| ??? 01/20/10 15:06 Read: times |
#172613 - AC modulating the bridge excitation voltage? Responding to: ???'s previous message |
Ap said:
Below was the topic under discussion and NOT a direct connection . I take that the resistive divider is doing its job on both channels ? Yes, of course. But again, the precision of these voltage dividers must be extremely high and the temp drift and long-term drift extremely low. Ap, why don't you modulate the excitation voltage of the bridge by a AC signal? Then, you wouldn't need to battle with this annoyingly high DC offset voltage. Kai Klaas |
| Topic | Author | Date |
| Isolating xducer | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| not even a way | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| noise | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| I wouldn't do that... | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| agree | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| when within specified range!!! | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| why 8V or 20V | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| no specs violated | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| that is TOTALLY irrelevant | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Jumping to conclusions | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| AC modulating the bridge excitation voltage? | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
modulating the excitation | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| make it simple at start | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| making it | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| o, i see... | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| from my experience with loadcells ... | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| what is exactly "xducer" ? | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Offsetting a signal | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Yes but...? | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Error analysis and budget | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Common Mode suppression | 01/01/70 00:00 |



