Vibration Analyzer for $20

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  • čas přidán 8. 06. 2024
  • Make your own vibration analyzer for 20 bucks! In this video I show you how to make a vibration analyzer to use with your scope and I provide some examples of it in use. In one of my classes, I have students make these sensors to use with their Pico 2204a scope so they can measure and calculate vibrations. The concept is similar to the expensive vibration analyzers, but this process requires the user (you) to do all the calculations. But that's a good thing! If you're learning, you're best off knowing how the fancy expensive machines figure out the problem. This vibration analyzer can easily be used to measure wheel/tire related vibrations, driveline vibrations, engine/accessory vibrations. It can even pick up engine misfires.
    You might say that you can download an app for your phone, like "vibrations!" (android) and get the same data. This is true and that app is great, but you'll see in this video you can also build and utilize a position sensor so you can sync the vibration to a component position. With that information, you will know where to place weight if you intend on fixing the imbalance.
    Parts List:
    AdaFruit.com
    accelerometer - ADXL335
    IR sensor (here or digikey below) - ITR20001/T
    digikey.com
    IR sensor (here or adafruit abive) - QRD1114
    10k resistor - CF14JT10K0
    470 resistor - CF14JT470R
    5v regulator - L7805CV
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 78

  • @scottschantz2553
    @scottschantz2553 Před rokem +1

    Great video, great humor, awesome presentation! Thanks for your time and expertise.

  • @gordon1201
    @gordon1201 Před 5 měsíci

    This is amazing. So smart yet simple. Very well explained

  • @astrogate1
    @astrogate1 Před 3 měsíci +2

    For vibration when using my Autel scope, I just use the end rod section of my mechanic's stethoscope and attach it to my pressure pulse transducer.

  • @nickschaefer13
    @nickschaefer13 Před 3 lety +2

    I was hoping this would come up. Thanks.

  • @alkhashtee
    @alkhashtee Před 2 lety +1

    You made me change my mind about what ugly means, lol. Thank you very much for the creative project.

  • @gerigesquiere66
    @gerigesquiere66 Před 3 lety +1

    Very interesting. Many thanks for the information.

  • @95GTSpeedDemon
    @95GTSpeedDemon Před 2 lety +7

    Man, this is good stuff. Back in 2007 when i went to ford asset school, technology wasn't this available yet. Sure they had chassis ears, but for cost, it wasnt justified usually. I just got my 4ch pico recently and im looking to add NVH capability, so this video is perfect.
    I also dabled in arduino for a couple things. I used my arduino for 5v for a pressure sensor to do waveform analysis yesterday.
    I also have a 3d printer, so if you would like, come up with an enclosure design for housing the parts and i can CAD & print it for you, no charge.

  • @trevcessna1723
    @trevcessna1723 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Could you do a detailed assembly video with close ups and a diagram? I am not an electronics guy but I would love making one of these. I’m rebuilding my vintage car engine and want to balance everything. Excellent video, your students are lucky to have you! Thanks!

  • @ke6bnl
    @ke6bnl Před rokem +1

    Great detailed demostratoon

  • @andykaw1
    @andykaw1 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the explanation "how its made"!!!!

  • @hotguyforu
    @hotguyforu Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks, Ill be making one of these.

  • @johnswilley6764
    @johnswilley6764 Před rokem +2

    Great presentation Sir! I was looking for a way to develop a system to balance numerous items; truck drive shaft (custom), grinders which I use to make tooling for my lathe and CNC mill, props for RC aircraft, etc. I cobbled up a setup using a piezo connected to my Pico 4425, it worked great for concept. I wanted to be able to include angular measurement to facilitate accurate placement of balancing weight. Your system provides a great platform upon which to build; thinking of adding a 3 axis accelerometer into it also. Bottom line, you did great: lead-in, demo, and production! Thank you very much for the production of the video, and BTW, I did "like" and subscribe. Best wishes!

