Micro Movements M1500 Series Manuel d'utilisateur

Naviguer en ligne ou télécharger Manuel d'utilisateur pour Climatiseurs à système divisé Micro Movements M1500 Series. Micro Movements M1500 Programable Signal Conditioning Manuel d'utilisatio

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Page 1 - User Guide

M1500 User Guide© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver.2.0M1500 Series SignalConditioning SystemUser GuideIssue 2 Jan 2002Issued with Serial Number:...

Page 2 - M1500 User Guide

M1500 User Guide Section 1© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver. 2.0Page: 6To cater for different user requirements, the enclosure is available in several o

Page 3 - CONTENTS

M1500 User Guide Section 1© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver. 2.0 Page: 71.2.2. Multiple Enclosure SystemThe M1500 Enclosures can be grouped in blocks of

Page 4

M1500 User Guide Section 1© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver. 2.0Page: 81.2.3. Wide Bandwidth SystemIn some applications, the sampling rates discussed in

Page 5 - Section 1

M1500 User Guide Section 1© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver. 2.0 Page: 91.2.4. System HierarchyAs described in previous sections, (see Figure 1.8.) the

Page 6 - 1.1.3. Signal Conditioner

M1500 User Guide Section 1© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver. 2.0Page: 10The 4-bit multiplexing control is provided by the ADC card and logically interpr

Page 7 - 1.1.5. Multiplexing

M1500 User Guide Section 1© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver. 2.0 Page: 111.2.5. Product Part NumberingENCLOSURESM1500-M Open frame 64 channel chassis Mu

Page 8 - 1.2. Hardware Configuration

M1500 User Guide Section 1© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver. 2.0Page: 12ACCESSORIESC1504 In line attenuator plug for M1560 (Specify attenuation Max = 10

Page 9

M1500 User Guide Section 2© 2001 Micro Movements Ltd Page: 13Section 22.0. M1500 Series Enclosures.2.1. OverviewThe M1500 enclosures are available in

Page 10

M1500 User Guide Section 2© 2001 Micro Movements LtdPage: 14The Monitor module provides LED indications of the status of the following:POWER+15, -15,

Page 11

M1500 User Guide Section 2© 2001 Micro Movements Ltd Page: 15computer. This enables hardware triggering of the ADC which is required in some applica

Page 12 - 1.2.3. Wide Bandwidth System

M1500 User Guide© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0

Page 13 - 1.2.4. System Hierarchy

M1500 User Guide Section 2© 2001 Micro Movements LtdPage: 16TRIGGER POLARITYJP1 fitted - trigger to ADC normally low going high on trigger.JP2 fitt

Page 14 - 12345678910111213141516

M1500 User Guide Section 2© 2001 Micro Movements Ltd Page: 172.5. Physical DimensionsFigure 2.4. Outline of M1500 EnclosureHeight 135 mm - Standard 3

Page 15 - 1.2.5. Product Part Numbering

M1500 User Guide Section 2© 2001 Micro Movements LtdPage: 182.6. External Connections (Standard)Figure 2.5. Rear Panel M1500 Direct OutputThe connect

Page 16

M1500 User Guide Section 2© 2001 Micro Movements Ltd Page: 19The connections shown opposite are the same for all four connectors. The variation is th

Page 17 - Section 2

M1500 User Guide Section 2© 2001 Micro Movements LtdPage: 20

Page 18 - 2.2. External Triggering

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0 Page: 21Section 33.0 M1560 Universal Input Signal ConditionerThe M1560 is a 4 channel S

Page 19 - 2.3. Jumper Configuration

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0Page: 22transducer, voltage or current input. The input is fed via an input configuratio

Page 20 - 2.4. Power Requirements

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0 Page: 23Each card has a Reduced Instruction Set (RISC) microprocessor which controlls a

Page 21 - 2.5. Physical Dimensions

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0Page: 243. Calibrate condition. There are two methods of implementing the calibration, s

Page 22

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0 Page: 25Figure 3.7 Voltage Transducer Supply Measurement ConfigurationThe resulting

Page 23 - 2.7 Specifications

M1500 User Guide© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver.2.0CONTENTS SECTION 1 Page1.1 Functional Description 11.1.1 Typical Sysem 11.1.2 Sensor and Transducer

Page 24 - M1500 User Guide Section 2

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0Page: 26address for all communication and signal routing. System addresses them become a

Page 25 - Section 3

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0 Page: 27d) Voltage Input: Fit jumper G onlye) ICP accelerometer: Fit jumper H onlyFigur

Page 26

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0Page: 283.3. Communications ProtocolThe main details about communications are contained

Page 27

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0 Page: 29For the M1560Only two bits are actually used. Bit 6 defines whether the board i

Page 28

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0Page: 30T+IN+IN-AuxT-Connections for FullBridge Transducers(Load cells, PressureSensors,

Page 29 - 3.2 Jumper Settings

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0 Page: 31T+IN+IN-AuxT-Connections forCurrent InputFIT INTERNAL CURRENTSENSE RESISTOR(+/-

Page 30

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0Page: 32 3.4 SpecificationM1560 4 Channel Universal Sensor AmplifierChannels: 4Sensor/ I

Page 31 - 3.2.3. Calibration Settings

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0 Page: 33

Page 32 - 3.3. Communications Protocol

M1500 User Guide. Section 3© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0Page: 34

Page 33 - 3.2.3. Input Connections

M1500 User Guide Section 5© 2001 Micro Movements Ltd Page: 33Section 55.1 RS232 Communication1. All board and channel addresses start at 0. Therefor

Page 34 - M1500 User Guide. Section 3

M1500 User Guide© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver 2.0

Page 35

M1500 User Guide Section 5© 2001 Micro Movements LtdPage: 34NOTE:Individual channels within a single Signal Conditioning card cannot be addressed. A

Page 36 - 3.4 Specification

M1500 User Guide Section 5© 2001 Micro Movements Ltd Page: 35Part Number (address, ?)The command syntax is as follows:<board address> ‘?’ ‘?’ ‘

Page 37

M1500 User Guide Section 5© 2001 Micro Movements LtdPage: 36Settings (address, *)The command syntax is as follows:<board address> ‘*’ ‘?’ ‘?’ ‘

Page 38

M1500 User Guide Section 5© 2001 Micro Movements Ltd Page: 37Filters and Supplementary outputs are set or removed by a single bit within the last byt

Page 39 - Section 5

M1500 User Guide Section 5© 2001 Micro Movements LtdPage: 38

Page 40 - 5.2 Commands

M1500 User Guide Section 1© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver. 2.0 Page: 1Section 1In Test and Measurement applications it is often necessary to use senso

Page 41

M1500 User Guide Section 1© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver. 2.0Page: 2Typical ADC devices are generally 16 channel input. However, many systems involve

Page 42

M1500 User Guide Section 1© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver. 2.0 Page: 31.1.4. FilteringIt is often required in measurement systems, to provide noise fi

Page 43

M1500 User Guide Section 1© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver. 2.0Page: 4Figure 1.3. Typical High Speed System with the M1500As an example, using an M

Page 44 - M1500 User Guide Section 5

M1500 User Guide Section 1© 2002 Micro Movements Ltd Ver. 2.0 Page: 51.2.1. Single Enclosure SystemA single M1500 enclosure has the capacity for 16 m

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