06-13-2007 05:46 AM
06-14-2007 05:28 AM
Hello,
can you give me more details about the error you are seeing? I have opened the .txt file but I don't know which is exactly the error. It appears a lot of numbers in columns
How many channels are you acquiring? Which type of trigger are you using? What type of signal does the encoder give? Are you acquiring the encoder signal as well?
In terms of soft, which version of LabVIEW are you using? Can you attach the VI to see how you are doing the programming?
Thanks and regards
crisR
06-14-2007 07:50 AM
06-14-2007 08:34 AM
Hello,
now, I am seeing correctly the two columns because I have opened it with Notepad instead of Internet Explorer.
Well, I think your answer resides on the LV Help, precisely in the AI Read help.
read/search position defines where you want to read from the acquisition buffer. For conditional retrievals, read/search position specifies where to begin the search in the acquisition buffer. The VI adds read offset scans to the mark specified by position to determine the starting point for the read. You express read offset in scans. The read offset parameter can be negative. The default setting and input is 0.
position indicates which input buffer reference mark is the read reference point. This reference can be the read mark, the beginning of the buffer, or the most recently acquired data (end of data). Initially, the read mark points to the beginning of the acquisition buffer. As you retrieve data from the buffer using this VI, LabVIEW increments the read mark to point to the next block of data to be read.
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read offset—The VI adds read offset scans to the mark specified by position to determine the starting point for the read. Refer to the description of the AI Buffer Read VI for more information. What happens if you don't cable any input to read/search position input parameter ( relative to read mark and 0 )? I think you shouldn't have any problems and it is the normal usage. regards, crisR
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06-14-2007 09:26 AM
06-14-2007 09:45 AM
Hello,
I hope so as well.
Let me know when you do the trials. Are you doing a finite acquisition or a continuos one?
Regards
crisR
06-15-2007 05:40 AM
06-15-2007 09:42 AM - edited 06-15-2007 09:42 AM
Mensaje editado por Jarr
06-15-2007 09:43 AM
06-20-2007 10:27 AM
Hello,
taking a look into picture 2, it seems pressure signal goes down when encoder goes up. You are saying the opposite, aren't you?
Try with different lower sampling rate values? What does it happens?
Regards
crisR