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EEVblog 1443 - They Don't Teach This in School! (Coherence)

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  • čas přidán 3. 08. 2024
  • A follow-up video to the Electrodynamic Shaker, showing you the critical importance of Coherence measurement. Something you'll only get taught in the school of hard knocks!
    Using the Ling Electrodynamic shaker, a measurement accelerometer, and a Dynamic Signal Analyser to set up a vibration test system.
    00:00 - Electrodynamic Shaker
    01:20 - The most inportant thing in vibration measurement
    03:56 - What is a Dymanic Signal Analyser?
    06:28 - It's all about the system response
    08:12 - Your expensive calibrated setup is worthless!
    08:44 - What is Coherence?
    12:17 - If you've got a really crappy shaker
    13:10 - Let's set up a vibration test jig
    13:54 - How to power and accelerometer
    16:44 - What happens if you leave it flapping around in the breeze?
    20:14 - Traps for young players
    22:39 - Let's sweep this sucker
    26:50 - Tighten your nuts!
    28:22 - Show me your coherence plot or GTFO!
    Previous Video: • EEVblog 1442 - DON'T D...
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    #ElectronicsCreators #Vibration #Measurement

Komentáře • 217

  • @flymypg
    @flymypg Před 2 lety +89

    We did this primarily to ensure accuracy and repeatability as part of our DoE (Design of Experiments) process. The worst part overall was to do reference characterizations on the many, many shake jigs we used. Each had a reference fiducial for attaching the accelerometer. We'd always validate the signal source, the driver amp, the shaker axes, the accelerometers, the signal processing system, and, of course, the shake jigs. Only after that can you mount the DUT (Device Under Test). And then, for reference runs, we'd have to repeat the entire process in reverse as we took down the test setup.

    • @nrdesign1991
      @nrdesign1991 Před 2 lety +7

      That well explains why environmental tests are so expensive, thanks!

    • @jdmccorful
      @jdmccorful Před 2 lety +2

      Analysis to paralysis! Enjoyed watching.

    • @_a_x_s_
      @_a_x_s_ Před 2 lety +2

      There are always a lot of factors in an experiment, either controlled or non-controlled. A wrongly setup will eventually cause the inaccuracy to the results which leads to fail of analysis results. It’s really an annoying and repetitive process there.

    • @steelcuts
      @steelcuts Před 2 lety

      Ii j

    • @BruceNitroxpro
      @BruceNitroxpro Před 2 lety

      @@nrdesign1991 , You are reading my mind!

  • @motion-scope
    @motion-scope Před 2 lety +60

    Great to see structural dynamics in electrical engineering!
    Accelerometers can also be attached using beeswax, as it is easy to detach compared to glue.
    The BIG problem with accelerometers (along with poor low frequency responses and triboelectrics in the cables) is that they influence the dynamics of the PCB with their mass, so you never measure true PCB responses, even though you get good coherence! Mass changes the mode shapes of the PCB and this changes everything.
    This is why we use Vision based Modal Analysis, where cameras measure submicron vibrations without adding mass to structures. Also you get to actually see what is happening because you measure a spatial response as well (not just a single point), so you see individual components moving and you can pinpoint problems and even shift mode shapes.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety +32

      I do have a laser displacement sensor...

    • @WacKEDmaN
      @WacKEDmaN Před 2 lety +3

      i was thinkin the same thing..the accelerometer cables would have some influence on the setup... aswell as the table the rig is sitting on!

    • @peterldelong
      @peterldelong Před 2 lety +2

      We used dental cement to attach accelerometers.

    • @RealSuperDuperCooper
      @RealSuperDuperCooper Před 2 lety +6

      @@EEVblog wo
      would love to see that, and compare it with the PZT accelerometer. They tend to just measure velocity though. Our HP VSA can do the math to integrate & diff but not sure about your one.

    • @gerryjamesedwards1227
      @gerryjamesedwards1227 Před 2 lety +1

      Steve Mould did a video on the visual measurement of vibration, the results end up quite trippy. It was able to show issues in big-arsed machine tools that it's tough to imagine being picked up with accelerometers. He also used it to show the micro-movements in the muscles around his eyes.

  • @TheStuffMade
    @TheStuffMade Před 2 lety +48

    I used to do electronics and electrical designs to control hydraulics using by anything from the US coast guard to the Swedish Navy. While we had all kinds of certifications like Bureau Veritas etc. the various nations military always wanted to do their own testing including vibration testing and honestly I was surprised to see our electronics and electrical cabinets passing those tests, they were very violent. The most interesting issue we had was when we did an installation on some new mine sweepers with hulls made of fiber glass to prevent attracting and setting off mines and all the hydraulic gear we delivered was custom made from stainless steel to be non magnetic. However being navy ships they still had very powerful radio equipment on board, so having a fiberglass hull and powerful radio, it would make some of our equipment freak out whenever they used the radio. In the end I had to fly there to solve the issues by making sure all cables were shielded and terminated properly plus adding a handful of nano farad sized capacitors at strategic locations. I used a roll of aluminum foil to narrow down the most sensitive locations. Overall a fun experience and they signed off on the installation after a few days. This is of course part of a much longer story including bar fights, a black eye and being denied access to a foreign naval base.
    Cheers,
    Jake

  • @jacobfaseler5311
    @jacobfaseler5311 Před 2 lety +9

    Working as a defense contractor, this is really insightful! You always see the vibrational energy spectra at the bottom of source control documents, and the mech-e’s audibly dread vibe-qualification - but to actually see how it’s done brings a lot of light to both the how and why.

