04.01.2015 Views

CR1000 Manual - Campbell Scientific

CR1000 Manual - Campbell Scientific

CR1000 Manual - Campbell Scientific

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Section 5. System Overview<br />

Sensors transduce phenomena into measurable electrical forms, outputting<br />

voltage, current, resistance, pulses, or state changes. The <strong>CR1000</strong>, sometimes<br />

with the assistance of various peripheral devices, can measure nearly all electronic<br />

sensors.<br />

The <strong>CR1000</strong> measures analog voltage and pulse signals, representing the<br />

magnitudes numerically. Numeric values are scaled to the units of measure, such<br />

as milliVolts and pulses, or user-specified engineering units, such as wind<br />

direction and wind speed. Measurements can be processed through calculations<br />

or statistical operations and stored in memory awaiting transfer to a PC via<br />

external storage or telecommunications.<br />

The <strong>CR1000</strong> has the option of evaluating programmed instructions sequentially,<br />

or in pipeline mode, wherein the <strong>CR1000</strong> decides the order of instruction<br />

execution.<br />

5.1.1 Clock<br />

5.1.2 Sensor Support<br />

Read More! See Clock Functions (p. 505).<br />

Nearly all <strong>CR1000</strong> functions depend on the internal clock. The operating system<br />

and the CRBasic user program use the clock for scheduling operations. The<br />

CRBasic program times functions through various instructions, but the method of<br />

timing is nearly always in the form of "time into an interval." For example, 6:00<br />

AM is represented in CRBasic as "360 minutes into a 1440 minute interval", 1440<br />

minutes being the length of a day and 360 minutes into that day corresponding to<br />

6:00 AM.<br />

0 minutes into an interval puts it at the "top" of that interval, i.e. at the beginning<br />

of the second, minute, hours, or day. For example, 0 minutes into a 1440 minute<br />

interval corresponds to Midnight. When an interval of a week is programmed, the<br />

week begins at Midnight on Monday morning.<br />

Read More! See Measurements (p. 273).<br />

The following sensor types are supported by the <strong>CR1000</strong> datalogger. Refer to the<br />

appendix Sensors (p. 559) for information on sensors available from <strong>Campbell</strong><br />

<strong>Scientific</strong>.<br />

• Analog voltage<br />

• Analog current (with a shunt resistor)<br />

• Thermocouples<br />

• Resistive bridges<br />

• Pulse output<br />

• Period output<br />

• Frequency output<br />

• Serial and smart sensors<br />

• SDI-12 sensors<br />

59

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!