GB2115562A - Apparatus for use in monitoring a plurality of variable parameters - Google Patents
Apparatus for use in monitoring a plurality of variable parameters Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- GB2115562A GB2115562A GB08304608A GB8304608A GB2115562A GB 2115562 A GB2115562 A GB 2115562A GB 08304608 A GB08304608 A GB 08304608A GB 8304608 A GB8304608 A GB 8304608A GB 2115562 A GB2115562 A GB 2115562A
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- GB
- United Kingdom
- Prior art keywords
- transducer
- output
- signal
- display
- signals
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Granted
Links
- 238000012544 monitoring process Methods 0.000 title claims description 6
- 230000008878 coupling Effects 0.000 claims abstract 2
- 238000010168 coupling process Methods 0.000 claims abstract 2
- 238000005859 coupling reaction Methods 0.000 claims abstract 2
- 238000001514 detection method Methods 0.000 claims 1
- 238000009966 trimming Methods 0.000 abstract description 2
- 238000005259 measurement Methods 0.000 description 11
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 description 9
- 238000013459 approach Methods 0.000 description 2
- 238000010586 diagram Methods 0.000 description 2
- 238000006073 displacement reaction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000000694 effects Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000005670 electromagnetic radiation Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000007774 longterm Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000004519 manufacturing process Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000002093 peripheral effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000003252 repetitive effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000012552 review Methods 0.000 description 1
Classifications
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G02—OPTICS
- G02B—OPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
- G02B7/00—Mountings, adjusting means, or light-tight connections, for optical elements
- G02B7/18—Mountings, adjusting means, or light-tight connections, for optical elements for prisms; for mirrors
- G02B7/182—Mountings, adjusting means, or light-tight connections, for optical elements for prisms; for mirrors for mirrors
- G02B7/1821—Mountings, adjusting means, or light-tight connections, for optical elements for prisms; for mirrors for mirrors for rotating or oscillating mirrors
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01D—MEASURING NOT SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR A SPECIFIC VARIABLE; ARRANGEMENTS FOR MEASURING TWO OR MORE VARIABLES NOT COVERED IN A SINGLE OTHER SUBCLASS; TARIFF METERING APPARATUS; MEASURING OR TESTING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- G01D5/00—Mechanical means for transferring the output of a sensing member; Means for converting the output of a sensing member to another variable where the form or nature of the sensing member does not constrain the means for converting; Transducers not specially adapted for a specific variable
- G01D5/12—Mechanical means for transferring the output of a sensing member; Means for converting the output of a sensing member to another variable where the form or nature of the sensing member does not constrain the means for converting; Transducers not specially adapted for a specific variable using electric or magnetic means
- G01D5/25—Selecting one or more conductors or channels from a plurality of conductors or channels, e.g. by closing contacts
- G01D5/252—Selecting one or more conductors or channels from a plurality of conductors or channels, e.g. by closing contacts a combination of conductors or channels
Landscapes
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Optics & Photonics (AREA)
- Length Measuring Devices With Unspecified Measuring Means (AREA)
Abstract
Respective transducers 1-4 are arranged to detect a variation in a parameter and to provide an electrical output signal representative thereof to means 9 coupling the signal to a display 19 either under the control of a manually operated switching arrangement or an automatic scanning arrangement which identifies a detected variation and causes it to be displayed. The arrangement is applied to the output of double-grating transducers sensing linear and rotational movement of machine parts in a wheel dressing or trimming grinding machine. <IMAGE>
Description
SPECIFICATION
Apparatus for use in monitoring a plurality of variable parameters
This invention relates to apparatus for use in monitoring a plurality of variable parameters, and it has particular, though not exclusive, application to a machine for use in dressing or trimming grinding wheels.
A machine for wheel dressing to which the present invention may be applied is described in the specification of our UK Patent No.844143, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The wheel dressing machine described in the patent specification has a tool which can be positioned accurately in order to form a required profile on the edge and/or side of a rotating grinding wheel. In order to position and move the tool accurately over the required profile, a holder for the tool is mounted upon a radius-setting subslide which is carried upon a longitudinally movable tangent slide, the tangent slide, in turn, being mounted upon a radius arm which is rotatable about an angle setting axis, the angle setting axis passing through a member which is itself mounted upon a cross slide and the cross slide being movable upon a depth control slide.
Each of the longitudinal movements of the radius-setting sub-slide, the cross slide and the depth control slide, as well as the rotary movement of the radius arm is carried out using a respective measuring scale, for example a Vernier measuring scale arrangement. The provision of a plurality of separate measuring scales, each arranged at a different position on the machine described in the above mentioned patent specification makes it necessary for an operator to direct his attention to a number of different parts of the machine in order to read the different scales.
