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Accuracy vs. Resolution

From Rieker, Inc.
 

 

The often confusing but important difference with inclinometer sensor output is whether accuracy is the same as resolution.

In mechanical testing and measurement, it is often important to understand how an object reacts to various forces. An inclinometer is commonly used to measure tilt, or the amount of inclination of an object in relation to gravity. When using an inclinometer, you mount the sensor to the device, apply tilt, and measure the incline by detecting changes in a certain output.

One type of output, via LCD digital display, provides an interpretation of angle based on the sensor output being sampled by a microprocessor - which in turn calculates an angle and presents it (typically) by a series of numbers (00.00º). With digital displays, these numbers are what is considered the resolution or number of decimal places the angle is represented. If the LCD is displaying 25.1º, this indicates an angle resolution in tenths of a degree (25.01º represents an angle resolution in the hundredths of a degree). This is not what determines the accuracy specification of the device.

Ideally, we would like the output of the inclinometer to change only in response to the tilting action. However, the sensor also responds to changes in temperature. Temperature related effects are the most common causes of error.

Accuracy depends on the expected temperature range of the installation. It is a combination of initial sets of sensor zero offset and sensitivity, sensor linearity, hysteresis, repeatability, and the temperature drifts of zero and sensitivity. Typically in room ambient conditions the accuracy is limited to the sensor linearity spec. So a digital inclinometer with LCD display indicating 0.1º resolution does not equate to a 0.1º of accuracy (a very tight accuracy spec) - this should be considered a major question when looking at digital display inclinometers.


Products & Services
Tilt sensors, switches and inclinometers generate an artificial horizon and measure angular tilt with respect to this horizon. They are used in cameras, aircraft flight controls, automobile security systems, and special switches. Search by Specification | Learn more about Tilt Sensors, Switches and Inclinometers

Product Announcements
Rieker, Inc. - Digital Display BOOM ANGLE INCLINOMETER
RDSR3-BA-09 Digital Boom Angle Indicator: LCD Display Box, 0.1º Resolution Adjustable Audible & Visual warnings Single Axis measurement-10/+90º Rugged Remote Sensor Box, ALL-weather... (read more)
Advanced Orientation Systems, Inc. - EZ-TILT-5000 Dual axis advanced inclinometer.
EZ-TILT-5000 advanced dual axis temperature-linearity compensated industrial inclinometer that outputs up to +-90 arcdeg Pitch/Roll tilt information in RS-232, PWM, ANALOG and ALARM formats. Internal... (read more)
Rieker, Inc. - Digital Inclinometer, RDI Series LCD display
Rieker's improved RDI Digital Inclinometers: angle monitoring & early tilt warning system Analog 0-5V, RS232, 4 switch outputs Single or Dual Axis LCD Display, 0.1º or 0.01º Resolution... (read more)
Rieker, Inc. - Analog 0-5V Inclinometer temperature compensated
NGU electronic sensors are liquid capacitive gravity based inclinometers for measuring tilt angle: Analog 0..5V 8-30VDC Supply ±10º, ±30º, ±80º Temperature Compensation: -40°C to +85°C... (read more)
Spectron Glass and Electronics Inc. - SPECTROTILT RS232 / 12-bit Electronic Inclinometer
The SPECTROTILTtm RS232 / 12 bit Electronic Inclinometer is a fully signal conditioned, DC input/RS232 output single axis sensor, which combines a glass/ceramic hybrid electrolytic tilt sensor with... (read more)
Rieker, Inc. - Full 0 to 360 degree range inclinometer
NG360 Inclinometer Sensor 0 to 360° range Liquid capacitive based inclinometer Measuring tilt angle with respect to gravity Integrated 16-bit single chip microprocessor High degree of... (read more)
Matric - Inclinometer
The Matric Dual Clinometer is a smart sensor capable of measuring angles of ± 55º in two orthogonal axes. The unit is capable of communicating to a DeviceNet scanner, which is the gateway to a PLC or... (read more)
 

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