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???
03/20/10 20:57
Modified:
  03/20/10 21:07

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#174355 - Well I have already seen some neat FPGAs
Responding to: ???'s previous message
I have seen one neat product using a dedicated FPGA that uses 48-bits instead of 24 bits. They claim it can constantly go at highest speed for up to 4 years before rolling over. Albeit, you can do some really neat things with FPGAs, but isn't that just overkill? What I would really like to see is a core in which I get 24 bit data for X and Y positions, so 6 bytes for a single point and have the core match this position up with a record(containing up to 32k samples) taken from an A/D. In this manner I could use a computer to just display the matched pairs. This would try to take out two asynchronous events that the main computer would have to deal with. I also believe that this product would extend vastly in just about every field.

List of 17 messages in thread
TopicAuthorDate
What's inside digital callipers?            01/01/70 00:00      
   Optical gratings?            01/01/70 00:00      
   A linear encoder            01/01/70 00:00      
      You don't really need a dedicated chip            01/01/70 00:00      
      Thanks for link            01/01/70 00:00      
      You can use my quadrature decoder            01/01/70 00:00      
         Well I have already seen some neat FPGAs            01/01/70 00:00      
            it is overkill            01/01/70 00:00      
               Stiffnes would be a tiny bit of a problem            01/01/70 00:00      
                  possibly            01/01/70 00:00      
                     There's a shrimp that does that            01/01/70 00:00      
   Here is a link            01/01/70 00:00      
      Can you be more specific            01/01/70 00:00      
         http://www.syncmos.sh.cn/SN6600HH.html            01/01/70 00:00      
   another linky            01/01/70 00:00      
   Curiosity ?            01/01/70 00:00      
   wikipedia: digital calipers = ...            01/01/70 00:00      

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