  • @nuthn2do
    @nuthn2do Před 6 měsíci +1

    If you're drawing power from a power bank or stand alone battery the voltage reg is smooth but if you are going to power it from a running car battery you need the capacitors to smooth out the alternator noise

  • @rustamabdullayev1019
    @rustamabdullayev1019 Před rokem

    Thank you very much for yor videos.

  • @sleepib
    @sleepib Před 10 měsíci

    Pretty straightforward. Biggest thing I'd change is making one box that holds the batteries, voltage regulator, and all the connections. That way the loose wires can connect to some terminal blocks, and you can put in some test-point style wire loops to connect the scope probes to(or binding posts/banana jacks if preferred). I'd probably 3d print an enclosure, it's not much work if you use the same form factor prototyping PCB for multiple different projects.
    Edit: that accelerometer module already has a voltage regulator on it, so you probably don't need to add one, just might need to tweak the resistor values for the led/phototransistor.

  • @daviddobeson7509
    @daviddobeson7509 Před rokem +1

    Hello from Down Under in Sydney Australia.
    I tried a similar Idea using the same 3 axis Arduino accelerometer connected to three separate LM3914 ten LED voltage indicators. I was trying to identify the X, Y, or Z vibrations in my 1965 Mini Cooper S engine.
    No matter what I did I could not get them to "Zero" at the same output voltage when they were stationary. FINALLY I realized that ZERO for the Z axis really means that it is in freefall.
    When it is stationary it is actually accelerating upwards at 1g. You have combined the three axis outputs for the single CRO trace. If you had kept them separate you would have have had the different output for the Z axis. Maybe that was the cause of your wide "zero" trace?
    Maybe gravity is -1g down here......... ????? Thanks Dave D.

  • @doyle4140
    @doyle4140 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks.great stuff

  • @terencekaye9948
    @terencekaye9948 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Can you show how you hooked both your ir sensor and accelorometer to your scope or lap top and what software are you using? Thank you for the great video!

  • @watahyahknow
    @watahyahknow Před 2 lety

    i wonder if you can balace a shaft / multy cilinder crank with this , if you use two of those xyz thingies and mount them on the front and rear holder (each holder made from two main bearingcaps bearings hung from treaded rod hung from a solid object (might be a concrete floor or wall ) and use each to drive an oxiloscope or switch between the sensors and have a way to overlay them , get the timing / degree mark on the crank of where the imbalance tops out , now inbalance in a shaft should cause the front and back to move independently so you need to remove weight at each end and in different spots per side to get it to run in a straight line without swinging side to side
    one option i was thinking on was using two disks for degreeing the camshaft and a pointer on each end (though that might mess up the balance on its own ) or a numbered piece of sticker pasted on a round part and point the strobe to that in such a way and at the right angle so that a change in direction will light up and freese the strip / disk and pointer and shows the degree number on the disk / strip
    think you can use differen weight neomedium magnets and move them around a little untill it balanced to find out the weight needed to be added or removed across from where the weight is
    along with using bobweights you should get a pretty acurate way to get the imbalance though the amount of wieght i would need to remove would take some trail and error
    as a last option i wonder if you in some way can mount a rotary encoder to the shaft with a flexible holder (like a piece of glasfiber fishing rod mounted to the same frame as the treaded rods of the crank holder )or hang it from the axle and put a weight on the body to alow it to spin in the air without the body moving to prevent the encoder again from messing up the measurments ((Single-phase 600 pulses /R,Two phase 4 frequency doubling to 2400 pulses per rotation ) but it handle the rpm ?) , that way you should be able to find the exact location of the inbalance back without the use of the infrared sensor and shiny surface , still need to ponder about finding out the exact weight you need to remove or add but thats probably like you said getting to know youre setup , a larger stroke crank should take less material removal than a shorter trow crank , spinning it faster or slower allso should affect vibration / amplification

  • @MuhammadAhmad-yu9kv
    @MuhammadAhmad-yu9kv Před 2 lety

    Great Video, I am currently working on performing the modal analysis of a wheel rim but I don't have analyzer. Can I use the same procedure to perform the modal analysis? Any suggestion will be helpful. Thanks

  • @sergeyantipov4750
    @sergeyantipov4750 Před rokem

    Amazing!

