On 13/04/18 10:24, newshound wrote:
On 13/04/2018 07:48, Halmyre wrote:
On Thursday, April 12, 2018 at 1:59:45 PM UTC+1, newshound wrote:
On 12/04/2018 12:51, The Nomad wrote:
On Thu, 12 Apr 2018 12:37:06 +0100, newshound
wrote:
For reasons I won't bore you with, I'm interested in building a cheap,
simple data logger to monitor mains voltage, ideally two channels
(live
to earth and neutral to earth). In the dim and distant past I have
designed and built such things more or less from scratch, but surely
someone has already done this.
I havn't used either Arduino or Pi before, but I assume one or other
would be the obvious starting point.
However ATM google isn't giving me a strong lead. Thoughts?
A quick google came up with:
https://openenergymonitor.org/forum-archive/node/58.html
https://circuitdigest.com/microcontroller-projects/arduino-ac-voltmeter
https://www.briandorey.com/post/ardu...e-and-current-
logging
Avpx
Thanks, that second one looks like a good basis.
Won't the capacitor smooth out any transients you might want to observe?
I am looking for transients longer than maybe a second or so. Obviously,
might need to experiment with capacitors a bit.
Hmm. My instinct would be to sample MUCH more frequently than that and
sample AC as well so that you get a really good set of smaples, and then
do any filtering in 'software'
I dunno how long an arduino trakes to do a sample but it cant be that long
Oh. It seems you can sample at up to 9.6Khz...that should do nicley -
and take an RMS value of the waverorm and moving average it out over the
last say one second...and use that to store.
Or uses a shirfter period for more sensitivity to transients
Basically you need a small mains transformer to step down to about 5VAC
or so, then a voltage diveider to set the mean voltage in the middle of
the arduino range, and a pot to scale the output to - say 0-5V
representing up to say 500V peak...
If say you are taking 5khz samples you will need a nmemoiryy buffer of
5000 16 bits (10k of RAM) to store the samples and a further location
to do the running average in.
Well within an arduino I'd say.
--
"The great thing about Glasgow is that if there's a nuclear attack it'll
look exactly the same afterwards."
Billy Connolly