CAPMAGIC wrote:I do have some questions on the 57205 "Single axis G Force Sensor" as well.
I couldn't find any of these characteristics:
- accuracy of measurement,
- noise density and intensity
Can you pass me these? Or who is the manufacturer of the sensor, so that I can contact him and ask.
Greetings
Julian
No idea what you are doing exactly.
But I have found:
1) That the noise of the chassis on the road is way more than the accelerometer's noise.
In fact idling the noise in a 3-axis accelerometer is ~10dB higher than with the engine off. Rolling it is at least another 10-20 dB higher.
2) Any shifting in the chassis will move the apparent G-Force around. Braking can pitch the car more degrees than one would imagine, and chassis roll is also a lot higher than I would have guessed. To account for the dynamic chassis attitude you would need to know the roll pitch and yaw angles. And similar issues in steady-state - when going up or down hill...
3) An IMU (Accelerometers, rate gyros, and magnetometers -all * 3-axis's) might be better suited it you are doing anything where you need more than 1-axis of acceleration. I am using a bit of high end unit, but MoTeC has also configured the eLean unit which is primarily for motorcycles. This is not really an IMU (just rate gyros and accelerometers * 3-axis), but spits out raw values for the accelerometers and rate-gyros. I have not tried one yet, but plan to do so as they are relatively cheap.
Bottom line is that you will likely be dominated by chassis noise and roll pitch and yaw attitude that can appear to cross couple into the single axis depending on how far you "peel the onion". Having more axis and rates can be helpful if it is not for a drag car.
If you PM me your email - I will send the eLean datasheet, or contact Ivo Boniolo at
ivo.boniolo@e-shock.it