Oversampling analog to digital readings
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Published on - 15th October 2010 16:51
Number of Views: 9755
Darrel Taylor has a great oversampling include file. This can give you a 10 through 16 bit result from a 10 bit A/D PIC (at the cost of a some micro or milliseconds).
You've probably noticed that when using the Analog to Digital converter, the numbers are NEVER stable. At best, the result will always be bouncing back and forth between two numbers.
While it's extremely annoying, there is a reason for it, and the number of times it bounces between those two numbers is actually indicating the values of more bits of resolution that are not included in the original 10-bit result.
This effect can be exploited to increase the effective number of bits in the result.
By taking a number of consecutive samples and averaging the results with a lower divisor, you can get up to 16-bit accuracy from that poor little 10-bit converter.
http://www.darreltaylor.com/DT_Analog/
An explanation of the Oversampling technique can be found on Wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oversampling
Re: hserout issues on the 18F26K83
Okay, I think I might have solved this one. I didn't have the TRIS of the transmit pin configured as an output. I was under the erroneous impression the UART controller trumped control of any port...
rocket_troy Today, 05:25