10 digital filtering, 1 digfltx parameters, 2 rattletrap® filtering – Rice Lake 520 HMI Digital Weight Indicator Installation Manual User Manual
Page 90: 3 dfsens and dfthrh parameters, 4 setting the digital filter parameters, 1 digflt, 2 rattletrap

Appendix
84
12.10 Digital Filtering
Standard digital filtering uses mathematical averaging
to eliminate the variant digital readings that the A/D
converter sends periodically because of external
vibration. Digital filtering does not affect the indicator
measurement rate, but does affect the settling time. The
selections from 1 to 256 reflect the number of readings
averaged per update period. When a reading is
encountered that is outside a predetermined band, the
averaging is overridden, and the display jumps directly
to the new value.
12.10.1DIGFLTx Parameters
The first two digital filtering parameters, DIGFLT1,
and DIGFLT2, are configurable filter stages that
control the effect of a single A/D reading on the
displayed weight. The value assigned to each
parameter sets the number of readings received from
the preceding filter stage before averaging.
A rolling average from filter one is placed in filter two.
The overall filtering is effectively a weighted average
of the product of the values (DIGFLT1 X DIGFLT2)
within a time frame equivalent to the sum of the values
(DIGFLT1 + DIGFLT2).
Setting the filters to 1 effectively disables digital
filtering.
12.10.2RATTLETRAP
®
Filtering
RATTLETRAP digital filtering (RATTRAP parameter
set ON) uses a vibration-dampening algorithm to
provide a combination of the best features of analog
and digital filtering. The RATTLETRAP algorithm
evaluates the frequency of a repeating vibration then
derives a composite displayed weight equal to the
actual weight on the scale less the vibration-induced
flaws. It is particularly effective for eliminating
vibration effects or mechanical interference from
nearby machinery. Using RATTLETRAP filtering can
eliminate much more mechanical vibration than
standard digital filtering, but will usually increase
settling time over standard digital filtering.
12.10.3DFSENS and DFTHRH Parameters
The digital filter can be used by itself to eliminate
vibration effects, but heavy filtering also increases
settling time. The DFSENS (digital filter sensitivity)
and DFTHRH (digital filter threshold) parameters can
be used to temporarily override filter averaging and
improve settling time:
•
DFSENS specifies the number of consecutive
scale readings that must fall outside the filter
threshold (DFTHRH) before digital filtering is
suspended.
•
DFTHRH sets a threshold value, in display
divisions. When a specified number of
consecutive scale readings (DFSENS) fall
outside of this threshold, digital filtering is
suspended. Set DFTHRH to NONE to turn off
the filter override.
12.10.4Setting the Digital Filter Parameters
Fine-tuning the digital filter parameters greatly
improves indicator performance in heavy-vibration
environments. Use the following procedure to
determine vibration effects on the scale and optimize
the digital filtering configuration.
1. In setup mode, set the digital filter parameters
(DIGFLT1 and DIGFLT2) to 1. Set DFTHRH
to NONE. Return indicator to normal mode.
2. Remove all weight from the scale, then watch
the indicator display to determine the
magnitude of vibration effects on the scale.
Record the weight below which all but a few
readings fall. This value is used to calculate the
DFTHRH parameter value in Step 4.
For example, if a heavy-capacity scale
produces vibration-related readings of up to 50
lb, with occasional spikes to 75 lb, record 50 lb
as the threshold weight value.
3. Place the indicator in setup mode and set the
DIGFLTx parameters to eliminate the vibration
effects on the scale. (Leave DFTHRH set to
NONE.) Find the lowest effective value for the
DIGFLTx parameters.
4. Calculate the DFTHRH parameter value by
converting the weight value recorded in Step 2
to display divisions:
threshold_weight_value / DSPDIV
In the example in Step 2, with a threshold
weight value of 50 lb and a display division
value of 5D:
50 / 5D = 10.
DFTHRH should be
set to 10DD for this example.
5. Finally, set the DFSENS parameter high
enough to ignore transient peaks. Longer
transients (typically caused by lower vibration
frequencies) will cause more consecutive
out-of-band readings, so DFSENS should be
set higher to counter low frequency transients.
Reconfigure as necessary to find the lowest
effective value for the DFSENS parameter.