09-24-2007 11:35 PM
09-26-2007 09:58 AM
Hi Jamieg,
Thanks for posting. I've got some questions so I can help troubleshoot the issue. Which channels/pins are showing this issue and which are not? How much of charge buildup and/or DC offset are you seeing? How quickly is this changing? Once I have your same setup I can try to simulate the problem here. Thanks.
09-27-2007 09:56 AM
09-28-2007 02:44 PM
Hi ATMA,
Maybe you have more things in your setup that need to be considered before fully answering your question. Will you outline your entire setup so I can take all of that into account?
To successfully detect a short circuit on a switch you need two things:
1. A known supply on one end of the switch
2. An input line (analog or digital) to measure the voltage
If there’s a reason why you can’t use the supply on the DAQ board itself, use any external supply available. Again, if there’s more to consider in your application, please let me know.
Have a great weekend!
09-29-2007 06:07 AM
10-01-2007 04:16 PM
Hi Jaime,
I apologize for that. I had written an answer for you, but apparently posted this answer, not yours.
When you don’t use the DAQ for a few weeks, are you leaving it plugged in and channels connected, or is it completely unplugged?
“I would say that the DC offset happens between using the DAQ for a for weeks, as when I stop using it, it is fine.” How is it fine after you ‘stop using it’? Does the DC offset happen only when you first use it again after letting it sit for a few weeks? Does the problem go away after using it for a specified amount of time?
What signal are you measuring? What frequency, amplitude, etc.? I’d like to duplicate this problem, but it sounds pretty sporadic. If you could also get this behavior to repeat and send me a screenshot and/or specific measurements, I could gain more insight as to what exactly is happening.
10-01-2007 11:00 PM - edited 10-01-2007 11:00 PM
>> “I would say that the DC offset happens between using the DAQ for a for weeks, as when I stop using it, it is fine.” How is it fine after you ‘stop using it’? Does the DC offset happen only when you first use it again after letting it sit for a few weeks? Does the problem go away after using it for a specified amount of time?
When acquiring my signal there is no DC offset. Then I don't use it for several weeks, use it again, but can be a DC offset.Message Edited by Jamieg on 10-01-2007 11:00 PM
10-02-2007 04:41 PM
I hate to sound like a broken record, but I’m still not 100% clear on your setup. Let me explain what I understand is happening and you can correct me.
1. You have your signal on pins 1 and 2 and are measuring away, happy as can be.
2. Job done, hardware turned off and (usually) unplugged.
3. Left for 2 weeks.
4. Plugged in, turned on, ready to go.
5. Measure signal and it has the DC offset. You touch the signal to ground (by putting a resistor between pins 2 and 3) to clear out the offset. You also change channels and there’s no offset.
Does this same offset happen when you look at a test panel in Measurement & Automation Explorer (MAX)? Do you leave the pull-down resistor in or is it only used to discharge the offset once? When you’ve tested on another channel do you leave it for a few weeks like you do with channel 0? I’m trying to determine if the problem lies in channel 0 or if something you’ve got hooked up to the USB-6251 is causing a charge buildup.
I would suggest looking at the DAQ Getting Started Guide for any other considerations neither of us has brought to the surface.
Let me know what the results are for some of these steps.