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The
single-channel Model 4077 is a versatile general-purpose instrument for
input of pressure, force, torque, weight, and other variables
measured by DC-excited strain gage transducers.
Unlike
the other 4000 Series "Standard Input
Models," the 4077 provides two special analog channels for real-time
capture of both positive and negative peak input values.
(ALL 4000 instruments are capable of digital peak capture, via
special "MAX" and "MIN" data channels. The
validity of digitally captured peak values is necessarily limited,
however, by the scan rate of the instrument's Central Processor.
This is not the case with the 4077's purely analog peak-capture
capability, which yields true real-time maxima and minima, regardless
of the current scan rate.)
The
4077 accepts a single input from any DC-excited load cell, pressure
sensor, or other conventional 4-arm strain gage bridge, nominal 120 Ω
or higher, with a full-scale range of 1.5 or 3.0 mV/V. Optional bridge-completion circuitry is provided by the Model
10CJB-2, allowing input from a 2-wire 1/4-bridge, 3-wire 1/4
bridge, or 1/2-bridge gage configuration, as shown in Stress
Analysis Using External Bridge Completion.
Advanced
circuit design overcomes many of the errors traditionally afflicting the
strain gage measurement process, resulting in rock-solid digital
indication and noise-free analog output.
Other
important 4077 features include
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selectable
bridge excitation (nominal 5 or 10 VDC) |
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remote
sensing and regulation of bridge excitation—eliminates errors
from temperature effects on cable resistance and yields consistently
stable ratiometric measurement, unaffected by possible power-supply
drift |
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input
impedance in excess of 100 megohms preserves the validity of
factory calibration, prevents conversion of common-mode to
normal-mode signals, and eliminates remaining errors attributable to
cable resistance. Allowable cable length has virtually no
practical limits. |
As
with most standard 4000 Series models, both active low-pass filtering and
user-selectable digital smoothing eliminate dynamic components arising
from vibration, power impulses, etc., that might prevent stable digital
conversion or control action (see Specifications).
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Real-Time
Analog Peak Capture |
The
4077's "+PEAK" channel detects and stores in capacitor memory
the most positive value experienced by the input since it was last
reset by an appropriate "+PEAK TRACK" command. The
"-PEAK" channel detects and stores the most negative
value since the last "-PEAK TRACK" command. Commands to
control peak-capture operation may be issued via the Interface Port, by an
optional Model 10P80D Extended Keyboard,
or by TTL-level logic inputs received at the 4077's rear-panel I/O
Connector.
Each
peak value will remain in memory until reapplication of the respective
"TRACK" command, or until occurrence of a subsequent more
positive or more negative signal excursion (thus permitting the capture of
successively higher maxima or successively lower minima). The
following diagrams show the different possible modes of real-time peak
capture (and reset); see the Model
4077 Instrument Instruction Manual for complete details.
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Capture
and Hold of Successively Higher-Valued Maxima |
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Capture
and Hold of Successively Lower-Valued Minima |
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Capture
and Hold of Successively Lower-Valued Maxima
Using "Reset" of "+PEAK" Channel |
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Capture
and Hold of Successively Higher-Valued Minima
Using "Reset" of "-PEAK" Channel |
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The
4077's capacitor memory is volatile, and entails inevitable decay of
captured signal values. The actual decay rate does not exceed 0.4%
of full scale/second (e.g., with full scale of 20000 counts, it will not
exceed 8 counts/100 msec). The decay rate is small enough to allow
essentially perfect capture and indefinite (digital) hold of signal peaks,
using the special digital "MAX" and "MIN" channels, as
shown in the following diagram.
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Use
of "MAX" Calculate Channel for
Nonvolatile Holding of Captured "+PEAK" |
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For
a 4077-based instrument specifically dedicated to the detection, display,
and evaluation of real-time peaks in all kinds of industrial applications—and
offering a special "peak trend modification"—see the Model
4K/PM-77 Peak Monitor.
Simple
two-point "zero and span" calibration is provided for the 4077's
input channel. In addition, a 100-kΩ, 0.1% shunt resistor
is supplied. You can use this resistor—or one or your own—to
apply an "equivalent input" for calibration purposes, when the
transducer's full-scale mV/V sensitivity is accurately known. The
calibration shunt may be switched in and out for either a positive or
negative up-scale reading by simple mnemonic
commands issued via the Interface Port or optional Model
10P80D Extended Keyboard.
