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    Reading Sensor Pressure from Analog output

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    • droftartsundefined
      droftarts administrators @developeralgo222
      last edited by

      @developeralgo222 I can't find in the firmware where the minimum and maximum values for U and V are set. I've asked @dc42 to check.

      Ian

      Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

      developeralgo222undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • developeralgo222undefined
        developeralgo222 @droftarts
        last edited by developeralgo222

        @droftarts

        As per my testing i don't think Analog port on Duet3 3HC seems to be working correctly. It seems that as per the Analog connection , i should be getting varied Analog pressure reading from the Sensor but it looks like its behaving as if it only triggers to a Max Value set when the Set pressure is met or it remains at the Minimum set Value so long as the Set pressure on the sensor is not yet met. Its behaving more like a NPN output instead or analog output .

        E.g i have this on Duet3

        M308 S1  P"2.io0.in" Y"linear-analog"  A"VG1"  F0  B0.0  C-101  V0.0 U13.5
        

        and on SMC Pressure Sensor i have set it to - 40 kPa for testing

        When the

        • Sensor reads/displays 0.0 ~ -39.9 kPa =====> Duet reads -0.1 ~ 0.1

        • Sensor reads/displays -40.0 ~ -101 kPa =====> Duet reads -87.5 ~ -87.9

        it seems to be behaving like a digital NPN output yet its analog output

        droftartsundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • droftartsundefined
          droftarts administrators @developeralgo222
          last edited by

          @developeralgo222 Try one of the other io.in ports. See https://docs.duet3d.com/Duet3D_hardware/Duet_3_family/Duet_3_Expansion_3HC#inputoutput
          Or connect it to a 6XD io.in port to check.

          Ian

          Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

          developeralgo222undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • developeralgo222undefined
            developeralgo222 @droftarts
            last edited by

            @droftarts

            i have 6 ports connected to 6 sensors as indicated above ( Board 2 (3HC) = 2.io0.in , 2.io1.in , 2.io2.in & Board 3 (3HC) = 3.io0.in , 3.io1.in , 3.io2.in ) and they are all behaving the same way.

            i have tried on the 6XD analog capable ports and they are behaving the same way too

            gloomyandyundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • gloomyandyundefined
              gloomyandy @developeralgo222
              last edited by

              @developeralgo222 Have you measured the input and output voltages at the level shifter? So the analogue in signal and the corresponding shifted voltage? What are they at say 0, 40 101 KPa? I'm not sure that device is intended to operate in the way you are using it, from the datasheet "The TXS0108E device is a directionless voltage-level translator specifically designed for translating logic voltage levels.". Not sure it is intended to convert an analogue signal that varies over a entire range.

              developeralgo222undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • developeralgo222undefined
                developeralgo222 @gloomyandy
                last edited by developeralgo222

                @gloomyandy . Any suggestion of a solution if a Logic level shifter is not the right solution ?

                AFAIK, these are the recommended solutions to solve this issue. Are you suggesting anything different from this?

                • Voltage Divider ( simple but not robust)

                • Bi-directional Logic Level Shifter ( Robust )

                • Zener Diode Clamp

                • Opto-isolator

                gloomyandyundefined droftartsundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • gloomyandyundefined
                  gloomyandy @developeralgo222
                  last edited by

                  @developeralgo222 I would have a thought that a voltage divider would be fine for this sort of application (reducing the range of an analogue voltage), after all that is exactly what is used to measure the supply voltage on a Duet board. Do you have a reference that gives details as to why a divider would not work?

                  developeralgo222undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • droftartsundefined
                    droftarts administrators @developeralgo222
                    last edited by

                    @developeralgo222 @dc42 says

                    U is limited to the range -20.0 to +20.0. V is limited to the range -0.2 to +0.2.

                    If this range isn't big enough, let us know, though it sounds like the voltage conversion isn't quite working correctly.

                    Ian

                    Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

                    developeralgo222undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • developeralgo222undefined
                      developeralgo222 @droftarts
                      last edited by

                      @droftarts
                      Thanks Ian, i have tried connecting directly & through a level Shifter and none seems to work correctly .

                      I am sure i am not the only one who has dealt or is dealing with this issue on Duet3 boards.

                      How to correctly read Pressure Sensor values either using a Digital NPN output signal ( 1 =True , 0=False) or Analog Voltage/Current Signal output ( Variable range ). i have made the connections and double checked everything but can't get it to work on Duet3 Boards but it works great on my Arduino and other boards no issues at all.

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                      • developeralgo222undefined
                        developeralgo222 @gloomyandy
                        last edited by

                        @gloomyandy , Voltage divider is simple and works most of the time (Dividers tend to be unreliable sometimes when you need accuracy ) but i have 6 sensors that are connected and are being used as Vacuum Pressure Sensing Actuators for my Pick-and-Place machine . i need high accuracy and robust reliability , that's why i used a Voltage Level Shifter

                        gloomyandyundefined infiniteloopundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • gloomyandyundefined
                          gloomyandy @developeralgo222
                          last edited by

                          @developeralgo222 Have you actually measured the voltages on each side of the level shifter you are currently trying to use? That is really the first step and should be easy to do.

