Changes for page ANU Seismic Data Loggers
Last modified by robert on 2025/08/08 16:09
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... ... @@ -14,9 +14,9 @@ 14 14 15 15 Both the LPR-200 (or "Low Power Recorder" 200) and TerraSAWR are designed to use as little power as possible, and more or less use the same amount of power. 16 16 17 -At 100 Hz and with a GPS cable connected these loggers draw about 220 mW of power once the screen is off (higher sample rates draw more power but only marginally, < 5 17 +At 100 Hz and with a GPS cable connected these loggers draw about 220 mW of power once the screen is off (higher sample rates draw more power but only marginally, < 5mW). Adding a sensor (e.g. a Trillium Compact 120) increases this to approximately 400 mW, or 0.4 volt-amps. So, in theory 7 Ah battery should last about 10 days without a solar panel, but in practice it seems to be a bit closer to 8 which may be due to variability in power drain while in getting GPS locks. 18 18 19 -For very sunny environments (latitudes < 30) a 20 olts10 Watt solar panel should have no issue keeping these loggers alive over the summer months, and assuming unobstructed skies should also be fine over winter. However there is no harm in using 20 or even a 40 Watt panel, especially for high latitudes, coastal regions, or areas without a full sky view. In theory up to a 60 Watt solar panel is fine, but we don't recommend anything over 40 Watts and that amount of power is already overkill.19 +For very sunny environments (latitudes < 30) a 20V 10 Watt solar panel should have no issue keeping these loggers alive over the summer months, and assuming unobstructed skies should also be fine over winter. However there is no harm in using 20 or even a 40 Watt panel, especially for high latitudes, coastal regions, or areas without a full sky view. In theory up to a 60 Watt solar panel is fine, but we don't recommend anything over 40 Watts and that amount of power is already overkill. 20 20 21 21 (% class="box infomessage" %) 22 22 ((( ... ... @@ -23,9 +23,6 @@ 23 23 Power issues are easy and cheap to solve relative to the cost of your experiment, don't skimp! 24 24 ))) 25 25 26 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 27 -In the case of an LPR, there is a large compartment for housing an internal battery, able to accommodate anything from a 10-30Ah battery. To use a standard lead acid battery with a positive and negative terminal, a 6 pin adaptor must be used. This ensures the voltage from the external power port (pins A and C) connect to the battery and ensure the system actually recharges. (See [[Peripheral Equipment>>doc:Instrumentation.Peripheral Equipment.WebHome]] for a more comprehensive overview of this kind of setup) 28 - 29 29 = Data Card Formatting and Information = 30 30 31 31 Both the TerraSAWR and LPR-200 require SD Cards to be formatted in FAT32 filesystem. For 64Gb cards it can be difficult to format in FAT32, but [[software >>http://auspass.edu.au/field/fat32cardformatter.exe]]is available. ANU recommend SanDisk Extreme 150 mb/s cards in either 32 or 64Gb size. We strongly discourage using cards larger than 64Gb, and in general smaller cards are less likely to fail. We have also found that "adapter" cards (e.g. SD to microSD) are prone to having write issues and **strongly** advise against them. ... ... @@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ 89 89 90 90 * XX.ANUSR network and station name 91 91 * 100 Hz Sample Rate 92 -* 40 89 +* 40V pp (or +/- 20 V) gain / Trillium Compact seismometer version 93 93 * Record on Restart enabled 94 94 95 95 Note that if a user sets the gain incorrectly, this can be fixed later (assuming nothing clipped) by multiplying or dividing by factors of 2. The gain setting can be looked up from the logfile, else you may have to guess from a PSD or other method. ... ... @@ -137,7 +137,7 @@ 137 137 138 138 The seismometer model and serial number (up to 10 