One feature of the present invention is the provision of means whereby a plurality of measurements, each taken at a different location, can be read more easily than hitherto.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: Figure 1 is a block schematic electric circuit diagram; and
Figures 2 and 3 illustrate electrical waveforms
occurring at various points in the circuit of Fig. 1.
In Figure 1, there is shown a basic block schematic diagram of an electric circuit which, in accordance with usual practice, does not show features of wiring detail, such as power supply and clock signal lines, but whose operation will be clear to those skilled in the art from the following description.
Referring to Figure 1, there are shown four transducers 1-4, each transducer having two electrical outputs 5 and 6, which are in phase quadrature, as indicated at 7 and 8. Each output 5 and 6 is coupled to both a primary analogue switch 9 and a secondary analogue switch 10.
The transducers 1-3 detect linear movement and each transducer includes a pair of gratings.
Each grating of the pair is carried by one of a pair of parts which are movable linearly relative to one another. Electromagnetic radiations passed from one of the gratings to the other are used to produce an interference fringe pattern. Each transducer includes a detector arranged to detect changes in the fringe pattern and produce the two phase-quadrature electrical outputs, as indicated at 7 and 8, in respect of a respective fringe pattern signal.
By employing two signal outputs in phase quadrature in respect of each fringe pattern signal, it is possible for the subsequent circuitry to divide a complete cycle of each fringe pattern signal into four quadrants comparatively easily. A measurement of displacement between a pair of relatively movable parts is achieved by counting the number of quadrants through which the fringe pattern signal moves and then multiplying the count by the known distance to which one quadrant corresponds. The relative direction of movement of the two movable parts is determined by comparing the relative phases of two output signals 7 and 8.
The use of gratings in measuring apparatus is well known and a history of their use is traced in a review article in the Journal of Physics E:
Scientific Instants for March 1972, Volume 5 No 3, pages 1 93-1 98, published by the Institute of
Physics, London, England and entitled Gratings in
Metrology.
In particular embodiment shown in Figure 1, the transducer 4 detects the rotary movement of a member relative to another and when used with wheel dressing apparatus of the type shown in the above numbered patent specification it detects the rotary movement of the radius arm.
The transducer 4 includes a pair of gratings each of which is carried by one of the two members which are rotatabie relative to one another and it provides two phase quadrature electrical outputs, as indicated at 7 and 8, as a result of passing light between the gratings, in a similar manner to transducers 1-3, in order to enable the quadrants of each fringe pattern signal to be established comparatively easily.
The gratings of the transducer 4 are each constituted by a series of radially extending lines arranged to overlap so that the passage of light between them results in the production of moir6 fringes.
It will be appreciated that when the transducers 1-3 are used with the wheel dressing machine referred to above, they detect the movement of the respective longitudinally movable slides.
Two peripheral interface adaptors 11 and 12 provide interface connecting lines between a computer 1 3 and the remainder of the circuit. The computer 1 3 controls the primary and secondary analogue switches 9 and 10 via the adaptors 11 and 12 and control buses 15, 16, 17 and 18. A five digit, seven segment LED display 19, which is used to display an output measurement from a selected one of the transducers 1-4, is supplied with multiplexed signals via a bus 20 from the adaptor 11 under the control of the computer 13.
Manually operable channel selection switches 22 are coupled via a bus 23, the adaptor 12 and the bus 1 5 to the computer 13, and their operation may be used to determine which transducer output is displayed at 1 9. Also coupled to the adaptor 11 via a bus 24 are switches indicated at 25 which may be actuated to cause the computer 13 to set the display at 1 9 in respect of a particular selected transducer 1-4 to a datum, for example to zero in respect of the rotary channel corresponding to transducer 4. Other switches indicated by the block 25 may be set to cause the display at 19 to be in a particular system of units, for example, in the case of linear measurement in either metric or imperial units.
Channel indicators, in the form of a series of light emitting diodes, are represented by a block 26. In the particular apparatus being described, each of the channel indicators represented by the block 26 is arranged on a panei in association with a respective one of the channel selection switches indicated by the block 22, so that the selected channel is clearly indicated to the operator.