A
third calibration technique for the 4077 involves application of a special
MILLIVOLT/VOLT CALIBRATION (MVV) command
through the Interface Port or optional keyboard when both "mV/V"
sensitivity and corresponding full-scale rating of the transducer are
known.
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Functions
Provided by the
MODEL 4077
"STANDARD
CONFIGURATION"
(for
a complete listing of the configuration, click
here) |
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A
preprogrammed tare function may be activated by front-panel
button |
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Channel
Nos. 2 and 3 are "ANALOG +PEAK" and
"ANALOG -PEAK" of the "live" input
channel (respectively) |
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Via
front-panel buttons, you can call to display the
"live" tared input; the digitally captured maximum (most
positive) value of that input since last reset; the digitally
captured minimum
(least positive) value of that input since last reset; or the
existing net difference between these digital maximum and minimum
values |
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The
digital "MAX" and "MIN" functions can be reset by a front-panel
button |
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Each of the standard
seven predefined limit
zones of the tared input reading is tied to a specific nonlatching logic output |
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The
4077's ±10
VDC analog output derives from the
tared analog input, and is initially scaled for 1 mV of output per
count |
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There
is a special version of the Model 4077 for true, on-line
Statistical Process Control (see the Model
4K/SPC-77). For a 4077-based instrument specifically
dedicated to weighing operations, see the Model
4K/WT-77 Industrial Weighing Instrument.
For
typical 4077 operations, see the following applications:
4000
Series options applying to the Model 4077 include
DC
Strain Gage Instrument Specifications [Top
]
(Click
here for
4000 Series General
Specifications; see also
the statement
on Daytronic accuracy specifications)
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Number
of Inputs |
One |
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Input
Type |
Conventional
4-arm strain gage bridge, nominal 120 Ω or higher NOTE:
1/4- and 1/2-bridge gage configurations can be accomplished by means
of the Model 10CJB-2 Bridge Completion Card,
or by equivalent external bridge completion circuitry supplied by the
user.
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Input
Range (full-scale) |
1.5
or 3.00 mV/V* |
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Excitation
Supplied |
Selectable
5 or 10 VDC, nominal; ±80 mA maximum |
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Normal-Mode
Range |
±50
mV peak operating; ±8 V without instrument damage |
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Common-Mode
Range |
±0.25
V peak operating; ±8 V without instrument damage |
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Common-Mode
Rejection Ratio |
-90
dB at DC; -120 dB at 60 Hz, 1 kHz, and 3 kHz |
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Input
Impedance (Differential and Common-Mode) |
Greater
than 100 MΩ |
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Offset |
Initial:
±0.02% of full scale
Vs. Temperature: ±20 ppm/°C
Vs. Time: ±10 ppm/month
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Gain
Accuracy |
±0.02%
of full scale ± 1 count LSD, typical, following calibration** |
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Gain
Stability |
Vs.
Temperature: ±50 ppm/°C
Vs. Time: ±20 ppm/month
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Analog
Peak Memory Decay Rate |
Does
not exceed 0.4% of full scale/second (e.g., with full scale of 20000
counts, decay rate will not exceed 8 counts/100 msec) |
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Analog
Filtering |
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Filter |
3-pole
modified Butterworth; -3 dB at 20 Hz; -60 dB at 220 Hz
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Step
Response Settling Time (Full-Scale Output) |
To
1% of final value: 60 ms
To 0.1% of final value: 80 ms
To 0.02% of final value: 125 ms
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*
Since channel zeroing is by digital techniques, no input balance control
is provided. The allowable input range, therefore, must include an initial
unbalance (which, in commercially produced strain gage transducers, is
negligible). Other transducers may have to be externally trimmed to
be used with the Model 4077, if zero unbalance exceeds 20% of full scale.
**
Initial (uncalibrated) inaccuracy may be as great as ±0.05% of full
scale. Maximum error that could occur upon replacement of the Model
4077 not followed by calibration is ±0.1% of full scale. |
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