  • @jaguarsouzalive
    @jaguarsouzalive Před rokem

    Obrigado sempre

  • @enchantedwenis4994
    @enchantedwenis4994 Před měsícem

    Have you or will make a video explaining the vibration orders? Like how to define them or determine them?

  • @mohamedahmed7493
    @mohamedahmed7493 Před 4 měsíci

    just great

  • @madmike214
    @madmike214 Před rokem +1

    What tape are you using for the position sensor? I want to use this to sync a cylinder on older diesels for example, i just diagnosed a stump grinder with a 4bt cummins that had mechanical injection using a pulse sensor on exhaust and a pressure transducer on the dipstick tube but could id the cylinder on the scope.

  • @pierpa_76pierpaolo
    @pierpa_76pierpaolo Před 2 měsíci +1

    Is it only for having a vibration graph or can it be recorded in various audio formats? Thank you very much.

  • @hikerJohn
    @hikerJohn Před rokem +2

    Can you use time to triangulate to see where the vibration is coming from with multiple accelerometers?

  • @christrap8883
    @christrap8883 Před rokem

    I have an annoying harmonic vibration buzz going on in my HotRod and I want to analyze different locations under the car when it is running down the road. I know what you put together will do the job but I was hoping you could direct me to an app I can use on my Windows tablet that I can connect your sensor package into. I'm hella rusty on my electronics prowis so if you could maybe make a schmetic on how to build the USB connection wiring to the devise to communicate w/ the Oscilloscope Software that would be a huge help..... Thanks so much.

  • @jmc6940
    @jmc6940 Před 2 lety +1

    You need write a book or books. I would love to buy them. Videos are great but I prefer books for reference material.

  • @ovalwingnut
    @ovalwingnut Před 4 měsíci

    Very COoL. Really GR8T explanation(s). The ruler that was 'flipping out' is worth the price of admission right there. Thank you for the video. You RoCk p.s. My GF says she loves the Z axis. Just saying.

  • @rotorblade9508
    @rotorblade9508 Před 2 lety

    seem that the accelerometer and the optical position sensor get a phase shift (before or after) depending on how much I press the sensor against the bearing where I measure the vibration 🤷‍♂️

  • @Redmech80
    @Redmech80 Před rokem

    Hello sir, If you see this you might be able to help me, on the infrared pickup, I just finished building both these items. Is there in a way to look at the rpm easily. Seems everything is hertz or cycle time, was wondering if there is a way where it figures pulses per minute so I can move the rulers in and measure the rpm in different spots of the recorded measurement. Thanks so much

  • @monarx333
    @monarx333 Před rokem +2

    May be a dumb question but how does one determine a motors acceleration using this sensor? A dc motor

  • @sergserg316
    @sergserg316 Před rokem

    Thanks. But did you try tu use NVH for android application to figure vibrations out in the car?

  • @alexextreme3026
    @alexextreme3026 Před rokem +1

    electrical diagram for mounting the accelerometer ?????

  • @daenz8334
    @daenz8334 Před 3 lety

    Shaun, looks great. Can the Pico NVH software be used to obtain results.

    • @siuautomotive
      @siuautomotive  Před 3 lety +1

      Just for fun, I have tried to use the homemade sensor on the pico. It showed up, but the values were way different.

  • @markharmon6392
    @markharmon6392 Před 14 dny

    I thought about getting a couple of airbag impact sensors to experiment with using as vibration sensors like this example. Has anyone done so already?

  • @johanjoubert7194
    @johanjoubert7194 Před 2 lety +1

    Great video mate, what computer program do you use? Or scope?

    • @siuautomotive
      @siuautomotive  Před 2 lety

      I was using a picoscope in this video. The software is pico 6. They also have pico7 which looks a bit different but works well.

    • @johanjoubert7194
      @johanjoubert7194 Před 2 lety

      @@siuautomotive thanks my friend.