One of the sets of outputs from the transducers 1-4 on the lines 5 and 6, which has been selected for display, either by the operation of a channel selection switch indicated at 22, or by an automatic selection process to be described below, is coupled by the primary analogue switch 9 to respective comparators 27 and 28 on lines 29 and 30. Also coupled to the comparators 27 and 28 on a line 32 is a reference level signal. The reference level signal is obtained via a digital to analogue converter 33, under the control of the computer 13 via the bus 15, the adaptor 12 and a bus 34.The reference level signal obtained from the output of the digital to analogue converter 33 on a line 35 is passed via a sample and hold circuit 36 to the line 32 under the control of the computer 13 which is exercised via a line 37, the adaptor 12 and the bus 1 5. The sample and hold
36 maintains a reference level on the line
32 at a predetermined value during the periods when the digital to analogue converter 33 is
being used for analogue signal measurements.
The reference level on the line 32 is set at such
a value that the comparators 27 and 28 produce square wave output signals on lines 38 and 39, as
indicated at 40 and 42. It will be understood that, since the output signals 7 and 8 on lines 5 and 6 are 90 out of phase, the square wave output signals 40 and 42 are similarly in phase quadrature. These out-of-phase signals 40 and 42 on the lines 38 and 39 are applied to a logic circuit 43 which gates the signals in such a way that an output is provided on a line 44 in the form of a signal 45 which consists of a series of pulses, each pulse corresponding to the beginning of one of the quadrants of each cycle of one of the signals 7 or 8. It will be appreciated that each pulse of the pulse train 45 corresponds to a particular portion of the original fringe pattern.
The pulse signals 45 on the line 44, which are referred to as interrupt pulses, are fed to the adaptor 11, to which the signals 40 and 42 are also fed on lines 46 and 47, the information on the lines 44, 46 and 47 is fed via the adaptor 11 and the buses 16 and 15 to the computer 13 which examines the signals on the lines 46 and
47 each time that an interrupt pulse 45 occurs and, according to the quadrant in which the inter
rupt pulse occurs, the computer either incre
ments or decrements an associated respective one of counters 48a-d for the channel corresponding to the transducer 1-4 whose output is being read.The contents of the
particular counter are displayed via 11 and 20 continuously at 1 9. From the output of the secondary analogue switch 10 there are coupled on lines 50 and 51 outputs to a second pair of comparators 52 and 53 to whose inputs the level signal from the digital to analogue converter 33 is applied on the line 35. The outputs from the comparators 52 and 53 are applied on a bus 54 to the adaptor 12.The computer 13 provides repetitive switching instructions via the bus 15, the adaptor 12 and the bus 1 8 to the secondary analogue switch 10 to cause the secondary analogue switch to scan continuously the outputs 5 and 6 from each of the transducers 1 The computer is thus continuously monitoring the outputs of each of the comparators 52 and 53, which will correspond to the outputs of the comparators 27 and 28 and, should the computer 13 detect a change in an output on a particular channel whose output is not being displayed at a particular instant, it will ensure that the respective counter is incremented or decremented accordingly.Should the output of either of the comparators 52 or 53 change by more than two quadrants of a cycle of the output signal from the transducer then the primary analogue switch is switched to cause the output of the channel from that particular transducer to be displayed at 1 9 and indicated at 26. The operator will thus be alerted to the fact that a particular transducer output is changing. It is preferred not to cause the automatic changeover of the primary analogue switch 9 to take place when less than two quadrants of a cycle change takes place in order to avoid the occurrence of unnecessary switching as a result of noise or other interference.
The arrangement is designed to operate automatically. However should it be necessary, for example during the setting-up procedure to select manually the channel to be displayed, the computer 13 is enabled to take account of the manual control instructions if the moving parts of the transducers are moved below a predetermined speed. The frequency of the interrupt pulses 45 is monitored by the computer and if their period exceeds that of a monostable device, which in the particular embodiment corresponds to a frequency of the interrupt pulses of 10 Hz, the computer 13 scans the channel selection switches 22 and the datum switches 25 and obeys the instructions of these switches to display a particular channel or set a display to a particular datum.
In order to increase the resolution of the measurement, when the rotary channel transducer 4 is used, each 900 segment of the output signals 7 and 8 from the transducer 4 is divided, in effect, into five segments of 180 each.
At the computer 13, scaled sine look-up tables are stored and information from these tables is fed to the comparators 52 and 53 as analogue signals via the bus 15, the adaptor 12, the bus 34 and the digital to analogue converter 33. At the same time the computer 13 counts from the interrupt signals 45 the particular 180 segment in which the comparison between the output from the secondary analogue switch 1 and the signal on the line 35 is being made by the comparators 52 and 53. The outputs from the comparators 52 and 53 are monitored by the computer 13 via the bus 54, the adaptor 12, and the bus 1 5 and it is determined whether the transducer signal on the lines 50 and 51 is above or below the signal from the digital to analogue converter on the line 35.
