If you take a longer RC time, the ripple voltage will be smaller, but the time when the DC outputvoltage is stable is than longer.
If you take a longer RC time, the ripple voltage will be smaller, but the time when the DC outputvoltage is stable is than longer.
Well higher impedance voltage divider may help or screw your reading depending at least of your instrument input impedance.
However higher impedance of your voltage divider, the less you alter the RC filter.
Personally, i would avoid a too high impedance to the instrument, maybe refine the whole design with a buffer in between.
Some instruments also have their own low pass filter at the input, so I would compare a DVM reading with. Not as this sure that you really need to go crazy in your PWM filtering. First order might work as well.
Steve
It's not a bug, it's a random feature.
There's no problem, only learning opportunities.
did you try just using the 1 micro farad across the 46k ohm ?
Last edited by amgen; - 29th January 2009 at 08:57.
The input impedance is 1000M, pretty darn high.depending at least of your instrument input impedance.
Ahhhh, yes. I tried just connecting the PWM across the voltage divider and it looks great. I looked at the block diagram of the DPM and there is a filter on the input.Some instruments also have their own low pass filter at the input
Looks like that might not be necessary.did you try just using the 1 micro farad across the 46k ohm ?
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Life is easier than we think sometime huh?
Glad to know it's working as expected now.
Enjoy!
Steve
It's not a bug, it's a random feature.
There's no problem, only learning opportunities.
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