Test & Measurement
National Instruments - NI CompactDAQ Chassis for Higher-Performance USB Data Acquisition at a Lower Price
National Instruments has announced the NI cDAQ-9174 four-slot and cDAQ-9178 eight-slot NI CompactDAQ chassis, which are advanced versions of the popular NI CompactDAQ chassis released in 2006. The two new chassis build on the functionality of the original chassis by adding a four-slot option; the ability to take mixed-sensor measurements at different rates; two built-in, external BNC triggers; and four advanced counters. These, along with NI-DAQmx driver and measurement services software for the NI LabVIEW graphical programming and development environment, make the NI CompactDAQ system easier to program and more suitable for mixed-signal data acquisition systems.
NI oWith the new cDAQ-9174 and cDAQ-9178 chassis, engineers can sample from NI C Series analogue input modules at different rates instead of implementing single-rate sampling in the cDAQ-9172 chassis. This feature makes programming easier because low-speed measurements can be separated from high-speed measurements, eliminating the need to oversample or decimate unwanted data. In addition to simpler software development, the multiple timing engines are optimised for multicore processing – each driver call to a timing engine can be processed in a separate loop to maximise processing core use and process data more quickly.
The cDAQ-9178 eight-slot chassis features external BNC triggers. With these external triggers, engineers can synchronise an NI CompactDAQ system with an external device or another system without installing and wiring a digital module, making synchronising systems easier and more cost-effective.
The new NI CompactDAQ chassis contain four advanced counters, which is twice the counters available in the cDAQ-9172 chassis. Some counter operations on the original chassis, such as finite pulse train generation, require the use of two counters. With the two new chassis, many of these operations use only a single counter because of counter technology advancements, providing more available counters for additional measurements.
The chassis operate in a temperature range of -20 to 55 degrees Celsius and can withstand up to 30 g shock and 3 g vibration. NI CompactDAQ achieves Hi-Speed USB throughput with NI signal streaming technology, so that the chassis can simultaneously perform multiple, high-speed operations such as waveform measurements, generation, digital I/O and counter operations.
Every NI CompactDAQ chassis is shipped with NI LabVIEW SignalExpress LE data-logging software. With USB plug-and-play data acquisition and LabVIEW SignalExpress, engineers can connect NI CompactDAQ to a PC, laptop or netbook and start measuring data within three clicks of a mouse.
For greater flexibility, NI CompactDAQ also includes NI-DAQmx driver and measurement services software for LabVIEW, NI LabWindows™/CVI, C/C++ and Microsoft Visual Studio .NET. Designed for more advanced data-logging features such as alarming, timed logs, analysis and reporting, LabVIEW SignalExpress is a full-featured development environment that works with all devices that run NI-DAQmx including NI CompactDAQ.
Ubiquity and a wide range of application support make Windows a popular operating system for benchtop, portable laptop and production line test systems. NI CompactDAQ is fully compatible with Windows 7, and the latest generation of NI CompactDAQ chassis shows a greater than 10 percent performance boost for some high-bandwidth streaming applications when compared with the same program run on Windows XP.
For more information about the new cDAQ-9174 and cDAQ-9178 chassis, readers can visit www.ni.com/new_compactdaq.