The values in the sine look-up table are successively fed to the line 35 until the correct 180 value is found. The display information fed to the display 19 from the computer 13 is thus obtained from a combination of techniques which includes counting the particular 180 segment in which the measurement is taking place and then determining from the comparison step the particular angular value of the segment.
When the apparatus is first switched on, a special calibration routine is brought into operation.
The calibration routine enables the value of a respective load resistor, one of which is indicated at 6Q, connected to each output 5 and 6 of a transducer 1-4 to be adjusted. In the calibration mode the transducer, whose load resistors are to be adjusted, is selected by means of a selection switch (not shown). Movement of the selected transducer causes the computer 1 3 to measure repeatedly, via the digital to analogue converter 33 and the secondary comparators 52, 53, the amplitude of one of the two signals from that transducer.
The signal is measured over several cycles and, from the maximum and minimum values, the computer establishes an average signal level. The difference between this average level and the mid-point of the range of the digital to analogue converter 33 is displayed at 19. In one particular embodiment, the mid-point of the digital to analogue converter range is 1.25 volts, and the transducer output channel is calibrated by adjusting the appropriate load resistor 60 manually until the displayed reading is zero. A manually operable switch is used to switch between the outputs of each transducer, in turn, in order to enable all of the outputs to be calibrated.
The invention employs two distinct techniques in making the measurements.
Firstly, a digital counting technique is used in making the measurements for all of the axes.
Interrupt signals 45 which are directly related to the outputs of the transducers 1-4 and thus to the movement of the moir6 fringe patterns, are produced in each case.
Fig. 2 shows the relationship between the cos wave 7 and sine wave 8 which are produced at the outputs of the transducers when there is relative movement between them in one direction. At 61 in Fig. 2 there is shown the output waveform resulting from relative movement in the opposite direction. The phase reversal is used to detect a change in the direction of movement. In Fig. 2, there are shown in dotted outline the signals 42 and 40 appearing at the outputs of the comparators 28 and 27 based on the sine wave 8 and cos wave 7 respectively. The interrupt pulses 45 are generated in the interrupt logic 43 from the front and rear edges of the signals 42 and 40.
The counting is effected by means of software counters, which are in fact constituted by locations in the RAM of the computer 1 3 and which are incremented or decremented, according to the direction of movement determined by the phase relationship of the signals from the transducer, whenever there is an interrupt pulse 45. When measuring on a linear axis, the relative movement between the parts of the transducer which corresponds to the interval between a pair of interrupt signals is 5,us. When making a rotary measurement, the interval between interrupt signals 45 corresponds to a movement through 5 minutes of arc.
The second technique which is used in the measuring operation, is employed in relation to the rotary measurement and uses the inter polation technique.
The interpolation technique will now be described in more detail with reference to Fig. 3, which shows at 7 and 8 the output signals from the transducer 4. It will be noted that the peak to peak value of the sine wave 8 is A and that of the cosine wave 7 is B. The interpolation is carried out with respect to the linear portions of the waveforms about the points C and D respectively.
It will be noted that the amplitudes of the waveforms 8 and 7 at 360 and 18 after and 180 and 360 before the points C and D are respectively 0.205, 0.345, 0.655 and 0.792 of the peak to peak values B and A. These amplitude values are well spaced and, since they occur on the relatively linear parts of the waveform are easily determined. By switching between the waveforms 7 and 8 it is possible to identify each 1 80 point in a 900 quadrant on a relatively linear part of waveforms. Since each quadrant occurring between the interrupt signals 45 corresponds to 5 minutes of arc, it is possible, by comparing the signal amplitude to values stored in a sine look-up table in the computer 13 to determine the points corresponding to the five 180 intervals in each quadrant, and thus the position of the transducer to within 1 minute of arc.
The interpolation routine increments a software counter that has a maximum count of four. The count in this software counter is added to the count in the main counter of the interrupt signals 45 before the total count is displayed.
In principle only one of the signals from the rotary transducer 4 need be used for interpolation. However, in order to improve the accuracy of the interpolation, both signals are used. Because the relationship between the two signals is that of a sine and cosing, as one signal approaches its peak, and its rate of change of amplitude is rapidly reducing, the other rate of change of amplitude of the other signal approaches a maximum, Thus, by switching between signals halfway through a quadrant the interpolation is always carried out on the signal with the greatest rate of change of amplitude. The switching is achieved by selecting which of the secondary comparator outputs is monitored after a value from the look up table is output to the
DAC 33.