  • @chrisleon27
    @chrisleon27 Před rokem

    Hello from China

  • @davidmarsden4586
    @davidmarsden4586 Před 5 měsíci

    The little IR sensor requires it to be very close to the rotating surface to work. No good for balancing wheels. I switched to a EK1254x5C IR sensor device from Amazon. It works up to 30 cm away and has a trim pot that allows you to adjust the sensitivity and trigger distance. It takes a 5 vdc power supply, so no resistors to add. 3 terminals to connect, ground, 5v in, and digital on/off out. Has an LED for power, and one that lights up when target is NEAR, all on the little board. I'm using the accelerometer and the EK1254x5C on a Y shaped wire running to a block of wood with terminals for the oscilloscope leads. I bought a HANTEK 2 channel PC based oscilloscope from Amazon, and connect it to my tablet that runs the Open HANTEK app. Entire rig incl the oscilloscope but minus the tablet cost a bit over $100 Cdn.

  • @johnnigro4536
    @johnnigro4536 Před rokem

    would it be possible to wire all 3 axis together so as to see on 1 single channel? Ideally so you could have 4 sensors on a vehicle and watch each corner and not miss any detail. Thanks for sharing this!

    • @siuautomotive
      @siuautomotive  Před rokem +1

      That wouldn’t give you a good signal. It would likely blend them all together and that would not represent the vibration accurately. You could use four sensors and just measure one axis on each.

  • @charlesstaton8104
    @charlesstaton8104 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the video explanation. This is great information. I have some Piezo sensors from Spark Fun and I was wondering if I could use them in place of the accelerometer you used. I searched "vibration analysis piezo" and came across your other video about the pulse sensor but it was a little different concept I think. Do you think a Piezo could be used in place of the ADXL335 in this video?

    • @eddysmit
      @eddysmit Před 2 lety

      Same question here. Is this sensor better then a piezo sensor for knocking detection? Lovely project!

    • @charlesstaton8104
      @charlesstaton8104 Před 2 lety

      @@eddysmit i can give half of an answer since I went ahead and gave it a try with my piezo sensors. I was able to do some balancing with the piezos. The signal from the piezos is pretty noisy. My shaft was pretty bad so the piezos still gave me a waveform I was able to use to make corrections. I made a dramatic improvement, so much that now I can't distinguish any meaningful waveform in the noisy piezo signal. But my shaft still have some vibration. I think in order to do this you ideally need the accelerometer. I have got a couple on order now.

    • @eddysmit
      @eddysmit Před 2 lety +1

      @@charlesstaton8104 Thanks a lot. My order also is placed ;)

    • @siuautomotive
      @siuautomotive  Před 2 lety +3

      Thanks for watching. I agree with your comments. For vibration, I think you'll need an accelerometer. Those piezos work well for noise, but not lower frequency vibrations. At least that's what I found.

    • @charlesstaton8104
      @charlesstaton8104 Před 2 lety +5

      @@siuautomotive while impatiently waiting for my accelerometers to arrive, I discovered an alternative. I mounted a desktop computer speaker tangentially to both end bearings of the drum/shaft I wanted to balance, and affixed a tube to each bearing, making contact with the speaker cone. A speaker is usually used to turn an electrical signal into a mechanical vibration, but it can also do the opposite. This gave me signals I was able to use with my oscilloscope to balance my drum.

  • @chrislee7817
    @chrislee7817 Před 2 lety

    That's great. I will make one of these. Would I be able to balance a crankshaft with this? Would I need to do anything special to make a crankshaft balancer?

    • @siuautomotive
      @siuautomotive  Před 2 lety +1

      You might be able to. I don’t see why not. It might take a bit of trial and error to figure out how much weight is needed, but it should work.

    • @chrislee7817
      @chrislee7817 Před 2 lety

      @@siuautomotive I have made a start. It's for a ducati crank so I'm using a pair of old cases to spin the crank in with a 12v motor in one if the gearbox output locations. For Bob weights I'm cutting down some old rods and adding extra mass. Might make a good educational project, nice an cheap too. I'm attaching the accelerometers and rotory encoder to an arduino, so lots to learn. Thanks again.

