FlightSim
Electrical
- Nov 19, 2013
- 26
Hi,
I'm trying to find a Non-Quadrature Encoder which is TTL but am confused over if and how they relate. The supply voltage available is 12VDC. Standard for TTL I understand is 5VDC. My understanding of quadrature is that you can have signals A B Z, the phase shift providing distance and direction while Z provides index. Or instead use a digital pulse train high or low.
Can the encoder linked to above still be used as a TTL non-quadrature encoder which is what I'm looking for. How do I identify is it's a quadrature or digital pulse train type?
Output Signals A + B + Z + /A + /B + //Z
O U T P U T C I R C U I T
U - 5 to 30V Universal Line
Driver, suitable for
most TTL, RS422,
Push / Pull, NPN, PNP
Applications
3 - 8 to 30V input with 5v
output signals
4 - 15 to 30V input with
12V output signals
0 - 5 - 30V Open Collector
thanks
Paul
I'm trying to find a Non-Quadrature Encoder which is TTL but am confused over if and how they relate. The supply voltage available is 12VDC. Standard for TTL I understand is 5VDC. My understanding of quadrature is that you can have signals A B Z, the phase shift providing distance and direction while Z provides index. Or instead use a digital pulse train high or low.
Can the encoder linked to above still be used as a TTL non-quadrature encoder which is what I'm looking for. How do I identify is it's a quadrature or digital pulse train type?
Output Signals A + B + Z + /A + /B + //Z
O U T P U T C I R C U I T
U - 5 to 30V Universal Line
Driver, suitable for
most TTL, RS422,
Push / Pull, NPN, PNP
Applications
3 - 8 to 30V input with 5v
output signals
4 - 15 to 30V input with
12V output signals
0 - 5 - 30V Open Collector
thanks
Paul