Is there a USB interface with DC coupled input?
Posted: Wed Jun 24, 2015 10:21 am
I am helping some university researchers build a very simple waveform recording system. We are looking for an ADC that connects via USB to an iMac or Mac laptop. This is not for recording audio. The specs are quite modest:
1) only one input channel needed, for a waveform varying slowly between 0 and 5 volts
2) 8 bit resolution is sufficient, more is OK
3) sample rate is 50 per second, more is OK
4) realtime, or near realtime display of the recorded waveform is needed (Audacity would be quite sufficient)
5) recordings may last as long as 4 minutes
The only difficult spec is that, since the signal is varying slowly, we need response down to 0 Hz (DC coupled input). But all the sound recording devices that I have found seem to be AC coupled, limited to about 10 or 20Hz and higher. Does anyone know of a device which is DC coupled?
I have found quite a few data acquisition and data logging products which can record down to DC, but very few that meet our specs and run on a Mac. Most require Windows or Linux. There are a couple of high-powered DAQ systems which will run on a Mac (National Instruments LabView, AD Instruments, etc.) but this stuff is expensive and overkill for our needs.
1) only one input channel needed, for a waveform varying slowly between 0 and 5 volts
2) 8 bit resolution is sufficient, more is OK
3) sample rate is 50 per second, more is OK
4) realtime, or near realtime display of the recorded waveform is needed (Audacity would be quite sufficient)
5) recordings may last as long as 4 minutes
The only difficult spec is that, since the signal is varying slowly, we need response down to 0 Hz (DC coupled input). But all the sound recording devices that I have found seem to be AC coupled, limited to about 10 or 20Hz and higher. Does anyone know of a device which is DC coupled?
I have found quite a few data acquisition and data logging products which can record down to DC, but very few that meet our specs and run on a Mac. Most require Windows or Linux. There are a couple of high-powered DAQ systems which will run on a Mac (National Instruments LabView, AD Instruments, etc.) but this stuff is expensive and overkill for our needs.