  • @marco56702
    @marco56702 Před 2 lety +5

    This is the best video in a long time! Great job Dave and thank you for all the effort that you put into this channel during the years. I started watching
    these videos as a teenager, now I am a Physicist.
    I don't think I would be where I am now without your work. Keep it up!

  • @teawizardry
    @teawizardry Před 2 lety +17

    We actually DID go over this in school! In an elective barely anyone took.... I almost forgot about this, and definitely didn't know about this application.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety +4

      I'm surprised it was even an elective!

    • @humgarllc1737
      @humgarllc1737 Před 4 měsíci

      @@EEVblog Coherence a tiny part of random signals and systems/processes that's barely 10 minutes of materials (but builds on solid understanding of signals, system and probability so it's not something you can easily explain to people without the background knowledge). It's a class you can technically avoid even if you specialize in signal processing, but you'd be crippled without it if your specialization has anything to do with systems, including quantitative finance or statistics.

  • @peterldelong
    @peterldelong Před 2 lety +27

    Very cool. I repaired those very large shakers from MB Dynamics and Ling back in the 80’s working for a certain US defense contractor. The MB Dynamics C210 used these pieces of spring steel in a ring around the armature to suspend it and they would crack and break which in turn messed up the coherence response. It took a couple days of tear down and re-assembly to replace those stupid spring steel parts, what a PITA. Thanks for the cool video, it’s something most probably never come across as EE’s.

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA Před 2 lety +3

      Did the same for vibratory feeders, where the springs were easy to get to to change, though of course getting them was the expensive part. Even though the design was based on a 1970's machine, and it was all TTL logic inside, and used a silicon solar cell slice as optical detector, because that gave a large area sensor cheap, and it was them loaded with a resistor, and then AC coupled to a 2 transistor amplifier inside the sensor housing, after which it was robust enough signal wise to be fed to a comparator on the logic board, where a LM311 converted it to TTL level to drive a cascaded set of BCD counters, which was then used with a load of XOR gates feeding into some multi input AND gates to give a "count equal to" signal, that, appropriately delayed, first reset the counter chain, and then operated a 7474 flip flop, that drove a rotary actuator that switched chutes.
      Vibrator feeder was all analogue, half wave rectified, and then using phase control to vary the voltage applied to the massive coil that pulled on the steel pole piece.
      Another one used variable voltage transformers, and when the one blew up I simply replaced it with the phase control version, using a circuit remarkably similar to a light dimmer, it was actually the guts of one, why reinvent the wheel, plus it came with all the snubbing and RFI suppression in it, with a large MOV and a 10A diode to turn it to pulsing DC. Did add in a second pot to limit amplitude, as it was otherwise capable of running the vibrator hard enough to slam into the end stops. That used a similar counter sensor, but instead used an integrated counter timer DIN mount block, all the logic in a single block, though it did need a separate 5V supply for the 6V illumination lamp, 12V for the sensor power, and a 24VDC power supply, all isolated from each other.

  • @mcconkeyb
    @mcconkeyb Před 2 lety +6

    Yup, when I was doing vibration testing we had 1 of these HP devices, but we never used it, as it was too simple. We used either a sine or a random closed loop control system. 2 very big boxes of electronics that were driven by a PDP-11 computer (yes this was back in the 1980's and the PDP-11 was a powerful computer back then). We could control the vibration at a selected point on the shaker or fixture. We could also set up multiple points to control the vibration, by 1 of several fancy mathematical functions (usually just an average). We normally just controlled the input to the fixture that was designed to hold the product/device under test (DUT). We would then characterize the fixture to determine if it was suitable for the testing that was planned. As long as the fixture didn't have any resonances at any of the test frequencies, then you can control the vibration input from anywhere on the shaker or fixture and the control system would ensure that the coherence is always 1 across the frequency range of the test.
    I also did research into vibration testing. The 2 most interesting things were: a) Impulse driven device characterization, b) mechanical heterodyning of structures. Unfortunately I left to pursue other electronics design goals before really being able to write papers on either of these fascinating topics.

    • @modeler4
      @modeler4 Před 2 lety +1

      I agree, lot easier to use a shaker controller, but shows you how far the field has advanced.

  • @neil2742
    @neil2742 Před 2 lety +3

    Dare I congratulate you on a very coherent explanation?

