OWON VDS Series User Manual

Page 26

Advertising
background image

To select the FFT window

There are four FFT windows. Each one has trade-offs between frequency resolution and magnitude accuracy. What you want to measure and
your source signal characteristics help you to determine which window to use. Use the following guidelines to select the best window.

Type

Characteristics

Window

Hamming

Better solution for magnitude than Rectangle,
and good for frequency as well. It has slightly
better frequency resolution than Hanning.

Recommend to use for:
 Sine, periodic and narrow band random

noise.

 Transients or bursts where the signal levels

before and after the event are significantly
different.

Rectangle

Best solution for frequency, worst for magnitude.

Best type for measuring the frequency spectrum
of

non-repetitive

signals and measuring

frequency components near DC.

Recommend to use for:
 Transients or bursts, the signal level before

and after the event are nearly equal.

 Equal-amplitude sine waves with

frequencies those are very close.

 Broadband random noise with a relatively

slow varying spectrum.

Blackman

Best solution for magnitude, worst for frequency.

Recommend to use for:
 Single frequency waveforms, to find higher

order harmonics.

Hanning

Good for magnitude, but poorer frequency
resolution than Hamming.

Recommend to use for:
 Sine, periodic and narrow band random

noise.

 Transients or bursts where the signal levels

before and after the event are significantly
different.


The figures below are examples for measuring sine wave with a frequency of 1kHz under the selection of four different windows for FFT:

Figure: Hamming window

22

Advertising