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Calibration of position Sensors

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Caslo

Aerospace
Oct 29, 2006
2
Hi

Does anybody knows of an instrument that I could use to calibrate a linear position sensor?
 
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how accurate, what range, and what type?

for my 2 to 20 inch lvdts, i use micrometer standards (when available). An adjustable guage block and a dial caliper most of the time.
 
For thrust position probes and radial vibration probes on rotating machinery we use a spindle micrometer to check accuracy and linearity over the full range. The probes we use are manufactured by Bently Nevada. I believe we buy the spindle micrometers from them as well. These probes have a linear range from about 0.010" to about 0.075" and are normally gapped at 0.050".
 
Thanks for the reply guys.

I'm planning on using two different types of sensors.

An LVDT range 30mm
A Potentiometer 25mm
Both work with DC Voltage

The total length that I want to measure is 0.5 in.

I don't have any experience calibrating sensors.

When you buy them do they come calibrated for a specific input voltage or do I have to do this myself?

I was thinking of using a micrometer or caliper to determiner the actual linearity error and the calibration curve.

My goal is to be able to create an equation to use as input for a controller program.

An example of the equation would be like:
For a given excitation voltage V_in

Delta_X = a1+a0(Voltage)

Where: delta_x is displacement
a1 and a0 are linearity constants
Voltage is output voltage

Could you recommend some website or reference site where I could get more information

Any advice is welcome

Caslo,
 
I have AC LVDTs from RDP if you select tech manuals, then select E308 will be a dislay that gives detail.

you'll notice the generic cal procedure doesnot give full scale travel as a given, but is user defined. for my use i want my display to be in inches. but if it is in a control loop, the actual bump to bump travel is set for 0 to 100%

adding to my previous post, I have used a standard nut as calibration block, and my calipers to determine what actual displacement was.

to determine your actual lineartiy, you can use incremental shims and record output. I think you'll find the linearity of most off the shelf sensors better than you're ability to measure
 
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