  • @billharris6886
    @billharris6886 Před 2 lety +9

    Thanks Dave for the fairly detailed overview on vibration table setup. You are right, being taught this type of information in school would be extremely rare.
    Being from the US, I enjoyed your Aussie Techno-jargon.
    Having retired from engineering in 2016, I must say, the job of vibe testing setup has gotten easier over the years, as well as the number of pieces of equipment used, and size of the equipment. Probably no one is using a water cooled valve shaker power amp these days.
    That little shaker you have is really cute, I have never seen one nearly that small. My warped mind has already come up with an alternate use, such as (as a joke), covertly attach it to the wall of a non-technical department head, and randomly play assorted barnyard noises throughout the day, just barely loud enough to be heard.

  • @ujjawaltiwary8151
    @ujjawaltiwary8151 Před 2 lety +4

    They say, Dave is still playing with his vibrator. :D

  • @johnyoungquist6540
    @johnyoungquist6540 Před 2 lety +15

    In the early days before I could find a Ling actuator I made one from a large speaker magnet. I put a linear bearing down the center of the magnet to support the test table. I later used a voice coil driver from a large disk drive. It was about 6 inches in diameter. I would use it horizontally rather than vertically, Over the years I found a few actual Ling drivers. We use one here every day to test each every vibe sensor that we make. The vibe sensor uses a 3 axis accelerometer. We mount the device at 45 degrees to each axis so a single setup excites all channels with similar magnitude. So we check the gain of all channels with one setup too. the engineering phase of the design few if any of these measurement details matter much. Initially the goal is to excite the assembly over the specified range or larger to find anything that resonates and moves. It could be a tall leaded component or the entire PCB itself. A component could flex enough at resonance to fatigue and break off. It the entire pcb flexes traces and solder joints are at risk of failure. If you find any suspicious resonances you might just excite the system at that point for a long time to see if you can induce a failure. If the product is exposed to vibration at some characteristic frequency you might drive it there for a long time too. Modern SMDs are so small and stiff that their resonant frequencies are too high to matter but they suffer when the pcb flexes. So board stiffeners and rigid mounts are important. Once all this real work is done you can perform the test in the spec even though by now it means nothing. We often far beyond spec limits to see how much margin we have.

    • @petevannuys5642
      @petevannuys5642 Před 2 lety +1

      Sure when it will be done by analog wristwatch for part duration testing and durable?

  • @jessicav2031
    @jessicav2031 Před 2 lety +6

    When a grid's mis-aligned with ano-ther behind, that's a moi........aliasing.

  • @nameredacted1242
    @nameredacted1242 Před 2 lety +3

    From best to worst, methods of attaching accelerometer:
    Bolted
    Epoxy / Cement
    CA adhesive
    Magnet
    Double-sided tape
    Wax
    Touch
    Cost to calibrate accelerometer seems a bit much... Perhaps nobody wants to deal with a hobbyist? My accelerometers cost $500 (single-axis)-$2000 (triaxial/fancy), and calibration costs us $200 I believe. We calibrate yearly. But we have a calibration lab right in the building (yet they are a different company due to conflict of interest concerns).

  • @milantrcka121
    @milantrcka121 Před 2 lety +8

    Big shakers typically use a feedback accelerometer to linearize the driver itself and to control the acceleration in a closed loop servo. Some 75 -80 kg device was designed to take 30 g crash safety. During a test the feedback accelerometer fell off. This resulted in a 100 g (not grams, earth gravity acceleration). A massive motor tore off, main chassis bent, a pitiful sight. We used to stand in a respectful distance during tests.

    • @Rx7man
      @Rx7man Před 2 lety +1

      guess there wasn't any redundancy!... an extra accelerometer (wouldn't have to be terribly fancy) that would trip at 40g's and shut down the system might have saved some damage.. but I guess they found the breaking point!

    • @milantrcka121
      @milantrcka121 Před 2 lety

      @@Rx7man 30g crash safety limit is just that. In a crash, the device is not supposed to kill the pilot or a ship crew, no ejected material, entire box shall shall not detach from its structural mounts even if the vibration isolators fail. Internally, we do not care at this point. So 40g limit would not help a whole lot.

    • @Rx7man
      @Rx7man Před 2 lety

      @@milantrcka121 I mean a safety to shut down the machine so that the test could be re-run.. I didn't mean that the run where an error happened would be valid.. with two sensors you could shut down the test if there's more than X% disagreement between them too

  • @coryballiet8260
    @coryballiet8260 Před 2 lety

    Dave, great video! Great timing, too. I supervise a group of test technicians and I have a few of them training on vibration test next week. Good information for them to have.

  • @InssiAjaton
    @InssiAjaton Před 2 lety +3

    I found this quite interesting in several aspects. The first is that I once participated in a 3-1/2 day customer training occasion offered by Bruel & Kjaer. One of the things they demonstrated was that you had to lock the accelerometer cable to the same plate where the accelerometer was attached. Probably using bees' wax on both the accelerometer and the cable. Another thing was to use the smallest available accelerometer available. The same rule then was also applicable to microphone selection on sound level meter, especially if you wanted it to work beyond some 20 kHz. The other thing is the coherence measuring instrument that I had never seen in use. I do see plenty of similarities to my HP 3563A Control Systems Analyzer, though. It also has plenty of math built in. The most impressive feature it has is a synthesizing of the the PID circuit out of the Bode (& Nyquist / Nichols) results. I once did that and was duly astonished. Otherwise, I mostly have used just the Bode diagram for my control systems tuning.

