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Lew Hartswick
 
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Don Foreman wrote:

On Sat, 04 Feb 2006 00:04:24 -0600, Richard J Kinch
wrote:


Don Foreman writes:


Gray code is relevant to absolute encoders, not to incremental
encoders. An absolute encoder will give correct position even if
the encoder was moved during a power-down situation.


Quadrature encoders are both incremental and absolute by virtue of the
index pulse, if you have cheap electronics, and you can tolerate homing in
the application.



A once-per-rev index pulse is still ambiguous if the encoder goes thru
more than one revolution in the travel range of the moving part, not
an uncommon situation. A rotary encoder might well be geared up for
higher resolution and accuracy.

"Absolute" generally connotes being able to sense absolute position

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even after a power outage during which movement occurred one way or
another. The absolute encoder knows immediately where it is without
having to hunt for an index, a fiducial mark or a limit sense
condition.


I would even go so far as to "always" .
If it's not Absolute then it's only relative. :-)
...lew...