Speakerguy
Active Member
Hey,
I need a quick and easy way of measuring the RMS value of a sinusoid. It will be in the range on 1-10kHz. It will be generated by a bench signal function generator.
The signal to be read is a sinusoid, at a constant frequency (yet to be chosen, but in the range given above). The sinusoid will be approximately 0.5Vrms. It will fluctuate about 30mV during the the experiment (so the signal will be a sinusoid, constant freq, 500mV-530mVrms).
The signal I'm interested in is the differential, ie the 30mV. Can I get better than 1mV resolution out of a good computer soundcard (like an M-Audio Audiophile 2496)? Can I get that kind of resolution out of a crap soundcard, like whatever is built into my HP pavillion laptop? (Nice laptop, but I don't assume the built in sound is too great).
I should add that I've tried using a Keithley 2100 bench top multimeter, but cannot get more than 10Hz readings on AC voltage. I can get 2KS/s on DC measurements, but not AC. I think it has to store a number of values (specifically 20) and then calculate the RMS value, and it reloads all new values (the next 20 it measured)and recalculates (as dropping the least recent value, including the most recent measured value, and then calculating the RMS voltage, which would then give you an effective 2Khz sample rate, if there is such a thing as AC measurement sample rate).
I may be able to increase the signal by a little, but certainly not any more than 50% (ie, 750mVrms).
This is for work, and I don't get paid very much, but I'll send you an e-cookie or something for any help
I need a quick and easy way of measuring the RMS value of a sinusoid. It will be in the range on 1-10kHz. It will be generated by a bench signal function generator.
The signal to be read is a sinusoid, at a constant frequency (yet to be chosen, but in the range given above). The sinusoid will be approximately 0.5Vrms. It will fluctuate about 30mV during the the experiment (so the signal will be a sinusoid, constant freq, 500mV-530mVrms).
The signal I'm interested in is the differential, ie the 30mV. Can I get better than 1mV resolution out of a good computer soundcard (like an M-Audio Audiophile 2496)? Can I get that kind of resolution out of a crap soundcard, like whatever is built into my HP pavillion laptop? (Nice laptop, but I don't assume the built in sound is too great).
I should add that I've tried using a Keithley 2100 bench top multimeter, but cannot get more than 10Hz readings on AC voltage. I can get 2KS/s on DC measurements, but not AC. I think it has to store a number of values (specifically 20) and then calculate the RMS value, and it reloads all new values (the next 20 it measured)and recalculates (as dropping the least recent value, including the most recent measured value, and then calculating the RMS voltage, which would then give you an effective 2Khz sample rate, if there is such a thing as AC measurement sample rate).
I may be able to increase the signal by a little, but certainly not any more than 50% (ie, 750mVrms).
This is for work, and I don't get paid very much, but I'll send you an e-cookie or something for any help