  • @theagnihotris9763
    @theagnihotris9763 Před 2 lety

    We did do this and I still use it on a daily basis. I work in vibrations/acoustics and our school had amazing curriculum. Now all modern softwares automatically calculate coherence and save it with your measurement data. Amazing stuff thanks for sharing.

  • @dentakuweb
    @dentakuweb Před 2 lety +1

    That was way more interesting than I expected.

  • @tolikechicken
    @tolikechicken Před 2 lety +5

    I had five (four of them core) classes in my ME program where coherence played a major role and was heavily emphasized in our dynamics testing. But to be fair, it was THE go to place for structural dynamics and vibrations research and the faculty throughout the colleges history pretty much wrote the book on how to do this stuff so I don't think it's an average case!

  • @ArtyomGalstyan
    @ArtyomGalstyan Před 2 lety +3

    Wow this is useful. I am currently going through the DO-160 training course, where one of the tests is for vibration. This video really helps to understand a lot of things!

  • @SudaNIm103
    @SudaNIm103 Před 2 lety

    Great Video - Awesome demo!

  • @ChargelessElectron
    @ChargelessElectron Před 2 lety

    Very, very good. Thank you Dave.

  • @KeritechElectronics
    @KeritechElectronics Před 2 lety +1

    I'm not an electronics engineer by education, so it's the first time I see this parameter talked about in a context other than statistical data or optics / wave physics. Still, makes sense to me.

  • @sonic2000gr
    @sonic2000gr Před 2 lety +2

    I love old school HP instruments. I still have a photocopy of a manual for an HP digitizing oscilloscope I was using in my student years...

  • @Pablo_El_Mago
    @Pablo_El_Mago Před 2 lety

    And now I NEED a dynamic signal analyzer in my life. SEE WHAT YOU HAVE DONE! hehehe.
    Now seriously, excellent video! I work at a physics lab at UBA, and we actually teach the concept of coherence in the context of light and sound sources, lasers, interferometry and such. But it had not occurred to me to use the same concept when analyzing the dynamic response of a mechanical system. Thank you!

  • @SeanBZA
    @SeanBZA Před 2 lety +11

    You can do the same with regular speakers, which will show that different manufacturers of speakers do actually make them sound different, because they are all more or less non linear over the response. They might show a frequency response curve in a standardised fixture, but pretty much you can be sure that that is only approximate, and your unit will be different.
    The more expensive ones come with either compensation in the amplifier, generated from a test speaker, that had it's response and coherence measured, or actually have positional feedback, so that at least the measuring point is going to be correct. That is why cones need to be stiff, and why there are titanium cones, and other exotic materials. But most use paper, because it is easy to form, and very cheap.
    But to use this your source must be good, and pointless if the recording you play has been mastered in a studio with less accurate speakers, as then you only can get the response the studio had. Even more so if the sound has been compressed with lossy compression, the compression has to be nearly equal to the uncompressed to get a non audible difference. For me recording that turned out to be 320k 48kHz, as the recording did not sound different to the original.

    • @WacKEDmaN
      @WacKEDmaN Před 2 lety +1

      diamond tweeters FTW!.. no (sound) break up until 75Khz!.. almost double what they are ever gonna be driven at...

    • @academicpachyderm5155
      @academicpachyderm5155 Před 2 lety

      Is that 320 kb/s compression on an MP3? As a music compression enthusiast (snob?) this is really valuable info

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA Před 2 lety

      @@academicpachyderm5155 Yes, I could not hear the difference, but could just about at the next lower step of 240kb/s, so decided to go the better step and run the encode. Later on I moved to lossless compression, and thus have a lot of audio stored as either ogg or flac now. Just needs a transcode if going to a media player that does not support it, I really need to replace the battery in the LG player, which does do FLAc and OGG natively, though it also has the issue the flash is worn out to a great extent, it has been used so much I ran into flash write limitations.

    • @gr4eme1975
      @gr4eme1975 Před 2 lety

      Paper and plastics are used because they have internal damping. Metal cones will ring at certain frequencies. Whilst the perfect transducer will act like a piston in practice the break up modes on stiff cones make for complex filters to fix the issues.

  • @kevincozens6837
    @kevincozens6837 Před 2 lety

    Watching the fundamentals videos that Dave puts out shows that there is a lot of things about working with electronics that aren't taught in schools.

  • @magnusoksbltherkelsen2453

    I was taught about coherence in my radar courses, it's an important aspect in high-end radar systems and in signal processing of speckle in synthetic aperture radar and optical images. Very cool video.

