.
What is important is the DAQ equipment you are going to use to read the transducer, or whether you need any signal conditioning circuit prior to whatever signal conditioning is already in the DAQ device,
Hatef, please be careful about spreading misinformation
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HI RavensFan,
I do not think we are allowed to just use Convert Strain Gauge Reading VI for Rosette Strain Gauge and we have to convert data of strain based of three angle of rosette sensors . if I want to make short what i means maybe this link could help Rosette Strain Gauge
also as I remember (but i am not sure) we have to use 24bit DAQ for Rosette
could you give us more information if I am wrong I will be thanks about it
First, when you mentioned rosette's I was picturing the kind where you have two gages 90 degrees apart in orientation that are meant to read shear strain from torque, or possible the tensile strain and poisson strain. See the link here, http://www.vishaypg.com/micro-measurements/stress-analysis-strain-gages/all-shear-torque-rosettes/ Those can be wired into a bridge and used with a DAQ device that supports strain gage sensors.
With the link and image you are showing, where there are 3 gages as various orientation, 0,60,120 or 0, 45, 90, then you are correct you need to read each of those gages separately and do the math in LabVIEW. The link you posted has a VI that does that math for you which means there really isn't a lot of additional work the programmer needs to do.
All of this is a moot point for the original poster's question, and is just a distraction from the problem he is trying to solve. Nothing in his messages indicates he has a rosette-type of strain gage.
PS. You do not need to you a 24-bit DAQ for rosette. You just need to use what bit-level of DAQ device that will give you the accuracy and resolution you need. That is true of rosettes, single strain gages, or any other type of sensor input you are trying to read.
02-14-2016 01:19 PM