  • @oliesting4921
    @oliesting4921 Před 3 lety +4

    Can you please make a follow up video? I made the vibration analyzer, how to you use it to monitor the condition of motors? What parameters to look for and how to perform predictive maintenance. Thank you

  • @hamzasaleem2550
    @hamzasaleem2550 Před 2 lety

    i get the part where you made the sensors ... i also understood the PC is on the other hand ... what i dont understand/can't see is what is in the middle of those both. can you please explain a bit on that part

    • @siuautomotive
      @siuautomotive  Před 2 lety

      Could you be more specific? Maybe past a time stamp from the video.

    • @hamzasaleem2550
      @hamzasaleem2550 Před 2 lety +3

      @@siuautomotive i mean is it a data logger which is getting signals from the sensors before sending it to PC?. Where the wires are going from the sensors?. I think that part is not in the video.

    • @Sugarkryptonite
      @Sugarkryptonite Před 5 měsíci

      @@hamzasaleem2550 Going to a picoscope oscilloscope.

  • @lingarajmishra8981
    @lingarajmishra8981 Před 11 měsíci +2

    1. How does the accelerometer output in mV gets converted to displacement/velocity/acceleration. Does picoscope software does it automatically?
    2. Can we retrieve the discreet data points in x and y coordinates from picoscope software to MS excel for any further signal processing ?

  • @bartek_galazka
    @bartek_galazka Před 11 měsíci +1

    Hi, is it possible to measure a guitar body vibration with this?

    • @VarionJimmy
      @VarionJimmy Před 2 měsíci

      That was a really interesting question! I don’t have any “bare” accelerometers at hand right now. But I tried with an app on my phone and used my loudest acoustic guitar. Unfortunately the vibrations were too weak.
      But the thought is very interesting and I think it would be possible to make it work.
      As a sound engineer I’m always looking for odd things to try, and I’ve never thought about this. So thanks for the idea! 👍

    • @bartek_galazka
      @bartek_galazka Před 2 měsíci

      @@VarionJimmy glad too read this🙂my idea was to use it as additional controller for other devices or something like this - that is why I was finding such videos like yours. Tell me please if you do something with this idea 🙂

  • @caves4458
    @caves4458 Před 3 lety

    how accurate are the readings on these?

    • @siuautomotive
      @siuautomotive  Před 3 lety

      I'd have to say spot on accurate. The amplitude of the vibration might take a little figuring out. That's where production tools shine is they can relate the voltage amplitude to a unit of gravity (g). I do have the production units, like the pico NVH, EVA, and MTS4100. I need to do some experimenting and put all four on the same components and make a scale for my homemade device.

  • @MaN2Mega
    @MaN2Mega Před 11 měsíci

    Adafruit makes parts for what? Something about robots? Anyone know what he's referring to?

    • @VarionJimmy
      @VarionJimmy Před 2 měsíci +1

      Adafruit makes all kinds of electronics modules etc. They are not only intended for one single purpose. You simply choose what you need for your project. Check out their website and you’ll see. 👍

  • @johnvincentgonzales639

    can it measure from 10hz to 10khz vibration?

    • @siuautomotive
      @siuautomotive  Před rokem +1

      It does a good job with vibrations that can be felt. Probably 1hz to 300-400hz. A piezo sensor would probably work better for vibrations that can be heard.

  • @kunalzshah
    @kunalzshah Před rokem

    How does the chip output go to the computer?

    • @siuautomotive
      @siuautomotive  Před rokem +2

      With this tool, the output goes to a scope, not a computer. There are three analog output, x,y, and x and they vary voltage up and down from a static 2.5 volts to indicate vibration.

    • @kunalzshah
      @kunalzshah Před rokem

      @@siuautomotive thanks!!!

  • @marchinault7609
    @marchinault7609 Před rokem

    Picoscope is more than 220$, not 20$

  • @user-rp6dx8bm7p
    @user-rp6dx8bm7p Před 3 lety +1

    Very interesting. Thanks for the information.