  • @arandomguy4478
    @arandomguy4478 Před 2 lety

    I struggle to understand how to use a 555 from my teachers, yet I understood "bigass magnet" and some other things from this vid. Good video

  • @ebenwaterman5858
    @ebenwaterman5858 Před 2 lety +2

    I know all this stuff and you did a really good job explaining it. Atta boy. :)

  • @marcfruchtman9473
    @marcfruchtman9473 Před 2 lety

    Very Interesting! Thank you.

  • @johnwilliamson467
    @johnwilliamson467 Před 2 lety

    Nice delay line there in the accelerometer line . Enjoyed the video

  • @andymouse
    @andymouse Před 2 lety +1

    Interesting stuff !....cheers.

  • @karama300video
    @karama300video Před 2 lety

    Very interesting video!

  • @monad_tcp
    @monad_tcp Před 2 lety

    20:02 nice, its similar to cross spectrum, which we use in computing vision to match signals to know the difference between them. Its useful to find drift in the images, for example.

  • @markbrown8097
    @markbrown8097 Před 2 lety

    Glad to see an explanation of what the guys are doing on the other side of the wall at our test laboratory. Before a wall was put up I thought there primary purpose was to drive us deaf and insane with their sine sweeps. Now just product EMI problems are the sanity stressors.

  • @linmajon
    @linmajon Před 2 lety +5

    This explains why almost all "tests" made by popular youtubers are absolutely worthless. Phone drop tests, scratch tests, battery tests - you name it.

    • @kstxevolution9642
      @kstxevolution9642 Před 2 lety +4

      it's worthless in any quantitative sense, tho. they have a qualitative value

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety +1

      @@kstxevolution9642 Correct.

  • @0202fabrice
    @0202fabrice Před 2 lety

    As in real estate, there are three important factors: fixture, fixture, and fixture. 30 yrs ago we used a GR 7 kW (IIRC, shaker ~ 1 m dia.) system to measure fiber optic components... after verifying the fixture. The GR shaker/amplifier system did most of the heavy lifting, except for mounting plate resonance.

  • @Bianchi77
    @Bianchi77 Před 2 lety

    Nice video clip, keep it up, thank you for sharing it :)

  • @WacKEDmaN
    @WacKEDmaN Před 2 lety +3

    i wanna see that PI shaken to deth!!...hopefully a future vid!..make all them electrons fall out!
    thanks Dave.. coherence makes sense now!.. and its not resonance!

  • @davefiddes
    @davefiddes Před 2 lety

    FWIW I did get taught this in a final year Machine Dynamics class as part of my Mech Eng degree some 25 years ago... Remember getting a demo with a much older HP DSA that cost an arm and a leg after we'd learned all the maths. Wasn't as clear and useful explanation as this video though. Well done for explaining it so clearly with good examples of potential gotchas.

  • @jimsmind3894
    @jimsmind3894 Před 2 lety +4

    I wonder why the first video on a 'vibration generating device' was so popular... 🤔🤣

  • @omitsura
    @omitsura Před 2 lety +2

    When you increase the play speed, the speaker applies more vibration to the device Dave is testing.

  • @ramansridharan4562
    @ramansridharan4562 Před 2 lety

    Wow - that is an old shaker and analyzer!! The shaker in this video is actually Ling Dynamic Systems, not Ling Electronics - they are two different brands now!
    I work for the US company that now owns Ling Electronics. We started out making Dynamic Signal Analyzers (our founders were HP engineers that worked on that HP DSA used in the video!), and acquired the shaker business later on. Our DSAs are are so much more advanced and interesting now! We make "custom DSAs" for vibration control specifically as is normal in the industry; and of course very advanced dynamic signal analyzers that make that HP look like a casio 4 button calculator!

  • @krnlg
    @krnlg Před 2 lety

    Very interesting!

  • @markclark787
    @markclark787 Před 2 lety

    I used an air shaker to find rattles in cars at a dealer, I am glad they do not build them the way they used to.

  • @mrlithium69
    @mrlithium69 Před 2 lety +1

    it was taught. on page 846 of the textbook.

  • @bart416
    @bart416 Před 2 lety +1

    But we did teach this in school! Now if the students paid attention or understood a word of it is another subject. 🤣

  • @daic7274
    @daic7274 Před 2 lety

    @EEVblog Would be interesting to see a video about piezo accelerometer charge amplifier signal conditioning and setup and real world examples of measuring displacement etc. You have the test bed :) very interesting series on vibration. Thank you.

  • @miguelangelsimonfernandez5498

    In my neck of the woods (Spain) they used to teach this but we never got the chance to see it in action. All pen and paper cases. Now with the stupid Bologne reform of higher education it's all a terrible mess and they no longer teach it. May the politicians all burn in Hell in a high flame for what they did to education in Europe.

