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CR1000 Manual - Campbell Scientific

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Section 8. Operation<br />

Table 56. ac Noise Rejection on Large Signals<br />

2. During A/D, <strong>CR1000</strong> turns off excitation for ≈170 µs.<br />

3. Excitation is switched on again for one-half cycle, then the second measurement is made.<br />

Restated, when the <strong>CR1000</strong> is programmed to use the half-cycle 50-Hz or 60-Hz rejection techniques, a sensor does not see a<br />

continuous excitation of the length entered as the settling time before the second measurement if the settling time entered is greater<br />

than one-half cycle. This causes a truncated second excitation. Depending on the sensor used, a truncated second excitation may<br />

cause measurement errors.<br />

8.1.2.8 Signal Settling Time<br />

When the <strong>CR1000</strong> switches to an analog input channel or activates excitation for<br />

a bridge measurement, a settling time is required for the measured voltage to settle<br />

to its true value before being measured. The rate at which the signal settles is<br />

determined by the input settling time constant, which is a function of both the<br />

source resistance and fixed input capacitance (3.3 nfd) of the <strong>CR1000</strong>.<br />

Rise and decay waveforms are exponential. Figure Input Voltage Rise and<br />

Transient Decay (p. 286) shows rising and decaying waveforms settling to the true<br />

signal level, V so .<br />

Figure 89: Input voltage rise and transient decay<br />

The <strong>CR1000</strong> delays after switching to a channel to allow the input to settle before<br />

initiating the measurement. The SettlingTime parameter of the associated<br />

measurement instruction is provided to allow the user to tailor measurement<br />

instruction settling times with 100 µs resolution up to 50000 µs. Default settling<br />

times are listed in table CRBasic Measurement Settling Times (p. 287), and are<br />

meant to provide sufficient signal settling in most cases. Additional settling time<br />

may be required when measuring high-resistance (high-impedance) sensors and /<br />

or sensors connected to the datalogger by long leads. Measurement time of a<br />

given instruction increases with increasing settling time. For example, a 1 ms<br />

increase in settling time for a bridge instruction with input reversal and excitation<br />

reversal results in a 4 ms increase in time for the <strong>CR1000</strong> to perform the<br />

instruction.<br />

286

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