Layout, Sensor orientation, Local magnetic field considerations – PNI RM3000 Sensor Suites User Manual

Page 22: 2 layout, 1 sensor orientation, 2 local magnetic field considerations

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PNI Sensor Corporation

Doc #1015673 r08

RM3000 & RM2000 Sensor Suite User Manual

– July 2012

Page 22 of 41

4.2 Layout

4.2.1 Sensor Orientation

Figure 4-3 indicates how the three Geomagnetic Sensors in a RM3000 Suite should be

oriented for a system referenced as north-east-down (NED). The arrow represents the

direction of travel or pointing. Positioning of the sensors is not critical, other than

ensuring they are not positioned close to a magnetic component, such as a speaker.

Figure 4-3: RM3000 North-East-Down (NED) Sensor Layout

If the Sen-Z sensor is flipped to the bottom of the board such that the curved portion of

the sensor still points forward, then to retain NED the Sen-Z’s ZDRVN and ZDRVP pads

should be as shown above, except on the bottom of the board. Since the pads on the

Sen-Z have switched positions, the connections to the Sen-Z sensor will be reversed.

4.2.2 Local Magnetic Field Considerations

Since the sensors measure magnetic field, it is important to consider what items in the

vicinity of the sensors can affect the sensor readings. Specifically:

The sensors have a linear regime of 200 T. (Earth’s field is ~50 T.) To

ensure the sensors operate in their linear regime, do not place the sensors close to

large electric currents, large masses of ferrous material, or devices incorporating

permanent magnets, such as speakers and electric motors.

Locate the sensors away from changing magnetic fields. While it is possible to

calibrate the sensors to accommodate local magnetic distortion that is fixed

relative to the sensors, changing local magnetic fields generally cannot be

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