Figure 7-14. method 3, Choosing a method for measuring frequency, Choosing a method for measuring frequency -13 – National Instruments DAQ M Series User Manual

Page 75

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Chapter 7

Counters

© National Instruments Corporation

7-13

NI 6236 User Manual

Figure 7-14. Method 3

Then route the Counter 0 Internal Output signal to the Gate input of
Counter 1. You can route a signal of known frequency (F2) to the Counter
1 Source input. F2 can be 80MHzTimebase. For signals that might be
slower than 0.02 Hz, use a slower known timebase. Configure Counter 1 to
perform a single pulse-width measurement. Suppose the result is that the
pulse width is J periods of the F2 clock.

From Counter 0, the length of the pulse is N/F1. From Counter 1, the length
of the same pulse is J/F2. Therefore, the frequency of F1 is given by
F1 = F2 * (N/J).

Choosing a Method for Measuring Frequency

The best method to measure frequency depends on several factors including
the expected frequency of the signal to measures, the desired accuracy, how
many counters are available, and how long the measurement can take.

Method 1 uses only one counter. It is a good method for many
applications. However, the accuracy of the measurement decreases as
the frequency increases.

Consider a frequency measurement on a 50 kHz signal using an
80 MHz Timebase. This frequency corresponds to 1600 cycles of the

SOURCE

OUT

COUNTER 0

SOURCE

GATE

OUT

COUNTER 1

Signal to

Measure (F1)

Signal of Known

Frequency (F2)

CTR_0_SOURCE

(Signal to Measure)

CTR_0_OUT

(CTR_1_GATE)

CTR_1_SOURCE

Interval

to Measure

0

1

2

3 …

N

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