characters) can be set. Seismometer model options include: 139 139 140 -* Trillium Compact (same for 20 sand 120s models)137 +* Trillium Compact (same for 20 and 120) 141 141 * CMG - 3ESP 142 142 * Guralp 40T 143 143 * LE-3D Lite ... ... @@ -168,10 +168,10 @@ 168 168 169 169 = Instrument Response = 170 170 171 -Both the TerraSAWR and LPR-200 use the same ADS1281 analog-to-digital converter chip and are designed to have identical instrument response. The ADC (analog to digital) chip in both loggers originally samples at 1024000 Hz and downsamples towards the output data rate via a 5th order SINC filter, then another four FIR filters. If the output is below 250 Hz, a final "pure" /5 decimation is done without any sort of FIR filter.168 +Both the TerraSAWR and LPR-200 use the same ADS1281 analog-to-digital converter chip and are designed to have identical instrument response. The ADC (analog to digital) chip in both loggers originally samples at 1024000 Hz and downsamples towards the output data rate via various stages. First via a 5th order SINC filter, then another 32x via 3-4 2x or 4x FIR filters. If the output is below 250 Hz, a final "pure" /5 decimation is done without any sort of FIR filter. 172 172 173 173 {{info}} 174 - TheStage 3 SINCcoefficients(600+) duringthe initial1024k > 16k decimationwereleftoffastheysloweddowntheprocessx10andcontributeverylittle(< 0.3db,<0.31 ms)to the endresult171 +All SINC and FIR filters are performed internally within the logger and all phase delays are accounted for. Thus, the FIR coefficients and delays are not needed/given in the response information. 175 175 {{/info}} 176 176 177 177 The user can choose to apply a 2nd stage "sensor gain" by selecting an instrument type in the setup menu. This effectively selects a 10 Vpp (e.g. short period sensors), 20 Vpp, 40 Vpp (most broadband sensors) regime to match the sensor's sensitivity. This has the effect of doubling amplitude from 10v to 20v, or quadrupling from 10v to 40v. If you have set your sensor correctly (and the signal isn't clipped!) you can "correct" this by simply multiplying your data by 0.5 etc. This gain manifests itself in stage 2 in the response information. ... ... @@ -178,16 +178,18 @@ 178 178 179 179 Instrument response can be downloaded from IRISĀ [[Nominal Response Library>>https://ds.iris.edu/ds/nrl/]] if need be, orĀ [[directly from us>>http://auspass.edu.au/data/logger_response]] , or by downloading the response of an equivalent sensor at AusPass (e.g. get_stations(level='response') ). 180 180 181 -[[Huddle test comparing a Trillium Compact 120 + TerraSAWR vs a Trillium Compact 120 + Nanometrics Centaur (M8.AUANU)>>image:TC120_ANU_vs_CENTAUR.png||data-xwiki-image-style-alignment="center"]] 182 182 183 -= ANU TerraSAWR (Gen 3, FW 3.5a, 201 4- current) =179 += ANU TerraSAWR (Gen 3, FW 3.5a, 2017- current) = 184 184 185 - Earliestknown model isdatedJuly 2014 (though firstdeployed in 2019) and ourcurrent flagshipmodel. Lightweightandsmall.181 +Not sure there's much left to say 186 186 187 -= ANU LPR-200 (Gen 2, FW 2.6a/2.7a, 2011 - current) = 188 188 189 -Earliest known model is dated May 2011 (but first deployed November 2012) and still in use today. Potentially capable of housing much larger batteries than the TSAWR due to the larger cavity space. 190 190 185 += ANU LPR-200 (Gen 2, FW 2.6a/2.7a, 2013 - current) = 186 + 187 +Ditto the mighty LPR! 188 + 189 + 191 191 = ANU "ANUSR" (Gen 1, 2003? - 2012) = 192 192 193 193 This logger has been retired for a long time and has a different instrument response. It used modular component boards and was powered via an acrylic case of 6 x 6V lantern batteries. There is a somewhat complete one above the CAT lab door if anyone is so inclined to have a look. ... ... @@ -213,12 +213,6 @@ 213 213 214 214 215 215 216 - 217 - 218 - 219 - 220 - 221 - 222 222 (% class="box" %) 223 223 ((( 224 224 = TerraSAWR Specs =
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