With regard to the feature of automatic switching from one axis to another, it will be appreciated from what has been said above that when a channel has been selected, either manually, or automatically, the primary circuits 9, 27, 28 and 43 are switched to that channel and the counting for that channel is controlled by the interrupt signals 45. The other channels are monitored in the main programme loop of the computer 13 by means of the secondary analogue switch 10 and the secondary comparators 52 and 53.
The main software counter for each channel is incremented or decremented whenever the pair of signals from the appropriate transducer move from one quadrant to another. Every time that a software counter is incremented or decremented, the new quadrant information is also stored, i.e.
the outputs of the two primary comparators 27, 28 are stored. These outputs are compared with the values of the comparators 27, 28 for the previous quadrant to determine the direction of movement.
During the monitoring of the other channels using the secondary circuits 10, 52 and 53, information related to the quadrant in which each of the pair of signals for each channel lies is compared with the respective quadrant information that was stored when the appropriate counter was incremented or decremented. If the present quadrant information is different from respective stored quadrant information, then the appropriate counter is incremented or decremented and the new quadrant information is stored.When the computer detects, by means of the secondary analogue switch 10 and the secondary comparators 52, 53, that the signals on a channel have moved through two quadrants, the primary analogue switch 9 is changed to select the moving channel and the display 1 9 is switched to show information related to that channel and the threshold value for that channel is set up on the DAC 33. The channel on which movement has been detected becomes the main channel which provides the interrupt pulses 45.
Whenever a channel is selected, either manually or automatically the primary circuits 9, 27, 28 and 43 and the display 19 remain set on that channel until another channel is selected.
A further feature of the arrangement shown in
Fig. 1 is the provision of long term drift compensation.
When the unit is switched on, the threshold level on the primary comparators 27 and 28 is set to 1.25 volts, which is the mid-point of the range of the DAC 33. When the transducer 4 for the rotary axis is moved over a few cycles, the maximum and minimum values of both signal outputs are measured. From these values the computer 1 3 computes a new threshold value for the rotary axis which is the mean level of the four maximum and minimum values measured. When each of the other axes is first selected after power-on, this process is repeated until the outputs of the transducers 1,2 and 3 associated with each of the other axes have been measured and a mean level for each axis has been computed and stored. Subsequently whenever a transducer associated with a particular axis is selected the appropriate threshold level is set up on the comparators by means of the DAC 33 via the line 35.
Claims (6)
1. Apparatus for use in monitoring a plurality of variable parameters including a plurality of transducers, each transducer being arranged to detect a variation in a respective parameter and to provide an electrical output signal representative thereof, a display and means to couple selectively to the display a signal associated with an output from a transducer.
2. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 including a plurality of counters, each counter being associated with a respective transducer, each
respective counter being up-dated according to variations in the output of its associated transducer, and the output from a counter being
coupled by the said selective coupling means to the display.
3. Apparatus as claimed in claim 2 including
means to scan continuously the outputs of the
transducers and to detect any change in the
output of a transducer, and means operative in
response to the detection of a change greater
than a predetermined value in respect of a
particular transducer to cause the output of the
counter associated with the particular transducer
to be coupled to the display.
4. Apparatus as claimed in any one of the
preceding claims including means to detect the
speed of movement of an element of a transducer
and to cause a signal associated with the output
from a selected transducer to be displayed when
the speed of movement is below a given value.
5. Apparatus as claimed in any one of the
preceding claims including a rotary transducer,
means to divide the output from the rotary transducer into segments, means for counting the segments and means to determine, by comparison with a known value, the angular value of a signal from the rotary transducer relating to a particular segment.
6. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 substantially as described herein with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| GB08304608A GB2115562B (en) | 1982-02-24 | 1983-02-18 | Apparatus for use in monitoring a plurality of variable parameters |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| GB8205480 | 1982-02-24 | ||
| GB08304608A GB2115562B (en) | 1982-02-24 | 1983-02-18 | Apparatus for use in monitoring a plurality of variable parameters |
Publications (3)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| GB8304608D0 GB8304608D0 (en) | 1983-03-23 |
| GB2115562A true GB2115562A (en) | 1983-09-07 |
| GB2115562B GB2115562B (en) | 1985-10-30 |
Family
ID=26282071
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| GB08304608A Expired GB2115562B (en) | 1982-02-24 | 1983-02-18 | Apparatus for use in monitoring a plurality of variable parameters |
Country Status (1)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| GB (1) | GB2115562B (en) |
-
1983
- 1983-02-18 GB GB08304608A patent/GB2115562B/en not_active Expired
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| GB2115562B (en) | 1985-10-30 |
| GB8304608D0 (en) | 1983-03-23 |
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Legal Events
| Date | Code | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCNP | Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee |
Effective date: 19970218 |