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Technical Computing Magazine - Issue 35

Logging On

Martin Krebs
Product Specialist

Exactly a year ago, I wrote in this magazine about an innovative new temperature measurement device from Measurement Computing. The world of data acquisition never stands still, and the company has leveraged that technology to produce a range of stand-alone temperature data loggers that are really shaking up the industry!

The problem with using a USB data logger is that you don't always want to have your PC in the same location as the temperatures you want to measure – especially if you have other work to do on it! In any case, there are plenty of remote or stand-alone applications requiring temperature measurement where the use of a dedicated PC or laptop is simply not feasible.

That's why Measurement Computing has used the technology of the USB-TEMP module described here last year, and produced a stand-alone data logger that matches its advanced features and functionality. Offering just about all the flexibility you're ever likely to want, the USB-5203 logs data from thermocouples, RTDs, thermistors and semiconductor temperature sensors – all at the same time if that's what you need!

So where is the data stored? The 8-channel USB-5203, and its companion product, the USB-5201 (a stand-alone version of the USB-TC) which records only thermocouple data but is otherwise identical, both ship with a 64 MB CompactFlash® (CF) card which can store approximately 2.35 million time-stamped temperature values from a single channel (if you need more, the unit supports CF cards up to 2 GB). To transfer the data to your PC for processing and analysis, either connect the device using a standard USB cable, or place the removable CF card into a standard CF card reader.

Both of the devices provide user configurable temperature alarms for control of eight digital output lines, and come with TracerDAQ software for data management and analysis. This converts and saves temperature and alarm data to standard, comma-delimited CSV or text files. TracerDAQ also plots and analyses real-time data or historical temperature files. Also bundled with the device is InstaCal, an all-in-one installation, logger setup, calibration and test application that makes setting up and retrieving data from the logger as simple as a few quick mouse clicks; and language interfaces for users who want to write programs in any of the most popular programming languages, including LabVIEW™.

But these are not the only new data logging offerings from Measurement Computing. You'd be hard pressed to find devices as small, and as inexpensive, as the USB-501 and USB-502. If you don't need the capacity of the CF card devices, or you're on the move a lot and need to take measurements in the field where no power supply is handy, these devices are a real boon.

These convenient little units are about the size of your thumb. They're battery-powered and include software to configure the loggers, program alarm thresholds, logging rates, start times and measurement units. When the loggers are retrieved from the field and plugged straight into a USB port, the software provides simple one-click access to download, display and export your data.

Both the USB-501 and USB-502 log up to 16,382 temperature measurements in the -35 to +80 ºC (-31 to +176 ºF) range. The USB-502 additionally supports up to 16,382 additional relative humidity measurements over the full 0 to 100 percent range. Rates for both data loggers can be set from 10-second to 12-hour intervals.

But I've saved the best until last: the prices of the USB-501 and USB-502 are, at the time of writing and excluding VAT, just £35 and £49 respectively!



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In This Issue:

Issue 35 Home

Cover Story: BlockBuilder for Simulink
Building Blocks

Quality Control
Everyone's talking about... Six Sigma

Data Visualisation
The Plot Thickens

Mathematics
Every Engineer's E-Book

Mind-Mapping
Sheer Genius

Data Acquisition
Logging On

Bibliographics
X Marks the Spot

Data Analysis
Spectral Analysis Made Easy

Laboratory
Drug Discovery

Data Acquisition
The 14-bit USB Solution

Data Acquisition
Multi-function DAQ in Micro-Seconds

Bibliographics
Where's that Book?

Chemistry
Top Draw!

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