is voltage constant like calibration

Hi all,

 

is calibration == voltage constant ?
can you explain What are the values taken from

voltage constant = 230 × 11 ÷ (9 × 1.20) = 234.26

I guess:
230  = AC input transformer
11    =  partition ratio?
9      =   out voltage  adapter
1.20 = ??

Thank you very much

calypso_rae's picture

Re: is voltage constant like calibration

My guess is that the RMS output from the unloaded transformer will be approx 20% higher that its nominal value of 9V.  This signal is then divided by a 10:1 pair of resistors so only 1 eleventh reaches the ADC.  So the RMS signal at the ADC's input will be (9V * 1.2) / 11 = 0.9818 Vrms.

The actual voltage on the mains is nominally 230 Vrms, so the cal factor needs to be 230 / 0.9818 = 234.26.

 

 

Robert Wall's picture

Re: is voltage constant like calibration

That page was written before the change to Ideal as the supplier of ac adapters. If you look at the Ideal data sheet, the actual output voltage under no-load conditions is specified, so there is no need to guess a value for transformer regulation. 

But there are in fact three constants that affect calibration. All the details are in Building Blocks.

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