                          developeralgo222undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • developeralgo222undefined
                            developeralgo222 @gloomyandy
                            last edited by

                            @gloomyandy Yes i did before i plugged everything in . 5V on the High side and 3.3V on the low side. Let me just do it again to see if that changed with the load

                            gloomyandyundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • gloomyandyundefined
                              gloomyandy @developeralgo222
                              last edited by gloomyandy

                              @developeralgo222 You need to do it at various different pressure readings so we can see what the transfer function of the level shifter looks like.

                              developeralgo222undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • developeralgo222undefined
                                developeralgo222 @gloomyandy
                                last edited by developeralgo222

                                @gloomyandy , ok will do that. Quick question, Do i need to connect a 10K resistor between the 3.3V converter source i.e Tie VA(3.3V) to OE then to 10K resistor to GND as per the TXS0108E Datasheet ?

                                Duet_LevelShifter_to_Sensors.png

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                                • infiniteloopundefined
                                  infiniteloop @developeralgo222
                                  last edited by

                                  @developeralgo222

                                  i need high accuracy and robust reliability , that's why i used a Voltage Level Shifter

                                  The level shifter you want to use is inappropriate for the task: as @gloomyandy says, the TXS0108E translates logical (i.e. ”binary”) signals from one voltage level to another one. Please study the data sheet to understand what this device is intended to do. On page 17, they say explicitly what they do to your analog signal:

                                  When transmitting data from A-ports to B-ports, during a rising edge the one-shot circuit (OS3) turns on the PMOS transistor (P2) for a short-duration which reduces the low-to-high transition time. Similarly, during a falling edge, when transmitting data from A to B, the one-shot circuit (OS4) turns on the N-channel MOSFET transistor (N2) for a short-duration which speeds up the high-to-low transition.

                                  So, they don’t shift an analog voltage to another level, instead, they try to detect flanks and sharpen these for better digital signal quality. For your use case, that’s the opposite of ”high accuracy”.

                                  A simple voltage divider is what you need. Using high-quality resistors, these are very accurate and highly reliable. I really have no clue why you disqualify them as ”simple but not robust”. The contrary is true. Towards @gloomyandy, you mention three alternative solutions: ”Zener Diode Clamp” and ”Opto-isolator”. Both are counter-productive: With a Z-diode, you can clip (or limit) a voltage, an opto-isolator is highly non-linear. Your preferred solution, a ”Bi-directional Logic Level Shifter”, falls in the same category.

                                  If you don’t like voltage dividers at all, there is an alternative: Op-Amps. But designing a circuit with several discrete components is a major task and not worth the effort: any added accuracy is easily ruined by the subsequent A/D conversion on the Duet controller or by temperature shifts along all components in the signal path.

                                  developeralgo222undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • developeralgo222undefined
                                    developeralgo222 @infiniteloop
                                    last edited by developeralgo222

                                    @infiniteloop

                                    i can't seem to get a good voltage divider to purchase that can handle 6 outlets. Do you have any link of any voltage divider that can do that and is being sold anywhere ? i don't have time to design one at the moment

                                    infiniteloopundefined dc42undefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • infiniteloopundefined
                                      infiniteloop @developeralgo222
                                      last edited by

                                      @developeralgo222

                                      i can't seem to get a good voltage divider to purchase that can handle 6 outlets.

                                      I’m not aware of a commercial product either. Just mount 12 resistors on a perfboard - that’s it.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • dc42undefined
                                        dc42 administrators @developeralgo222
                                        last edited by dc42

                                        @developeralgo222 if you don't need isolation between the sensor and the Duet, just use 2 resistors as a voltage divider.

                                        A better solution would be to use sensors that provide a digital interface that the Duet can use, for example Modbus RTL via RS485. You cold put all 6 sensors on the same RS485 bus provided that the sensors provide a way to set then all to different slave addresses.

                                        We have a small number of prototype 2-channel ADC daughter boards designed for reading 0 to 10V signals.

                                        Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                                        Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                                        http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

                                        developeralgo222undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • developeralgo222undefined
                                          developeralgo222 @dc42
                                          last edited by developeralgo222

                                          @dc42

                                          Managed to mount 12 resistors ( that i had in hand creating 6 Voltage Dividers ( 1.8K & 3.3K ) per connection and it seems to work read the values fine now . Now my issue is how to Calibrate it correctly .

                                          Sensor Analog ( 1 ~ 5V) ===> Duet Analog ( 0 ~ 3V getting a Max of 3.24V) . Ideally probably i need to use 1.7K resistor so at get 3.3V or 1.6K resistor(assuming leakage or noise) to get 3.33V

                                          @ 0 kPa on the Sensor ===> Duet reads -22 kPa

                                          @ 40 kPa on Sensor ===> Duet reads -38 kPa

                                          @ 55 kPa on Sensor ==> Duet reads -53 kPa

                                          @ 65 kPa on Sensor ==> Duet reads -63 kPa

                                          and so on

                                          Not sure how to calibrate it correctly using U & V values for adjusted reading

                                          dc42undefined infiniteloopundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • dc42undefined
                                            dc42 administrators @developeralgo222
                                            last edited by

                                            @developeralgo222 for a linear analog sensor you should leave U and V as zero. Adjust the B and C parameters to get the correct readings.

                                            Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                                            Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                                            http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

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