  • @stephenholland6328
    @stephenholland6328 Před 2 lety

    I’m posting this comment so your can see what a hobbyist who is familiar with signal sources, oscilloscope and spectrum scopes got out of this. This is clearly a mechanical engineering thing. It was very interesting to see this worked through. I really liked seeing that mechanical engineering analysis has to deal with a lot of subtleties. Seeing the electronics used in a mechanical engineering system shows how pure electronics works interfaced to a real world physical system. I didn’t understand what a dynamic signal analyzer was before this. I thought it was just a measurement of a changing electrical signal, but now see it is an analysis system for a transducer output when correlated to a physical input. The coherence demonstration was very interesting, too, since I now get the system integrity testing that it measures to ensure that h you are not reporting artifact in the analysis.
    I have a question: what would a mechanical engineer say they were doing when using this system to test a part? Or, a senior engineer wants the data out of this type of testing system: what would they tell the junior engineer they wanted using their technical terms?

  • @Antony_Jenner
    @Antony_Jenner Před 2 lety

    At last a Sunday morning adjustable cocktail shaker.🤪🤪

  • @nameredacted1242
    @nameredacted1242 Před 2 lety +2

    I have done a bit of vibe in my life, never heard of coherence... We only use Transmissibility (ratio of Monitor channel divided by Control channel). We use a multi-channel closed-loop control system. There is one or several Control accelerometers, and one or more Monitor accelerometers all around the DUT. We look for amplitude changes on different spots of DUT from Monitor accelerometers wrt to Control accelerometer(s). I can also plot phase inversion, but I frequently have a situation of phase inversion from one spot to another. In a complex product that I test, I don't see how this, if it is sensitive to even phase inversion, is of great insight. My controller actually does not care about phase, only magnitude of signal from accelerometers. I can flip one of my accelerometers upside down and still the reading is the same. If I flipped 2nd accelerometer and tried coherence, I will get a crap value?

    • @modeler4
      @modeler4 Před 2 lety +1

      sounds like you have a more modern day view of what Dave was doing. thanks for explanation.

  • @rexbk09
    @rexbk09 Před 2 lety

    Love, Love, Love

  • @RGD2k
    @RGD2k Před 2 lety

    Sine sweeps: If you are going to do slow sine sweeps, you *really, really* want to do them at very low power. Else, you will create nonlinearities due to resonances, which will screw with your measurement. It doesn't happen in the random signal because the energy is not so concentrated. For sine sweeps, the rule is to go slow, but also softly...
    This same thing applies very strongly to DRC calibration sweeps for loudspeakers: If you use a sine sweep, try playing it back at a nearly inaudible volume: You pick up so much SNR from the convolution (and from lenghening the sweep, even a minute or two is enough), that it just doesn't matter that you aren't using much of the dynamic range of your recording setup. Let it be low level, that will avoid exciting mechanical resonances in your room so much they go nonlinear. It really doesn't take much: Sine waves are much more powerful than they sound.
    (Also, if you're doing a stereo set, try swapping the left and right DRC filters, and do a listening test to see if it sounds more transparent/nice or not. You're welcome!)

  • @FSXgta
    @FSXgta Před 2 lety

    That's a nice bass shaker

  • @justmemyselfandi5532
    @justmemyselfandi5532 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for the video, bit long for me :) but still thank you for making it! In short, all is about validation so if one does not have coherence you have no way to control your system and be sure what and why it is happening. In process to know your equipment is a must. Been there done that, not sure if I ever called it coherence :). That was term for physics, - "coherent waves"

  • @patnutoris4054
    @patnutoris4054 Před 2 lety

    I should have watched this 10 years ago. :(
    It seem like I did these tests for 5 years without even understanding any of it.

  • @Pootycat8359
    @Pootycat8359 Před rokem

    They do this for buildings! First, the engineer designs the superstructure by coming up with a model of it. This consists of a massless "rod" with masses attached where the floors would be. For complex structures, there are multiple rods/masses, coupled together. The resonant frequencies are calculated. The idea is to avoid resonances in the 2-4 Hz range. That's where the most destructive vibrations from earthquakes occur. After the structure is erected (less the walls, etc, which weigh very little), giant motors, with eccentric weights, are attached. Strain sensors are attached at various places on the beams. The motors are then turned on.....WUMP....WUMP...WUMP..WUMP.WUMPWUMP.... The resonances are adjusted by attaching masses to lower the frequencies, tensioning cables to raise them.

  • @gtcollection6933
    @gtcollection6933 Před 2 lety

    Fascinating content, thank you so much for sharing this knowledge. Given that material properties are known, would modern digital twin finite simulation of eigenfrequencies (modes) prior the components layout be an alternative to coherence testing, or simply an advantage?

  • @techmakerandhacker7867

    i love this guy this guy is awesome how is he able to afford all of this .

  • @chrispollard6568
    @chrispollard6568 Před 2 lety

    Swept sine with a tracking filter means you do not see parametric amplification. You excite at one frequency and get another. Like driving a spring from the ends - it moves sideways at half the frequency.

