I am building a project where I need to put, into a data logger, a voltage from a, variac controlled, mains connected transformer’s, secondary winding tapping, which will be proportional to the secondary output. It has to be reasonable accurate but the logger will only input with d.c current or voltage, however there are facilities in the software to apply formulae to the input, i.e. divide by the square root of 2 for example.
My idea is to use a bridge rectifier, which should result in a d.c. voltage to the value of the peak to peak value of the a.c. voltage. Then apply the above equation to the input to achieve the RMS equivalent.
The a.c voltage is low from 0.5V to 8V. I’ve built a small bridge rectifier and, as there will be no load, I’ve connected a 10k resistor in parallel with a 0.1 µF capacitor, across the d.c. output.
The d.c voltages I am reading from this setup are not what I would have expected. There is no d.c output below 0.6 a.c. input but this must be due to the threshold switching of the diodes (any suggestions for a type with a lower threshold would be welcome). The higher voltages are linear but reduced by a factor of between 2 and 1.5, i.e. 2.5V a.c. gives an output of 0.8V d.c. Can anyone suggest why this isn’t 3.5 d.c as I would have expected? I don’t have a scope unfortunately, as this would probably identify what is going on.
My idea is to use a bridge rectifier, which should result in a d.c. voltage to the value of the peak to peak value of the a.c. voltage. Then apply the above equation to the input to achieve the RMS equivalent.
The a.c voltage is low from 0.5V to 8V. I’ve built a small bridge rectifier and, as there will be no load, I’ve connected a 10k resistor in parallel with a 0.1 µF capacitor, across the d.c. output.
The d.c voltages I am reading from this setup are not what I would have expected. There is no d.c output below 0.6 a.c. input but this must be due to the threshold switching of the diodes (any suggestions for a type with a lower threshold would be welcome). The higher voltages are linear but reduced by a factor of between 2 and 1.5, i.e. 2.5V a.c. gives an output of 0.8V d.c. Can anyone suggest why this isn’t 3.5 d.c as I would have expected? I don’t have a scope unfortunately, as this would probably identify what is going on.