01-30-2007 08:29 AM
01-31-2007 01:10 AM
Overvoltage protection
Powered on .................................±25 V
Powered off.................................±15 V
Through it superficially seems you may have in permissible limits, there is a chance you might have damaged the board
01-31-2007 02:22 AM
Thanks for your reply
We use 32 of the AI channels for one type of measurement which are all reading as expected.
The other 32 channels can be taken upto +15VDC maximum but are usually kept below +8VDC. We see a varying number of these 32 channels give very similar or identical readings of 0.01V or 0.02 although the value can be up to +4.0V. Sometimes occasionally there are no channels with identical values, other times there are up to about 20 out of 32 channels. In the application we are using, this is unlikely to be the true value. These values move to different channels and changes in value and do not occur every time.
The 32 channels in question are measuring the voltage across a resistor which is between ground and +15VDC.
I'm not 100% sure it is the NI PCI card but I just wanted to check we havent damaged it due to what we have been doing to it.
I thought it may be the software we are using, so i formatted the PC hard drive and reinstalled windows and Visual C++ so it is now running the same software as two other identical machines but it still has this problem.
Thanks for your help
Andy
01-31-2007 03:02 AM
Just to add to my last reply, the card Passes Self Test and doesn't give an error messages
Thanks
Andy
01-31-2007 04:12 AM
01-31-2007 08:38 AM
Hello,
The card's specifications are found here : http://www.ni.com/pdf/manuals/370720c.pdf,
That lists it's AI protection, which has already been mentioned as 25V. Make sure you are selecting the correct voltage reference (RSE etc), and if the measurements are only mV out then make sure it is accurately calibrated.
Hope this helps,
Tom.
NIUK
02-08-2007 10:12 AM
Thanks for your replies guys, I did try all the obvious stuff when I was first looking at it. After taking the whoel thing apart, it turned out to be the moving probes of the test system shorting on something randomly.
Nevermind thanks for the replies anyway...
Regards
Andy