  • @darrenwilkinson1742
    @darrenwilkinson1742 Před 2 lety

    Awesome Dave, does the quality, accuracy and frequency response of the amplifier used affect the accuracy of these measurements? Thanks

  • @mcasual7657
    @mcasual7657 Před 2 lety

    Happy 2022 by the way :)

  • @alexscarbro796
    @alexscarbro796 Před 2 lety

    How about strapping a Crystal oscillator to this to show the resulting side bands.
    You could also show the effect on ceramic capacitors maybe?

  • @erikdenhouter
    @erikdenhouter Před 2 lety

    I hope you repaired the skirt of that shaker, dirt will cause a lot of problems falling into the air gap of the coil.

  • @13yroldgosu-gosu-sin24

    "You can count those if you really want to" LOL

  • @steviecandtheplace2b
    @steviecandtheplace2b Před rokem

    I see similarities with audio frequency coherence, power factor and calibrating the Pat tester before testing a cable, and then it starts to go over my head… still interesting to watch tho.

  • @ChillBing
    @ChillBing Před 2 lety +2

    Nice

  • @georganatoly6646
    @georganatoly6646 Před 2 lety

    very interesting, glad the video didn't shy away from 'scary' looking maths, though I'm surprised the display referred to the complex part of the number as 'imaginary,' never liked that term

  • @jeremylister89
    @jeremylister89 Před 2 lety

    👍 It's intuitive that the plate should be big, solid and much heavier than the pcb.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety +2

      Yep. Bigger the plate the bigger the shaker needed though.

    • @jeremylister89
      @jeremylister89 Před 2 lety

      @@EEVblog yep 👍

  • @johnshaw359
    @johnshaw359 Před 2 lety

    Sounds like system self resonance monitoring to me. Interesting. Can you get software to cancel any known errors in the jig.

  • @joopterwijn
    @joopterwijn Před 2 lety

    Guess that the wooden workbench would impact the measurement (to flexible on a certain frequency)

  • @andrewphi4958
    @andrewphi4958 Před 2 lety

    Shmick response... *taking notes*

  • @TheMlg556
    @TheMlg556 Před 2 lety

    golden!

  • @defenestrated23
    @defenestrated23 Před 2 lety

    Oh, now we see the nonlinearity inherent in the system! Nonlinearity inherent in the system! Help! Help! I'm being distorted!

  • @rowanjones3476
    @rowanjones3476 Před 2 lety

    Attach a cone and you’ve got yourself a makeshift loudspeaker driver.

  • @sdp8483
    @sdp8483 Před 2 lety

    Correct me if I am wrong but I think a vibration controller like the VR system that was flashed on screen in the previous video removes the need for coherence. At work we use the VR system and the controller takes care of outputting the right signal based on a control accelerometer. I don't run the vibe tables much but the few times I have I never had to do the measurement from this video.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety

      If you've got a fancy pancy rig that handles it automatically, sure. But that's just the shaker platform, you should still test the coherence of your mounting hardware as that forms part of the system.

  • @Debraj1978
    @Debraj1978 Před 2 lety

    Can we replace the speaker coil (the apparatus for generating vibration) with a vibration motor (eccentric mass on shaft) and vary the motor speed to sweep frequencies?

  • @jesset2550
    @jesset2550 Před 2 lety

    cool I always wondered how this was done

  • @Audio_Simon
    @Audio_Simon Před 2 lety

    What type of specs are people looking for or requiring in PCB vibrational measurements? I understand not breaking parts and also measuring product signals under vibration... but what help is sticking an accelerometer on the PCB itself?
    Do they make vibrational damped PCB layup?

  • @demoncloud6147
    @demoncloud6147 Před 2 lety +2

    What is the value of Coherence at Resonance frequency(mechanical) ? 0?

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety

      The resonant point of the shaker is usually the upper limit frequency.

  • @__--JY-Moe--__
    @__--JY-Moe--__ Před 2 lety +1

    it's shak'n...hopp'n...skipp'n...& a bopp'n!!! make a worm gear, then rotate + & - 45 deg!! or purchase a reciprocating saw!! going 2 sleep now!!

  • @christianedelmann6880
    @christianedelmann6880 Před 2 lety

    Can one compensate for the mechanical setup's various resonances and make the coherence better? Like every mechanical system will have some problematic frequencies. Or is it more a case of working around it where your desired measurement range doesn't coincide with the mechanical systems resident frequencies?

  • @PsiQ
    @PsiQ Před 2 lety

    **Scribbling notes:**
    - Shaker
    - Big Assmagnet
    - Micro ferrets
    - uneven sweeping
    => Coherence .. Thats what i'm gonna name that Bar
    :-)

  • @jamesttol
    @jamesttol Před 2 lety

    I wish i had a DSA to test audio circuits.

  • @msmith2291
    @msmith2291 Před 2 lety

    My thoughts tell me this same system can be used to test the effectiveness of vibration isolation devices such as the rubber mounts on hard disk drives, etc.

  • @helmuthschultes9243
    @helmuthschultes9243 Před 2 lety +2

    By the way, off centered mass is very bad for the dynamuc shaker mechanism. By spec the mass should be very close to centered.
    Much of the demo you have a significantly imbalanced mounted assembly during both videos.
    If you want to destroy the shaker over a much shortened life, keep msss off center.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety

      Yes, but it's the best way to demonstrate the effect.

