MarkCG Posted September 8, 2009 Report Share Posted September 8, 2009 Hi yall... So I may have to do this in order to get a 0-5V analog out signal up to the 0-10 V input signal required by a variable frequency drive. I was thinking of doing so by means of an op-amp configured to work as a non-inverting amplifier to increase voltage 2X, then put this through a unity-gain "power buffer" just to make sure the signal gets to were it needs to go (over long wires) without a whole lot of noise and without potentially messing up the op-amp. Should /shouldn't I do this? Any advice? (No, I can't just buy a daq card with 0-10 V output. Cmon, that would be too easy...) Regards, Mark Garnett Quote Link to comment
Clio75 Posted September 9, 2009 Report Share Posted September 9, 2009 (No, I can't just buy a daq card with 0-10 V output. Cmon, that would be too easy...) Quote Link to comment
ShaunR Posted September 9, 2009 Report Share Posted September 9, 2009 Hi yall... So I may have to do this in order to get a 0-5V analog out signal up to the 0-10 V input signal required by a variable frequency drive. I was thinking of doing so by means of an op-amp configured to work as a non-inverting amplifier to increase voltage 2X, then put this through a unity-gain "power buffer" just to make sure the signal gets to were it needs to go (over long wires) without a whole lot of noise and without potentially messing up the op-amp. Should /shouldn't I do this? Any advice? (No, I can't just buy a daq card with 0-10 V output. Cmon, that would be too easy...) Regards, Mark Garnett Sounds good to me. I would suggest darlingtons on the output if current is required. Quote Link to comment
Tim_S Posted September 9, 2009 Report Share Posted September 9, 2009 An off-the-shelf option might be to use 3B modules. It's certainly pricey (I recall them being about $300 each + backplane + power supply), but you've got a fairly solid linear gain. I expect there are other such bricks out there. Tim Quote Link to comment
George Pollock Posted September 11, 2009 Report Share Posted September 11, 2009 (edited) Hi yall... So I may have to do this in order to get a 0-5V analog out signal up to the 0-10 V input signal required by a variable frequency drive. I was thinking of doing so by means of an op-amp configured to work as a non-inverting amplifier to increase voltage 2X, then put this through a unity-gain "power buffer" just to make sure the signal gets to were it needs to go (over long wires) without a whole lot of noise and without potentially messing up the op-amp. Should /shouldn't I do this? Any advice? (No, I can't just buy a daq card with 0-10 V output. Cmon, that would be too easy...) Regards, Mark Garnett Sounds like a good plan to me. If you have a long wiring haul, be sure to use twp and keep your returns separate. That is about 90% of noise immunity. Shielding is not as important as it sounds, if you do the former. Edited September 11, 2009 by George Pollock Quote Link to comment
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