04-20-2015 12:49 AM
Hello,
I have just one question . How the ni9263 and ni 9269 could have the same number of bits (n=16), the same level voltage (+/-10V) and a different precision (9263: 0.11V / 9269: 0.006V)?
I think that precision of signal depends on resolution and resolution =V/2^n. Now why the precision is different?
thanks
regards
Solved! Go to Solution.
04-20-2015 01:03 AM
You are talking about resolution 😄
Range does not have to equal the max ADC range 😉
Precision ? What is pecision??? I usually talk about uncertaincy tied to a measurement 🙂
And uncertaincy usually is a function with a lot of (statistic) variables.
04-20-2015 05:54 AM
Hi ,
thanks for your answer.
And for precision , look at the NI specification : http://sine.ni.com/nips/cds/view/p/lang/fr/nid/208806. We note that precision is egal to 0.11V.
thanks
04-20-2015 06:47 AM - edited 04-20-2015 06:49 AM
So you found out that the number of bits doesn't tell you all 🙂
The resolution of the DAC isn't all. It needs the DAC, a reference source (build-in or external), a supply and an amplifier, all build on a PCB in a housing.
Every part plays a role to the uncertaincy/precision, common main enemies are temperature, drift (over time and temperature), humidity .... EMC/noise/....
And, no wonder.... one part is about twice the cost of the other.
You can buy a resistor for less than 1c or >1000 times that value ... both migth have the resistance ... well, at a certain point ...
04-20-2015 08:27 AM
************************thanks for answer.Now it's very clear****************************
04-20-2015 08:28 AM
************************thanks for answer.Now it's very clear****************************
04-20-2015 08:37 AM
Normally i know that i must open a new topic for ask question. But i need this response very quickly it's a high importance.
Tell me if NI9263 could have an offset value? i buy it just one year ago and i don't see 'offset' in specification.
I ask this question because i have ni 9263 + electronic circuit. On my output i have an offset .
thanks
04-20-2015 09:02 AM
on page 13 I see an offset error spec.
uncalibrated 1.7% of 21.4V ... so you migth expect up to 364mV Offset in the temprange -40 to +70°C
Don't know this hardware... is there a autocal or selfcalibration button in MAX?
04-20-2015 12:13 PM
hi,
May be in max there are this button but i don't see them. But now What worried me , it's this value of offset .Its very high for my measure.
I have a signal of 220mV so offset egal to 364mV is very high for me.
Do you have tips for this?
regards
04-20-2015 03:47 PM
How about doing an offset cancelation befor starting your application?
Measure the offset and include that value in your setpoint?