    • @helmuthschultes9243
      @helmuthschultes9243 Před 2 lety +2

      @@EEVblog certainly, but caution that others do not mis learn proper setup. As doing so WILL relatively quickly destroy the bearings/suspension of the shaker.
      Possibly even a comment to this off centre being illadvised/bad practice would have been worthwhile. A strobe lamp synched to 5he vibration can also create impressive display of deflections during vibration.
      For students and new design engineers we were often showing 5he vibration at resonances on an alternator with external fan. Manually the fan seems totally rigid and unable to be bent. Under resonant vibration the fan blades are swinging like butterfly wings at takeoff, when using a strobe lamp very clearly visible. The movement/bending in cm deflection. Similar on a PCB assembly, where the board can look like waves on a pond. Using destructive levels even SMD parts can skip 9ff and especially ceramic caps can be shown cracking.
      Also by the way on PCB tests, even the lightest teardrop accelerometers mod8fy the PCB test, and worse still on switches and other small mechanical parts the mass remains to much. We used a Laser vibration sensor for totally mass free sensing. Only disadvantage was these return velocity not acceleration. But that is no problem with the normally used shaker control units as inputs can be realtime evaluated via the DSP processor in accel, vel or displacement terms . A lot of current endurance vibration testing is done in combined thermal-vibration mode.

  • @ovnibus_cx3cp
    @ovnibus_cx3cp Před 2 lety

    Hello @EEVblog Some inquire, is not necessary the calibration in the desired frequency span for a proper amplitude linearity response ???

  • @williamsquires3070
    @williamsquires3070 Před 2 lety

    If all else fails, attach a large, round plastic disk to it and use as a subwoofer! 😆

  • @T2D.SteveArcs
    @T2D.SteveArcs Před 2 lety

    What about the natural frequency of the shaker and or the plate? This would effect the coherence? Great video as always Dave

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety +2

      The resomant point of the shaer is usually the upper frequency limit. As for the plate and other mounting hardware, this is what the test is designed to find out. You don't want to be operating at any resonant point of your test hardware.

    • @T2D.SteveArcs
      @T2D.SteveArcs Před 2 lety

      @@EEVblog 👍 thanks for answering Dave that's really cool considering the size of your channel AWESOME 😎 love your channel been subbed for years..
      If you have time take a look at my channel high power electronics for instance 10kw Vacuum tube Tesla coil. 300kv xray transformer s (real 300kv 30cm plus jump)
      Xray equipment taredowns, 18kw DIY half-bridge and so on..
      I only started uploading 18months ago so quality isn't up there yet but I intend to work at it as my audience grows.. your feedback would mean a lot..
      All the best from the old dart
      Steve 👍👍

  • @WacKEDmaN
    @WacKEDmaN Před 2 lety +2

    cool... been waiting for this....
    enjoy ya holidays Dave and family..
    where ya headed? north, south, west? .... east?!

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety +6

      Wherever the government lets us go, of course. I'm an obedient citizen, of course.

    • @WacKEDmaN
      @WacKEDmaN Před 2 lety

      @@EEVblog ya should be fine for anywhere in NSW by wednesday!.. maybe sooner!

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety +2

      @@WacKEDmaN Thank you for my freedom Sir! I will always be your loyal servant.

    • @WacKEDmaN
      @WacKEDmaN Před 2 lety

      @@EEVblog lol wat?... U been on the sauce or somethin mate?! (i know ya dont drink!)
      im hoping the new one doesnt ruin plans right before xmas :/

  • @byloyuripka9624
    @byloyuripka9624 Před 2 lety

    curious, if you are searching for things like flex in the PCB, would the lower mount that looks to be made of plastic(?) not flex quite a bit more? acting as a dampener?

  • @Iamalizard
    @Iamalizard Před 2 lety

    So you are giving away the secrets of the Philips Motional Feedback System (MFS) speakers from the seventies, mjum nice, collector items! DIY high-end speakers with EEVblog and learn something

  • @Wok_Agenda
    @Wok_Agenda Před 2 lety

    They didn't even taught us how to solder

  • @moddquad8362
    @moddquad8362 Před 2 lety

    Shouldn't the shaker be mounted to something heavy? It moves around on it's own due to vibration at 25:22.

  • @ericcameron281
    @ericcameron281 Před 2 lety +1

    can you build a speaker out of the shaker to reproduce music? let's what is inside the shaker.

    • @milantrcka121
      @milantrcka121 Před 2 lety

      It is a speaker. You should hear a big one! Like 1 meter in diameter.

  • @mscir
    @mscir Před 2 lety

    How about shaking something and illuminating it with a strobe at the same time?

  • @szabolcs__
    @szabolcs__ Před 2 lety

    Dave with a pico scope would be more interesting , bc you can play with the software at home. (Iam saying this , because hopw some kid watching it and wana try it out at home)